Possible Duplicate:
Is it possible to include a file in your .gitconfig
With bash and zsh I can source subfiles in order to better organize my config.
Can I do something similar with .gitconfig
?
(March 2012) It looks like this is finally going to be possible soon -- git 1.7.10 is going to support this syntax in .gitconfig
:
[include]
path = /path/to/file
See here for a detailed description of the git change and its edge cases.
By the way, a couple of subtleties worth pointing out:
Path expansion, e.g. ~
or $HOME
, does not appear to be supported.
If a relative path is specified, then it is relative to the .gitconfig file that has the [include]
statement. This works correctly even across chained includes -- e.g. ~/.gitconfig
can have:
[include]
path = subdir/gitconfig
and subdir/gitconfig
can have:
[include]
path = nested_subdir/gitconfig
... which will cause subdir/nested_subdir/gitconfig
to be loaded.
If git can't find the target file, it silently ignores the error. This appears to be by design.
(March 2012): As mentioned in Mike Morearty's answer (which I upvoted), git 1.7.10+ will support this feature.
Original answer (October 2010):
Currently, no.
As I mentioned in Is it possible to include a file in your .gitconfig
, you already have 3 separate gitconfig for you to get your settings organized:
$GIT_DIR/config
Repository specific configuration file. (The filename is of course relative to the repository root, not the working directory.)
~/.gitconfig
User-specific configuration file. Also called "global" configuration file.
$(prefix)/etc/gitconfig
System-wide configuration file
Config File inclusion was discussed in May 2010, and a first patch was written by Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason, but I don't see this patch in one of the latest "what's cooking in Git".
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