107

As my question says, after changing files and adding new files in my repository, I normally commit files with git, but sometimes I need all the modified / changed files copied to a folder for organizing-myself reasons.

Any option?

6
  • If you tell us what you're actually trying to accomplish, our answers might be a little bit more helpful.
    – Cascabel
    Nov 8, 2010 at 17:37
  • It depends, sometimes just to ftp them Nov 8, 2010 at 17:54
  • But "to ftp them" is not a goal by itself. What is the rationale of doing this? I never wanted to create a zip of just the changed files, so I'm wondering about the use case. Nov 8, 2010 at 17:58
  • In this case it's more about copying them to a folder, and not zipping Nov 8, 2010 at 18:01
  • Ah, the old "why would you ever want to do something that I never do?". Use case is completely irrelevant to the question. The question is succinct enough.
    – John
    May 10, 2023 at 18:54

12 Answers 12

149

Assuming you mean you haven't yet committed, and want to package up all of the files that currently have local modifications (but not completely new files), you can get the list of modified files with git ls-files --modified. If you want the files which were changed by the last commit, you could use git diff --name-only HEAD^. Where you go from there is up to you. Examples:

zip modified-files.zip $(git ls-files --modified)
cp --parents $(git ls-files --modified) ../modified-files # Linux
rsync -R $(git ls-files --modified) ../modified-files # macOS

Note that this is using the versions of files in the working tree currently.

If you have spaces in filenames, you'll have to go to a little more trouble.

(Of course, depending on what you're really trying to do, you might be looking for git stash, which stashes away all modified files and leaves you with a clean working tree, or you could simply want to make a temporary branch to commit to.)

13
  • 1
    this is without commiting, how can I get the new files too. Nov 8, 2010 at 17:57
  • When I say new files that means before adding them to the repository Nov 8, 2010 at 18:02
  • 4
    I think I found what I was looking for: cp $(git ls-files --modified --others) modified-files. Thx a lot. Nov 8, 2010 at 18:04
  • 17
    use --parents to copy and create the folders: cp --parents $(git ls-files --modified) ../copyfolder/ Aug 1, 2014 at 13:47
  • 1
    zip modified-files.zip $(git ls-files --modified) only works with modified files. staged files WILL NOT be included. Aug 25, 2022 at 15:25
81

To do exactly what you requested (assuming you already committed and want to create an archive of the files changed by the last commit), you could do:

git archive --format=zip HEAD `git diff HEAD^ HEAD --name-only` > a.zip

If you have removed files in a commit, to prevent a pathspec error use --diff-filter=d:

git archive --format=zip HEAD `git diff --diff-filter=d HEAD^ HEAD --name-only` > a.zip

But maybe you actually want to create a patch using:

git diff HEAD^ HEAD > a.patch

and apply this patch where you need it using:

patch -p1 < a.patch

Of course, applying a patch only works if your target directory already contains the old version of your repository.

14
  • 2
    i recommend using git format-patch instead of piping git diff to a file
    – knittl
    Nov 8, 2010 at 17:55
  • 1
    this is after commiting, how can I get the new files too. Nov 8, 2010 at 17:58
  • 3
    One problem is, when you deleted something, you will get error: "fatal: path not found: XYZ" May 29, 2013 at 14:53
  • 1
    git archive worked perfect for me. I had to get the last 2 commits, so I did one of these: git archive --format=zip HEAD `git diff HEAD~2 HEAD --name-only` > a.zip
    – j.snyder
    Jul 22, 2013 at 15:21
  • 1
    The first command in this answer didn't work for me on Windows (7). For some reason it complained that the --name-only option was unknown. I think it's probably just an escaping issue? So to be lazy I installed Cygwin and was able to run it correctly from the Cygwin prompt.
    – John B
    Feb 26, 2014 at 15:51
21

If you use TortoiseGIt, it provides this too.
Choose the folder, in explorer
Right click,Choose menu, TortoiseGit-> Show Log.

Select working directory and the last commiitted version.
Right click. Compare revisions. Select files you want to save/export.
Right Click. Export to folder. Done.

2
  • I wish the TortoiseGit export tool allowed you to select multiple commits.
    – Corgalore
    Sep 19, 2017 at 14:04
  • It's astounding how much functionality Tortoise packs into the UI.
    – M Katz
    Jul 30, 2022 at 23:36
9

Zip the modified and newly created files in the git repository

zip mychanges.zip $({ (git ls-files --others --exclude-standard) ; (git ls-files --modified)})
1
  • This doesn't include new files (marked as "new file:" by git status). Jun 1, 2023 at 22:31
2

Assuming you don't have deleted or renamed files, this should do the trick

Copy:

cp --parents $(git status -s | egrep "M|A|AM" | rev | cut -d" " -f1 | rev) destination_folder

