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I want to merge two branches that have been separated for a while and wanted to know which files have been modified.

Came across this link: http://linux.yyz.us/git-howto.html (moved to web.archive.org) which was quite useful.

The tools to compare branches I've come across are:

  • git diff master..branch
  • git log master..branch
  • git shortlog master..branch

Was wondering if there's something like "git status master..branch" to only see those files that are different between the two branches.

Without creating a new tool, I think this is the closest you can get to do that now (which of course will show repeats if a file was modified more than once):

  • git diff master..branch | grep "^diff"

Was wondering if there's something I missed...

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  • 24
    How many others find the title of this question misleading? It is actually about finding the file differences between two branches. What I came here looking for was how to see file differences between two revisions on the same branch. Or am I the only one? Mar 18, 2016 at 10:19
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    @SandeepanNath: with git there is no difference. You are ALWAYS referring to individual commits. Mar 21, 2016 at 2:54
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    @SandeepanNath: instead of using the branch names then you can take the answers below and just specify the commit IDs instead. Or even refer the commits by their tag names if you create tags when rolling out. Mar 21, 2016 at 6:50
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    @SandeepanNath You cannot compare 2 branches, you must specify the revision. So comparing 2 branches is comparing 2 revisions. Dec 15, 2017 at 15:37
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    @SandeepanNath think of a branch name as just an alias for the last commit on that branch (aka HEAD)
    – cygnus
    May 6, 2020 at 16:38

21 Answers 21

2905

To compare the current branch against main branch:

$ git diff --name-status main

To compare any two branches:

$ git diff --name-status firstbranch..yourBranchName

There is more options to git diff in the official documentation (and specifically --name-status option).

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  • 4
    What's do each of the indices on the left hand side mean (I see a lot of M's and D's)? Apr 5, 2013 at 18:25
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    @user446936 - you can see what the letters mean in the git status man page @ kernel.org/pub/software/scm/git/docs/git-status.html - in particular, M == modified, D == deleted Apr 11, 2013 at 18:34
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    git diff --name-status your_branch...master outputs the changes that occurred on master since your_branch was created from it
    – Radu
    Aug 20, 2013 at 10:38
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    I get unknown revision or path not in the working tree. Oct 15, 2015 at 14:18
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    It worth to mention '--name-only' option. It provide information only about the names of the files that changed, without status-codes. If might be more helpful in some scripts.
    – Vladislav
    Nov 13, 2020 at 18:10
442

Try

$ git diff --stat --color master..branchName

This will give you more info about each change, while still using the same number of lines.

You can also flip the branches to get an even clearer picture of the difference if you were to merge the other way:

$ git diff --stat --color branchName..master
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  • 80
    If you have (highly recommended, imho) git color turned on (config --global color.ui true), you can skip the --color. (I have lks - lazy keyboard syndrome.)
    – Art Swri
    Mar 10, 2012 at 21:35
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    I'm with you on color! BTW I meant to say git config --global color.ui true - to be complete.
    – Art Swri
    Mar 10, 2012 at 22:13
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    Does not work, throws errors: fatal: ambiguous argument 'master..branchName': unknown revision or path not in the working tree. Jan 18, 2017 at 15:15
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    @TomášZato sorry but you need to swap "branchName" with the name of your branch.
    – Gerry
    Jan 30, 2017 at 12:01
172

Also keep in mind that git has cheap and easy branching. If I think a merge could be problematic I create a branch for the merge. So if master has the changes I want to merge in and ba is my branch that needs the code from master I might do the following:

git checkout ba
git checkout -b ba-merge
git merge master
.... review new code and fix conflicts....
git commit
git checkout ba
git merge ba-merge
git branch -d ba-merge
git merge master

End result is that I got to try out the merge on a throw-away branch before screwing with my branch. If I get my self tangled up I can just delete the ba-merge branch and start over.

