3

When using 'git difftool' it passes relative path to external diff application when one of the files is the latest version.

~/.gitconfig

[difftool "echo"]
    cmd = echo $LOCAL $REMOTE
    path =
[diff]
    tool = echo

example command

git difftool e3d654bc65404b9229abc0251a6793ffbfccdee3 6c6b5fd34196402e4fa0e8cf42f681d9fbd5359f

Viewing: 'app/views/shared/_graph.html.slim'
Launch 'echo' [Y/n]: y
app/views/shared/_graph.html.slim /var/folders/fs/3pgvhwkj2vq4qt3q6n74s5880000gn/T//XGFoyj__graph.html.slim

In this example app/views/shared/_graph.html.slim is relative path which would be passed to external diff application and since it is relative the diff application doesn't know how to open it.

How can I make 'git difftool' to ALWAYS export absolute paths?

4 Answers 4

4

Put the echo command inside a wrapper script

$ tail -5 ~/.gitconfig
[difftool "echo"]
        cmd = /tmp/test/echo.sh $LOCAL $REMOTE
        path =
[diff]
        tool = echo
$ cat /tmp/test/echo.sh
#!/bin/sh

LOCAL="$1"
REMOTE="$2"

case "$LOCAL"
in
        /*)
                L="$LOCAL"
                ;;
        *)
                L=`git rev-parse --show-toplevel`/"$LOCAL"
                ;;
esac

case "$REMOTE"
in
        /*)
                R="$REMOTE"
                ;;
        *)
                R=`git rev-parse --show-toplevel`/"$REMOTE"
                ;;
esac

echo "$L" "$R"
$

Then it will output the absolute path for files:

$ git status
# On branch master
# Changes not staged for commit:
#   (use "git add <file>..." to update what will be committed)
#   (use "git checkout -- <file>..." to discard changes in working directory)
#
#       modified:   dummy
#
no changes added to commit (use "git add" and/or "git commit -a")
$ git difftool

Viewing: 'a/b/c/dummy'
Hit return to launch 'echo': 
/tmp/vsDkDe_dummy /tmp/test/a/b/c/dummy
$
1
  • Same idea than my answer, but more detailed. +1
    – VonC
    Mar 14, 2014 at 8:07
3

This is solution based on hlovdal and VonC answers which I've ended up using.

~/.git_absolute_path.sh

#!/bin/sh

FILE_PATH="$1"

case "$FILE_PATH"
in
        /*)
                NEW_PATH="$FILE_PATH"
                ;;
        *)
                NEW_PATH=`git rev-parse --show-toplevel`/"$FILE_PATH"
                ;;
esac

echo "$NEW_PATH"

~/.gitconfig

[difftool "echo"]
    cmd = echo `~/.git_absolute_path.sh $LOCAL` `~/.git_absolute_path.sh $REMOTE`
    path =
[mergetool "echo"]
    cmd = echo `~/.git_absolute_path.sh $LOCAL` `~/.git_absolute_path.sh $REMOTE` `~/.git_absolute_path.sh $BASE` `~/.git_absolute_path.sh $MERGED`
    trustExitCode = true
[diff]
    tool = echo

the difference here is that we are reusing the single script for each path.

0
2

You could use git rev-parse --show-toplevel to add before your $LOCAL variable in order to get the full path.

Interestingly enough, there is a patch in progress (February 2014) which would add that very command in order to make difftool work from within a submodule:

"[PATCH] difftool: support repositories with .git-files"

The git-difftool.perl#find_worktree becomes

sub find_worktree 
{ 
    # Git->repository->wc_path() does not honor changes to the working 
    # tree location made by $ENV{GIT_WORK_TREE} or the 'core.worktree' 
    # config variable. 
    return Git::command_oneline('rev-parse', '--show-toplevel'); 
} 
1
  • Same idea as my answer, but additional information. +1
    – hlovdal
    Mar 14, 2014 at 16:42
1

Although it is not documented, it appears that git interprets $PWD as the Print Working Directory Linux command even when invoked from the Windows command prompt and this is the working directory of the git repository.

Therefore, you can use $PWD alongside $BASE, $LOCAL, $REMOTE and $MERGED.

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