I'm playing with git in isolation on my own machine, and even like that I find it difficult to maintain a mental model of all my branches and commits. I know I can do a git log to see the commit history from where I am, but is there a way to see the entire branch topography, something like these ascii maps that seem to be used everywhere for explaining branches?

      .-A---M---N---O---P
     /     /   /   /   /
    I     B   C   D   E
     \   /   /   /   /
      `-------------'

It just feels like someone coming along and trying to pick up my repository would have difficulty working out exactly what was going on.

I guess I'm influenced by AccuRev's stream browser...

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70% accept rate
duplicate of stackoverflow.com/questions/1064361/… – leif81 Jan 27 '11 at 21:02
@leif81, a half-duplicate, for me. @Masi explicitly excluded gitk in his question. – Benjol Jan 28 '11 at 7:02
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7 Answers

up vote 71 down vote accepted

git log --graph or gitk. (Both also accept --all, which will show all the branches instead of just the current one.)

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2  
Your's is the shortest answer, but it was the magic --all which I was missing. – Benjol Dec 3 '09 at 10:15
1  
+1 to push you over :) – Benjol Dec 3 '09 at 11:44
Thanks. Although I think 9999 was an amusing score to have :) – jrockway Dec 3 '09 at 11:54
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Yeah, that's why it caught my eye, but I figured it had to happen sometime... – Benjol Dec 3 '09 at 14:58
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I usually use

git log --graph --full-history --all --pretty=format:"%h%x09%d%x20%s"

With colors (if your shell is Bash):

git log --graph --full-history --all --color \
        --pretty=format:"%x1b[31m%h%x09%x1b[32m%d%x1b[0m%x20%s"

This will print text-based representation like this:

* 040cc7c       (HEAD, master) Mannual is NOT built by default
* a29ceb7       Removed offensive binary file that was compiled on my machine and was hence incompatible with other machines.
| * 901c7dd     (cvc3) cvc3 now configured before building
| * d9e8b5e     More sane Yices SMT solver caller
| | * 5b98a10   (nullvars) All uninitialized variables get zero inits
| |/
| * 1cad874     CFLAGS for cvc3 to work succesfully
| *   1579581   Merge branch 'llvm-inv' into cvc3
| |\
| | * a9a246b   nostaticalias option
| | * 73b91cc   Comment about aliases.
| | * 001b20a   Prints number of iteration and node.
| |/
|/|
| * 39d2638     Included header files to cvc3 sources
| * 266023b     Added cvc3 to blast infrastructure.
| * ac9eb10     Initial sources of cvc3-1.5
|/
* d642f88       Option -aliasstat, by default stats are suppressed

(You could just use git log --format=oneline, but it will tie commit messages to numbers, which looks less pretty IMHO).

To make a shortcut for this command, you may want to edit your ~/.gitconfig file:

[alias]
  gr = log --graph --full-history --all --color --pretty=tformat:"%x1b[31m%h%x09%x1b[32m%d%x1b[0m%x20%s%x20%x1b[33m(%an)%x1b[0m"

However, as Sodel the Vociferous notes in the comments, such long formatting command is hard to memorize. Usually, it's not a problem as you may put it into the ~/.gitconfig file. However, if you sometimes have to log in to a remote machine where you can't modify the config file, you could use a more simple but faster to type version:

git log --graph --oneline
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If you like dates: git log --graph --full-history --all --color --date=short --pretty=format:"%x1b[31m%h%x09%x1b[32m%d%x1b[0m%x20%ad %s" – sehugg Dec 11 '10 at 3:27
--oneline is a more memorable substitute for all that pretty formatting deep-magic. – Sodel the Vociferous Sep 28 '11 at 4:38
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@SodeltheVociferous, indeed, I didn't approach the problem from the side you talk about; I expanded my answer. – Pavel Shved Sep 28 '11 at 7:35
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I like, with git log, to do:

 git log --graph --oneline --branches

(also with --all, for viewing remote branches as well)

Works with recent Git releases: introduced since 1.6.3 (Thu, 7 May 2009)

  • "--pretty=<style>" option to the log family of commands can now be spelled as "--format=<style>".
    In addition, --format=%formatstring is a short-hand for --pretty=tformat:%formatstring.

  • "--oneline" is a synonym for "--pretty=oneline --abbrev-commit".

PS D:\git\tests\finalRepo> git log --graph --oneline --branches --all
* 4919b68 a second bug10 fix
* 3469e13 a first bug10 fix
* dbcc7aa a first legacy evolution
| * 55aac85 another main evol
| | * 47e6ee1 a second bug10 fix
| | * 8183707 a first bug10 fix
| |/
| * e727105 a second evol for 2.0
| * 473d44e a main evol
|/
* b68c1f5 first evol, for making 1.0

You can also limit the span of the log display (number of commits):

PS D:\git\tests\finalRepo> git log --graph --oneline --branches --all -5
* 4919b68 a second bug10 fix
* 3469e13 a first bug10 fix
* dbcc7aa a first legacy evolution
| * 55aac85 another main evol
| | * 47e6ee1 a second bug10 fix

(show only the last 5 commits)


What I do not like about the current selected solution is:

 git log --graph

It displayed way too much info (when I want only to look at a quick summary):

PS D:\git\tests\finalRepo> git log --graph
* commit 4919b681db93df82ead7ba6190eca6a49a9d82e7
| Author: VonC <vonc@laposte.net>
| Date:   Sat Nov 14 13:42:20 2009 +0100
|
|     a second bug10 fix
|
* commit 3469e13f8d0fadeac5fcb6f388aca69497fd08a9
| Author: VonC <vonc@laposte.net>
| Date:   Sat Nov 14 13:41:50 2009 +0100
|
|     a first bug10 fix
|

gitk is great, but forces me to leave the shell session for another window, whereas displaying the last n commits quickly is often enough.

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Gitg is a great tool for Linux, similar to Gitx for OS X. Just run 'gitg' on the command line from somewhere inside your repository's tree structure (same with gitx).

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To any of these recipes (based on git log or gitk), you can add --simplify-by-decoration to collapse the uninteresting linear parts of the history. This makes much more of the topology visible at once. I can now understand large histories that would be incomprehensible without this option!

I felt the need to post this because it doesn't seem to be as well-known as it should be. It doesn't appear in most of the stackoverflow questions about visualizing history, and it took me quite a bit of searching to find--even after I knew I wanted it! I finally found it in this Debian bug report. The first mention in stackoverflow seems to be this answer by Antoine Pelisse.

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Giggle draws nice graphs

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Gitx is also a fantastic visualization tool if you happen to be on OS X.

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