Zip:

zip modified.zip $(git status -s | egrep "M|A|AM" | rev | cut -d" " -f1 | rev)
7
  • the cp --parents seem to copy/create directories along with file, is there way to copy on the files and not create directory. I guess removing the --parents argument works just fine :) .
    – rainu
    Mar 1, 2020 at 8:19
  • --parents use full source file name under DIRECTORY The --parents argument places the files into the same folders structure on destination that they were on origin. For example, if you have modified files on include and source folders, the --parents argument places them into include and source on destination. [orig/folder_a/file_1, orig/folder_b/file_2] -> [dest/folder_a/file_1, dest/folder_b/file_2] This is very useful if you have modified files on different folders on the same project (for example include and source folders)
    – BRT
    May 13, 2020 at 12:52
  • If you add '??' to egrep "M|A|AM" like egrep "M|A|AM|??", you will also copy files that are not under version-control. This is useful for new files that are not added or commited yet
    – BRT
    May 13, 2020 at 13:01
  • When I add "M|A|AM|??" I get: egrep: repetition-operator operand invalid. 😞 Oct 30, 2020 at 0:44
  • 1
    @gonzobrains: -f3 won't work for AM files (it will return an empty string). Anyway, the egrep "M|A|AM" will falsely match files that contain M or A in their name. See my answer for a correct solution. Jun 1, 2023 at 22:50
2

Note that the git ls-files --modified command listed in other answers doesn't include new files.

I've been using the command below to back new and modified files in case my IDE screwed up when syncing from remote branches and its "Smart checkout" feature wasn't that smart:

cp --parents $(git status -s | egrep "^A|^ M" | cut -c 4-) ../modified-files # Linux
rsync -R $(git status -s | egrep "^A|^ M" | cut -c 4-) ../modified-files # macOS

Let's look at how we obtain the list of new and modified files:

git status -s | grep "^A\|^ M" | cut -c 4-
  • -s stands for --short and it will produce an output like this:

     M .gitignore
    A  _includes/code/howto/manage-data.create.py
    A  _includes/code/howto/manage-data.create.ts
     M _includes/code/howto/search.generative.ts
     M _includes/code/howto/search.hybrid.ts
    AM developers/weaviate/manage-data/create.mdx
    ?? _includes/code/howto/jeopardy_1k.csv
    
  • grep "^A\|^ M" filters for Added or Modified files

  • cut -c 4- cuts those first 3 characters and returns the filename starting from the 4th character

The other options are:

1
mkdir -p /c/temp/blah && cp $(git diff <your commit hash> --name-only) /c/temp/blah

I'm using Git Bash on windows.

1

If you have TortoiseGit, even before committing also you can export all the changed files to folder (which contains files under proper directory structure). Just perform following steps.

  1. Right click on folder which you want to see changes
  2. Select Commit to
  3. Once files are visible in box, select all files
  4. Right click - > Export selection to...
  5. Select folder where you want to put these files.
  6. Done.
1

Had the same requirement. Got the input from the first answer and created a tool (Windows Only) for myself. Which copies all the added/ modified files to a backup folder.

Tool Overview

Git-Uncommited-Files-Backup-Tool-Windows

Just wrote this quick for fun. Just posted incase it'd help someone. (Highly welcomed for modifications).

Also, you can schedule backups using the Task Scheduler.

1

Gathered from different solutions, here's what I used:

git archive --format=zip HEAD `git diff --name-only [from-commit-hash]` > changes.zip

It'll zip changes from any particular commit.

like:

git archive --format=zip HEAD `git diff --name-only 4a944407aec42222761cdc23c3e0b89a0c1e26a1` > changes.zip
0

Here is a script which can make this process a lot easier, it will copy all changed file to used defined directory and also maintain the directory structure of code base.

run: sh scr.sh

================================================

#!/bin/sh
FILES=`git ls-files --modified`
for x in $FILES
do
        prev_dir=$PWD
        echo "MY Dir = $prev_dir"
        mkdir -p $1/$x
        cd $1/$x
        cd ../
        rm -r *
        cp $prev_dir/$x ./.
        cd $prev_dir
done

================================================

2
  • how do I check FILES is empty and show message to terminal screen and set destination folder?
    – May'Habit
    Sep 18, 2019 at 1:49
  • I change file in root folder and run your command, it'll create a folder with same name. Why it doesnt copy file to another folder instead create folder?
    – May'Habit
    Sep 18, 2019 at 1:58
0

You can export your last modified files via git ls-files --modified Just create a .sh file with the following code And execute it.

#!/bin/sh
FILES=`git ls-files --modified`
export_dir="place your export dir"
for x in $FILES
do
   prev_dir=$PWD
   folder=$(dirname $x)
   echo "Exporting to..." $export_dir/$x
   cp $prev_dir/$x $export_dir/$x
done

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