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  • 5
    Awesome. I have never thought of branching that way. I think this should be considered as part of the "best practices" when merging.
    – egelev
    Jul 1, 2015 at 14:08
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    @EricAnderson Right, it's a graph. SVN sticks like gum under a school desk. thx.
    – Josef.B
    May 2, 2017 at 4:10
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    Why do you need to do last step 'git merge master' if ba-merge already had master
    – qwebek
    Sep 4, 2018 at 14:30
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    You could leave it off. The only reason it would be useful is if new stuff landing in master while you were working on reviewing the code and fixing conflicts. Sep 4, 2018 at 14:49
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    @EricAnderson why would you need a throw away branch if something failed during merge? Isn't just cancelling the merge changes be enough? Something like, git reset --hard; git clean -fd ?
    – nawfal
    Oct 18, 2018 at 18:19
61

If anyone is trying to generate a diff file from two branches :

git diff master..otherbranch > myDiffFile.diff
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  • 2
    This has come in handy especially with large branches containing a lot of differences.
    – vandsh
    Apr 7, 2015 at 18:07
  • This is useful when the difference is really large. By default it would not show all diff in the console (I was wondering why), passing the diff to a file is the way to go in such case. May 3, 2019 at 7:52
46

There is also a GUI based method.

You can use gitk.

  1. Run:

    $ gitk --all
    
  2. Right click on a commit of a branch and select Mark this commit in the pop-up menu.

  3. Right click on a commit of another branch and select Diff this -> marked commit or Diff marked commit -> this.

Then there will be a changed files list in the right bottom panel and diff details in the left bottom panel.

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  • 4
    @Orwellophile I upload a video to show how to do it. I hope it will help to you.
    – Yantao Xie
    Oct 20, 2015 at 9:43
  • Wow, just for me, I feel special. I've bookmarked it in delicious.com for future reference and extra google-foo. Oct 21, 2015 at 15:29
  • Severely underrated answer. Thanks!
    – Koshinae
    Mar 6, 2020 at 9:35
40

One more option, using meld in this case:

git difftool -d master otherbranch

This allows not only to see the differences between files, but also provides a easy way to point and click into a specific file.

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    May want to set meld as default difftool: git config --global diff.tool meld
    – bwv549
    Sep 8, 2014 at 15:19
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    This is my favorite because it will use whatever difftool you configure.
    – Josiah
    Mar 3, 2017 at 15:08
  • Not supported on OSX. :-(
    – Mike S.
    Jun 10, 2018 at 12:36
  • @MikeS. please checkout this answer stackoverflow.com/a/12815806/151918 it contains instructions for OSX. It works for me at least, hope it helps.
    – rsilva4
    Jun 11, 2018 at 10:39
  • Thank you! Been searching around and this command makes it so easy to see differences between 2 branches.
    – Patric Hua
    Feb 4, 2021 at 18:08
29

Note that git makes it easy to just try out the merge and back away from any problems if you don't like the result. It might be easier than looking for potential problems in advance.

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    David, that's a good point, although it'd be nice to just know what's going on before hand...
    – johannix
    May 5, 2009 at 1:14
21

And if you are looking for changes only among certain file(s), then:

git diff branch1 branch2 -- myfile1.js myfile2.js

branch1 is optional and your current branch (the branch you are on) will be considered by default if branch1 is not provided. e.g:

git diff master -- controller/index.js
15

When working collaboratively, or on multiple features at once, it's common that the upstream or even your master contains work that is not included in your branch, and will incorrectly appear in basic diffs.

If your Upstream may have moved, you should do this:

git fetch
git diff origin/master...

Just using git diff master can include, or fail to include, relevant changes.

0
11

If you are using IntelliJ IDEA, you can also compare any branch with your current working branch. See http://www.jetbrains.com/idea/webhelp/merging-deleting-and-comparing-branches.html#d288093e3827 for more info. This is available in the free edition as well.

9

There are plenty of answers here, but I wanted to add something that I commonly use. IF you are in one of the branches that you would like to compare I typically do one of the following. For the sake of this answer we will say that we are in our secondary branch. Depending on what view you need at the time will depend on which you choose, but most of the time I'm using the second option of the two. The first option may be handy if you are trying to revert back to an original copy -- either way, both get the job done!

