The normalized way to reference a commit is abbreviated hash (subject, date)
, without the time. It is called a "reference".
With Git 2.25 (Q1 2020), "git log
" family learned "--pretty=reference
" that gives the name of a commit in the format that is often used to refer to it in log messages.
And that format is close to what you are looking for.
See commit 3798149, commit 1f0fc1d, commit 618a855, commit ac52d94, commit 3e8ed3b, commit 4982516, commit f0f9de2, commit fb2ffa7, commit bae74c9, commit bd00717 (20 Nov 2019) by Denton Liu (Denton-L
).
See commit 0df6211 (20 Nov 2019) by René Scharfe (rscharfe
).
(Merged by Junio C Hamano -- gitster
-- in commit d37cfe3, 10 Dec 2019)
pretty
: provide short date format
Signed-off-by: René Scharfe
Signed-off-by: Denton Liu
Add the placeholders %as
and %cs
to format author date and committer date, respectively, without the time part, like --date=short
does, i.e. like YYYY-MM-DD
.
Why?
Because of contribution and patch:
pretty
: implement 'reference
' format
Based-on-a-patch-by: SZEDER Gábor
Signed-off-by: Denton Liu
The standard format for referencing other commits within some projects (such as git.git) is the reference
format.
This is described in Documentation/SubmittingPatches
as:
If you want to reference a previous commit in the history of a stable branch, use the format "abbreviated hash (subject, date)", like this:
....
Commit f86a374 (pack-bitmap.c: fix a memleak, 2015-03-30)
noticed that ...
....
Since this format is so commonly used, standardize it as a pretty format.
The pretty-formats
documentation now includes:
'reference
'
<abbrev hash> (<title line>, <short author date>)
This format is used to refer to another commit in a commit message and is the same as --pretty='format:%C(auto)%h (%s, %ad)'
.
By default, the date is formatted with --date=short
unless another --date
option is explicitly specified.
As with any format:
with format placeholders, its output is not affected by other options like --decorate
and --walk-reflogs
.
Before Git 2.25, as shown in WisdmLabs's answer, you might do:
git show -s --date=short --pretty='format:%h (%s, %ad)' <commit>
Now (Git 2.25+):
git show -s --pretty=reference <commit>
Example with Git 2.32 (Q2 2021), and "log --format=...
" that show timestamps in various formats.
See commit 3593ebd, commit fbfcaec (25 Apr 2021) by Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason (avar
).
(Merged by Junio C Hamano -- gitster
-- in commit e5d99d3, 07 May 2021)
pretty tests
: simplify %aI/%cI
date format test
Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason
Change a needlessly complex test for the %aI/%cI date formats (iso-strict) added in 466fb67 ("pretty
: provide a strict ISO 8601 date format", 2014-08-29, Git v2.2.0-rc0 -- merge) to instead use the same pattern used to test %as/%cs
since 0df6211 ("pretty
: provide short date format", 2019-11-19, Git v2.25.0-rc0 -- merge listed in batch #5).