There seems to be a problem adding newly created files to subversion through Intellij, because when I right click on any of them, the option to add them is grayed out and only Revert is accessible:
By the way, this problem only appears with newly added files, the old ones are detectable and can be edited and committed without problem.
Maybe I missed something when I created them?
Any help would be appreciated. Thank you.
The solution was really simple. Here's how I did, hopefully this will help someone else one day:
Leave Intellij (or the IDE you're using) aside and open your command prompt.
CD to the root of your project.
Manually add the files that you have created with the command add.
Example: svn add path/to/your/file.java
Go back to Intellij, you should see all your files which weren't detected before change color from yellow to green.
You can now commit your new files.
I have an empty git repository sitting here, and I'm trying to figure out how to get Intellij to start using it. I'm not that familiar with git, but traditionally, to initialize it from the command line, I'd just git clone it and git push it, but when I try to do something similar for Intellij, it doesn't seem to work.
The first thing I tried was to create a new empty project and then checkout from version control, but it won't let me do that because it requires that the directory not exist.
The second thing I tried was instead of creating a new project, to checkout from version control directly in the main page (I'm using Idea 14). Neither of these have worked, though I am quite new to this so I feel like I'm missing something quite obvious
Could someone point me in the right direction?
Thanks!
When I create a new project in XCode 6.0.1, I got this error message: The file "exclude" doesn't exist
It seems to only impact the versioning of the files i.e. the generated stub files are not committed into github after the project is created.
What can cause this problem?
For me the issue was caused because I had previously created a project with the same name, and Xcode still had record of that.
To clear it out,
go to Window -> Organizer in the menu bar
Remove all of the repositories highlighted in red
To add your repository (if it's not being tracked for some reason),
Click the + (still in Window -> Organizer from the steps above)
Enter the path of your file
Make sure to change to Git from Subversion (if Xcode has Subversion set as default - it did for me.
I usually get this error if I initialize an Xcode project with a git repository, delete it and try to recreate it with the same name (casing doens't appear to make it sufficiently 'different'). Turns out, "Well I'll just start over" can leave some issues as well.
Hope this helps.
I had this issue as well, and I tracked it down to the .git-template folder included with Thoughtbot's dotfiles. Basically, Xcode expects its template folder to have info/exclude, and Thoughtbot's dotfiles don't. Creating that directory and file fixed the problem, as so (in the Terminal):
cd ~/.git_template
mkdir info
cd info
touch exclude
If you're getting this issue without Thoughtbot's dotfiles, you could probably look at ~/.gitconfig and use whatever templatedir is getting set as instead of ~/.git_template in the first command.
I am trying to figure out how to correctly rename files with git while using Xcode.
I made a test project, with a few commits, then renamed a file in Xcode, verified that the git status did say it was being renamed, and then committed outside of Xcode. This was in accordance with this answer to a SO question (Handling file renames in git).
I go back in to Xcode, try to look into the history of that file before the name change (in the version editor assistant window), and I get the error "This file does not exist in the index." While that is true, the file did not exist at that point, its predecessor did. When I go to the terminal, and run git log --follow myFile.m, I do see all commits, even those before the rename. So with that, the history is there, but Xcode doesn't seem to know how to find it.
How can you follow before a rename of a file in git version control when using Xcode?
PS. It does seem that the blame functionality can see before the name change, but the version editor can not.
I had the same error today and as suggested by matt
the best solution is to use an alternate Git GUI.
I finally solved this by installing the great GitX app by rowanj.
Then i saw the uncommitted change and simply commit it.
TY Xcode for being too git-simple and renaming-painful !
After IntelliJ IDEA froze and was killed from the task manager, all the Run/Debug Configurations disappeared. I have tried invalidating caches, reloading files from disk, synchronizing and restarting, but nothing helped.
You can try to restore your Run configuration using the Local History feature of IntelliJ IDEA.
If you are using .idea directory based format, then your configurations will reside in workspace.xml file under .idea directory, invoke Local History dialog from the .idea directory right click menu in IDEA Project View, select the label some time before the crash and revert the old copy of workspace.xml.
In case .ipr file based format is used, your configurations will be stored in the <project>.iws file in the project root which you can restore in a similar way.
If the configurations were Shared, they are stored in .idea\runConfigurations directory as separate XML files or in the <project>.ipr file (if old project format is used).
If the Local history is blank and you are in Windows, try Restore previous versions right clicking the workspace.xml file or the <project>.iws one in Windows Explorer.
You can go to your main project and right click on it, select local history --> show history. Find some point in time where you think that system was stable (before crash) and click revert. This worked for me.
To me, this frequently happened on switching branches. Turning off "restore workspace on branch switching" helps to prevent the run configurations from getting lost.
Edit: Not sure if it actually has an impact, it still seems to happen to me sometimes, maybe less frequently though. I'll leave it here since the answer already has some upvotes, so maybe this was the solution for someone...
For every project in intellij there's a file created with all the configurations related to it.
Under the root directory of the project there's a hidden folder .idea in it is the workspace.xml with the configuration. workspace.xml is comprised of components one of which is responsible to hold the run/debug configurations.
If this file is getting corrupted it's difficult to restore these configurations if you don't have a backup of workspace.xml. to overcome it:
1. in intellij right click the workspace.xml file under project view and choose Local History -> Show History
2. if there's no history you can copy the component from a coworker with similar configurations.
3. backup in advance the workspace.xml and retrieve the RunManager component from it..
another good choice is to use the share option.
under each project's definition there's a checkbox share
Marking this checkbox will extract the definition for this project to an external location:
under the same .idea folder a new folder is being created runConfigurations and the configurations per project are being represented there in xml files.
The advantage of using share is that it can be copied and used for similar projects under other branched like QA and production
In my case, i've accidentally pressed Alt + Home and this bar disappeared, this combination toggles run bar at the top of IDEA window for me.
Here the screen with my bound actions on this keys. I hope it should help
Run configurations are stored in your project files. When IntelliJ (or your computer with IntelliJ running) crashes hard, the project files can become corrupted and unreadable. I don't know of a way to recover this unless you have your project files are backed up somewhere.
Navigate to your project folder and check weather any .idea folder is created or not,
if created copy your project and paste it other location ant try opening it;
it will work.
I sometimes have the problem that all the run/debug configurations are not created from CMake after being lost. I solved this by just deleting the whone list of configurations from the workspace.xml (from .idea folder).
This happened to me recently and I just restarted IntelliJ and they shared ones (in .run) are now restored.
In my case what happened was I did something that made IntelliJ recognize the project as a new application type, so it thought my old configuration was not valid for my project anymore and wasn't displaying it to me. I reverted my changes and the configuration appeared as an option again.
I guess this feature can't be removed from IntelliJ but I guess this can help:
Run/Debug configuration functionality might be hidden, so to show it go to:
View/Appearance/Navigation Bar
Very annoying problem in Intellij Idea for many years.
It's quite often breaks because of broken (connection to?) Ant debugger, used to create run configs.
I was periodically searching for a solution, but no success. Then today after disappeared Run Config to display in panel I did inspect contents of workspace.xml. All the run configs were there.
And then it turns out to be 7+ years bug clue...
Always spring out non-called Ant...
Happily, contents of workspace.xml in place with all your run config items, you can just
disable infamous plugin Ant debugger,
reload the project,
and all your run configs are displayed and available again))).
Happy to share with all of you the solution).