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Home/ Questions/Q 848235
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T06:54:41+00:00 2026-05-15T06:54:41+00:00

I have bunch of ruby scripts in a git repository and it seems to

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I have bunch of ruby scripts in a git repository and it seems to be really hard to enforce people to write properly indented code.

I also have a small ruby script that formats to code to specific standard and now i would like to run that as a a filter script so that junk wont get committed into repository.

echo "*.rb filter=rubyfilter" > .gitattributes
echo "[filter \"rubyfilter\"]" >> .git/config
echo "    clean = /home/rasjani/bin/rbeauty" >> .git/config
echo "    smudge = /home/rasjani/bin/rbeauty" >> .git/config

does the dirty trick git side but the ruby script should then process the files affected:

how / where do i look those up from ?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T06:54:42+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 6:54 am

    As described in the GitPro Book

    Git applies those settings only for a subdirectory or subset of files. These path-specific settings are called Git attributes and are set either in a .gitattributes file in one of your directories

    The git attributes man page mentions:

    • Upon checkout, when the smudge command is specified, the command is fed the blob object from its standard input, and its standard output is used to update the worktree file.
    • Similarly, the clean command is used to convert the contents of worktree file upon checkin.

    alt text

    So your script will process each *.rb files (in the directory and subdirectories where the .gitattributes file is located) on checkout and commit.

    See this SO question for a concrete example.
    You can test your own setup with a:

    git checkout --force
    

    Note: as mentioned in this SO question, smudge and clean scripts can only modify the content of a file, without knowing what exact file they are processing.

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