This will compare master to the branch that we are in (which is secondary) and the original code will be the added lines and the new code will be considered the removed lines

git diff ..master

OR

This will also compare master to the branch that we are in (which is secondary) and the original code will be the old lines and the new code will be the new lines

git diff master..
8

There are two branches lets say

  • A (Branch on which you are working)
  • B (Another branch with which you want to compare)

Being in branch A you can type

git diff --color B

then this will give you a output of

enter image description here

The important point about this is

  1. Text in green is inside present in Branch A

  2. Text in red is present in Branch B

2

If you are using Github / Github Enterprise, you can use the Web UI by hitting the url /compare of your repository path, for instance, https://github.com/http4s/http4s/compare. You can select the branch / commit / tag that you want to compare: Github Compare Screenshot

And the diff will be presented in the github interface at the url /compare/{x1}...{x2} where are x2 and x1 are the branch / commit / tag you want to compare, for instance: https://github.com/http4s/http4s/compare/main...dotty

You can see more in the Github Doc.

1
  • Thanks a lot. Have been struggling to find this.
    – chetan
    Jan 8, 2022 at 11:59
1

OP wanted some other option, but probably it can be helpful to somebody: it is possible to see modified file list linked to commits

git log --name-status other-branch..

It is also works with commits

git log --name-status commit1..commit2
0
git diff revision_n revision_m

if revision_n and revision_m are successive commits then it outputs same as git show revision_m

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    Perfect for my use case. I needed only the file names, so I used --name-only to get a list of changed files. git diff --name-only rev_old rev_new Jan 15, 2021 at 12:40
0

For people who are looking for a GUI solution, Git Cola has a very nice "Branch Diff Viewer (Diff -> Branches..).

1
  • Question is asking for a command line solution, not a GUI. Aug 17, 2023 at 13:03
0

I made a pipeline that outputs a list of all filenames that have been modified between 2 branches. This is useful for piping to another program, not for viewing the diffs directly as other responses.

yes n | git difftool main..develop | grep V |sed "s#Viewing ([0-9]*/[0-9]*): ##g"

Or, if you simply want the difference between the current branch and another one:

yes n | git difftool develop | grep V |sed "s#Viewing ([0-9]*/[0-9]*): ##g"

git difftool develop will prompt you for opening files in your difftool. I use yes n to refuse everything and then simply format the text with grep and sed.

3
  • Probably it's better to remove quotes in output
    – mechnicov
    Apr 19, 2023 at 17:01
  • @mechnicov may I ask why? I prefer leaving the quotes just in case there is some badly named file with spaces or other weird characters. If you want to remove them, here's the pipeline: yes n | git difftool develop | grep V |sed "s#Viewing ([0-9]*/[0-9]*): ##g" | sed "s/'//g" May 29, 2023 at 12:36
  • It's easy to copy-paste file names without them
    – mechnicov
    May 29, 2023 at 12:45
0

Only file paths without commit msg for parsing

All the other answers were giving me list of paths to files but also commit messages between file paths. Below are solutions that produce file paths but without commit msg. They are handy if you want to parse file paths later and don't care about the commit msg.

file paths prefixed with modification status

git log --name-status --pretty='' commit1..commit2

only file paths

git log --name-only --pretty='' commit1..commit2

only unique file paths

git log --name-only --pretty='' commit1..commit2 | sort -u
-1

You can also use a visual diff.

For example, if you are using Sourcetree, you can simply select any two commits in log view.

(I personally prefer using a GUI in most cases for this, and I'm posting this for those who may not be familiar with GUI options.)

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  • Question is asking for a command line solution, not a GUI. Aug 17, 2023 at 13:03
-2

If you like GUI and are using Windows, here is an easy way.

  1. Download WinMerge
  2. Check out the two branches into different folders
  3. Do a folder by folder compare using WinMerge. You can also easily make modifications if one of the branches is the one you are working on.
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  • It is not the simplest way, there actually is no need to download repos to diff between branches. Jul 19, 2019 at 20:31
  • It is indeed not the simplest way, but it is the GUI way, which often is a lot easier especially for seeing the diffs in all the files Jul 20, 2019 at 21:13
-3

You can also easily compare branches for changed files using for example TortoiseGit. Just click on Browse References and pick the branches you want to compare.

For example if you compare your branch with master you will get as a result list of files that will be changed in master if you decide to merge your-branch into master.

Remmber that you will have different result if you compare master with your-branch and your-branch with master.

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    the question seems to be about native git utility Jan 30, 2018 at 14:52

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