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I'm comparing remote branches, in order to see if a branch can safely be merged into Master, in order for Master to be released.

I'm doing the following:

git diff --name-status origin/develbranch ... origin/master

And I seem to get a correct list of files, like this:

AAAA    www/images/widget/topdown/right_dis.png
DDDD    www/includes/htmlpurifier/library/HTMLPurifier/DefinitionCache/Decorator.php

My questions are:

  1. Am I doing this correctly?
  2. If I merge these branches, the DDDD file won't be deleted in Master right?

1 Answer 1

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Actually, to get the diff the right way around you want to run

git diff --name-status origin/master ... origin/develbranch

That should work fine, but I'll show you some other nifty tricks:

  1. git checkout master; git branch --no-merged

    This will show all branches that aren't fast-forwardable to master, i.e. all non-merged branches.

  2. git checkout master; git merge --no-ff --no-commit develbranch; git diff

    This is the only way of knowing what the merge would actually look like. You can throw away the merge after you've looked at it with git reset --hard .

  3. git branch --contains develbranch

    Will show all the branches that develbranch could be fast-forwarded to. This is useful for checking which branches all the changes of develbranch have been merged to.

3
  • git diff origin/master...origin/my-branch did not indicate changes to me, unless I git fetch first. Is my origin remote here ignored or how can I force Git to compare remote branches? Oct 16, 2014 at 10:09
  • the only way to access remote branches is via git fetch (or pull)
    – opqdonut
    Apr 1, 2015 at 9:56
  • Would the syntax be this? git diff --name-status origin/master..origin/develbranch Apr 29, 2020 at 19:38

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