This does exist, but it's actually a feature of git log
:
git log -p [--follow] [-1] <path>
Note that -p
can also be used to show the inline diff from a single commit:
git log -p -1 <commit>
Options used:
-p
(also -u
or --patch
) is hidden deeeeeeeep in the git-log
man page, and is actually a display option for git-diff
. When used with log
, it shows the patch that would be generated for each commit, along with the commit information—and hides commits that do not touch the specified <path>
. (This behavior is described in the paragraph on --full-diff
, which causes the full diff of each commit to be shown.)
-1
shows just the most recent change to the specified file (-n 1
can be used instead of -1
); otherwise, all non-zero diffs of that file are shown.
--follow
is required to see changes that occurred prior to a rename.
As far as I can tell, this is the only way to immediately see the last set of changes made to a file without using git log
(or similar) to either count the number of intervening revisions or determine the hash of the commit.
To see older revisions changes, just scroll through the log, or specify a commit or tag from which to start the log. (Of course, specifying a commit or tag returns you to the original problem of figuring out what the correct commit or tag is.)
Credit where credit is due:
- I discovered
log -p
thanks to this answer.
- Credit to FranciscoPuga and this answer for showing me the
--follow
option.
- Credit to ChrisBetti for mentioning the
-n 1
option and atatko for mentioning the -1
variant.
- Credit to sweaver2112 for getting me to actually read the documentation and figure out what
-p
"means" semantically.
git diff HEAD^ <file_path>
– asgs Sep 12 '17 at 12:50HEAD^
is123abc
,HEAD^^
is456def
; and if there were other commits that didn't affect this file thenHEAD^
refers to them) – Chowlett Sep 12 '17 at 16:23