git question 

I'm working in a repository made by someone else, and it includes a build file.

This build file should NOT change upstream, however in order for it to build on my system I needed to make some OS-specific changes to the file.

Is there a way to tell git "hey, don't commit this file, and just leave it the way it is" without either removing my modifications to the file or sending my modifications upstream?

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git question, addressing everyone's responses 

Unfortunately it's part of a build system, so I can't rename it - it has to be stack.yaml

I can't set it to work on both because I need these lines on my system:

nix:
enable: true

and those lines don't work without nixos.

I can't use the global gitignore because I have stack.yaml in other repositories that use stack, and I have to commit the file in those.

and the .git/info/exclude file doesn't seem to work

git response -- Take with pinch of sault 

@lizardsquid Tere's a per-repo .gitignore file that SHOULD work! Just put each file you don't want committed, and it SHOULD NOT push those files for you.

git response -- Take with pinch of salt 

@lizardsquid (That took me like 4 mins to make sure about because setting up a a fresh install and my ssh keys weren't set properly, ugh) An example in a stupid hacked together project that I've made before: github.com/Whovian9369/OTPKeyS

git response -- Take with pinch of salt 

@lizardsquid Hah looks like I'm super late to that party. Sorry!

git question, another thing to try 

@lizardsquid All right, if exclude isn't working, try the command: `git update-index --assume-unchanged stack.yaml`

git question, another thing to try 

@Terrana @lizardsquid this is the command you want

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