153

I've looked around, and am not sure if this is possible, but here goes:

I have a (javascript) file (say /lib/client.js) in which I have a unique identifier assigned to a variable, like so: var identifier = "SOME_IDENTIFIER";

You can think of the identifier like a version number: Periodically, we'll change this variable to a new identifier.

What I'd like to do is find all of the unique identifiers we've ever used. How can I do this with git?

I imagine there might be a way to search through the git history, and print the line matching "var identifier =". I could de-dupe this list manually.

Anyway, I'd appreciate any insight here. Thanks.

1

6 Answers 6

165

Since Git 1.8.4, there is a more direct way to answer your question.

Assuming that line 110 is the line saying var identifier = "SOME_IDENTIFIER";, then do this:

git log -L110,110:/lib/client.js

This will return every commit which touched that line of code.

See git-log's documentation for the -L command line parameter.

61

See the man page for git-log and gitdiffcore. I believe this command would do it, but it might not be quite right:

git log -G "var identifier =" file.js

EDIT: Here's a rough start for a bash script to show the actual lines. This might be more what you're looking for.

for c in $(git log -G "something" --format=%H -- file.js); do
    git --no-pager grep -e "something" $c -- file.js
done

It uses git log -G to find the interesting commits, using --format=%H to produce a list of commit hashes. It then iterates over each interesting commit, asking git grep to show the lines from that commit and file that contain the regex, prefaced with the commit hash.


EDIT: Changed to use -G instead of -S as suggested in comments.

5
  • @Rob - thanks for this - small edit to your script though - putting just the filename only shows commits that just affect that file - if a commit referenced other files it is not listed Sep 7, 2012 at 20:07
  • @AdrianCornish - Glad it was helpful. I think the OP wanted to just look at one file, but you are quite correct that removing the filename is probably a more generally useful script.
    – rob
    Sep 9, 2012 at 1:19
  • I have a more difficult situation. The file in question moved from paht_a/file to path_b/file. Now when I do it in path_b it only show changes up to when the file moves from path_a to path_b. If I do it in path_a it tells me fatal: ambiguous argument 'file': unknown revision or path not in the working tree.
    – Andy Song
    Jul 15, 2013 at 3:59
  • @AndySong - If the string you are searching for is unique enough, perhaps you can just leave off the file name and still get what you're looking for.
    – rob
    Jul 21, 2013 at 16:25
  • Was more convenient for me - place a blank line after each commit, enumerate lines: sfile=path/to/some_file; sfind='string_to_find'; for c in $(git log -G $sfind --format=%H -- $sfile); do git --no-pager grep -e $sfind -n $c -- $sfile; echo; done
    – John_West
    Nov 22, 2015 at 18:56
14

You can also do this with gitk:

gitk file.js

In the "commit" drop down, choose "adding/removing string:" and in the text box next to it, enter "var identifier =", and any commits that add or remove lines that contain that string will be highlighted.

5
  • This helped pinpoint the commit at which the line containing "var identifier =" was added, but it is not showing subsequent commits that modified this line.
    – findchris
    Mar 30, 2012 at 20:35
  • 2
    Have you tried git blame file.js or git gui blame file.js? Mar 30, 2012 at 20:47
  • 1
    I know what git blame does; I am looking for a full history of revisions, not a single diff.
    – findchris
    Mar 30, 2012 at 20:50
  • 1
    git gui blame file.js will do that...it'll show you all revisions of a file and who changed it; you can just click backwards through the history. Mar 30, 2012 at 20:53
  • I ended up stepping through visually with gitk. I imagine there is some elegant git technique to do this, but gitk was good enough. Thanks.
    – findchris
    Apr 3, 2012 at 1:10
10

If you adapt @rob's answer just a bit, git log will basically do this for you, if all you need is a visual comparison:

git log -U0 -S "var identifier =" path/to/file

-U0 means output in patch mode (-p), and show zero lines of context around the patch.

You can even do this across branches:

git log -U0 -S "var identifier =" branchname1 branchname2 -- path/to/file

There may be a way to suppress the diff header, but I don't know of one.

1
5

In magit, you can do this with

l, =L

It will then ask you for file and start,end lines.

0

I wanted to list all the pet names that the Linux kernel has been given. This is set in the Makefile in the kernel Git repo (although this isn't the full history). I didn't want to rely on it being a specific line number and I wanted the line's actual content rather than the commit refs, and I wanted to remove duplicates without affecting the order. I came up with this:

git log --format=format:%H Makefile | xargs -I{} git show {}:Makefile | awk -F '=' '/^NAME = /{print $NF}' | awk '!x[$0]++'

It first uses git log to get the commits affecting that file then passes the file content, obtained with git show, at that ref through awk which extracts the line of interest and a 2nd awk de-duplicates the list.

Just in case it's useful to anyone.

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