Is it possible to extract a single file or diff of a file from a git stash without popping the stash changeset off?
10 Answers
On the git stash manpage you can read (in the "Discussion" section, just after "Options" description) that:
A stash is represented as a commit whose tree records the state of the working directory, and its first parent is the commit at HEAD when the stash was created.
So you can treat stash (e.g. stash@{0}
is first / topmost stash) as a merge commit, and use:
$ git diff stash@{0}^1 stash@{0} -- <filename>
Explanation: stash@{0}^1
means the first parent of the given stash, which as stated in the explanation above is the commit at which changes were stashed away. We use this form of "git diff" (with two commits) because stash@{0}
/ refs/stash
is a merge commit, and we have to tell git which parent we want to diff against. More cryptic:
$ git diff stash@{0}^! -- <filename>
should also work (see git rev-parse manpage for explanation of rev^!
syntax, in "Specifying ranges" section).
Likewise, to answer your question, you can use git checkout to check a single file out of the stash (note that this will not merge the stash like git stash apply
does—that means any changes made to the file will be overwritten):
$ git checkout stash@{0} -- <filename>
or to save it under another filename:
$ git show stash@{0}:<full filename> > <newfile>
or
$ git show stash@{0}:./<relative filename> > <newfile>
(note that here <full filename> is full pathname of a file relative to top directory of a project (think: relative to stash@{0}
)).
You might need to protect stash@{0}
from shell expansion, i.e. use "stash@{0}"
or 'stash@{0}'
.
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19This is pretty cool... I didn't really understand how stash worked until I read your answer (which lead me to the git-checkout addition). I really didn't get that, when you do a stash, git saves TWO commits -- one for the state of the index and one for the state of the working copy which is a merge between the index and the original HEAD. This explains the odd trees I've seen when I visualize the repository with "gitk --all" when stashes are present.– Pat NotzCommented Jul 9, 2009 at 20:56
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6Mostly I find the git checkout application to be the best way to accomplish what it is I wanted to do. However I was curious and double-checked
git checkout
's man page. It cannot drop the file into another location. There is a reference to this in: stackoverflow.com/questions/888414/…– DannyCommented Jul 9, 2009 at 22:15 -
73Note that the
git checkout
approach copies the exact file from the stash -- it doesn't merge it with what's in your working directory likegit stash apply
would. (So if you have any changes from the base the stash was created on, they'll be lost). Commented Apr 5, 2013 at 22:04 -
6Note that in order for
git stash apply
to merge the changes in a file that has been modified in the work tree since the file was stashed, that file in the work tree must be staged. For auto-merge to work, the same files cannot be modified both in the working copy and in the stashed copy-to-be-merged. Finally, stash apply doesn't remove the item from stash likegit stash pop
would.– VilleCommented Nov 4, 2013 at 16:15 -
6
git checkout stash@{0} -- <filename>
Notes:
Warning: this will not merge the file—any existing changes to the file will be overwritten.
Make sure you put spaces around the
--
.If the stash you want the file from isn't the latest one, replace
0
with your specific stash number. (To list stashes, rungit stash list
.)
Based on Jakub Narębski's answer -- Shorter version
-
1You can also use the stash name
git checkout stash^{/'Stash name here'} -- <filename>
Commented Feb 10, 2021 at 16:50 -
5This has two risks: (a) it will silently overwrite any unstaged local changes you have in this file; and (b) it copies the exact file from the stash, without merging it with any changes that have been made on your branch since the stash was saved. That may be confusing since
git stash apply
/pop
don't have either of those pitfalls. To get behavior that is more expected, use one of thegit diff
-based approaches in some of the other answers here. Commented Jun 22, 2022 at 20:06 -
2Modern git versions: use
git restore --source=stash@{0} -- <filename>
– jIICommented Oct 10, 2023 at 15:52
If you use git stash apply
rather than git stash pop
, it will apply the stash to your working tree but still keep the stash.
With this done, you can add
/commit
the file that you want and then reset the remaining changes.
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4To pop a specific stash:
git stash pop stash@{0}
(list the stashed changes:git stash list
) Commented Jan 15, 2015 at 16:53 -
If other files in the stash cause a merge conflict, git doesn't let me commit on the file I want :( Commented Dec 7, 2019 at 23:45
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4This is the best answer. You don't have to use a different command (heh) to do what git stash apply should do, and you don't have to worry about any weird side effects (git checkout copies the exact file to the stash) or memorize any weird syntax.– PatrickCommented May 25, 2022 at 21:40
Edit: See cambunctious's answer, which is basically what I now prefer because it only uses the changes in the stash, rather than comparing them to your current state. This makes the operation additive, with much less chance of undoing work done since the stash was created.
To do it interactively, you would first do
git diff stash^! -- path/to/relevant/file/in/stash.ext perhaps/another/file.ext > my.patch
...then open the patch file in a text editor, alter as required, then do
git apply < my.patch
cambunctious's answer bypasses the interactivity by piping one command directly to the other, which is fine if you know you want all changes from the stash. You can edit the stash^!
to be any commit range that has the cumulative changes you want (but check over the output of the diff first).
If applying the patch/diff fails, you can change the last command to git apply --reject
which makes all the changes it can, and leaves .rej
files where there are conflicts it can't resolve. The .rej
files can then be applied using wiggle
, like so:
wiggle --replace path/to/relevant/file/in/stash.ext{,.rej}
This will either resolve the conflict, or give you conflict markers that you'd get from a merge.
If your distro doesn't have wiggle
, you can just build it:
cd /usr/local/src/
git clone git://git.neil.brown.name/wiggle
cd wiggle/
git checkout v1.3
make install
Previous solution: There is an easy way to get changes from any branch, including stashes:
$ git checkout --patch stash@{0} path/to/file
You may omit the file spec if you want to patch in many parts. Or omit patch (but not the path) to get all changes to a single file. Replace 0
with the stash number from git stash list
, if you have more than one. Note that this is like diff
, and offers to apply all differences between the branches. To get changes from only a single commit/stash, have a look at git cherry-pick --no-commit
.
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1Does this copy the exact file from the stash, or does it merge? In case of copy, if you have any changes since the stash was created, they will be lost.– DanijelCommented Oct 30, 2018 at 11:39
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3@Danijel Read
git help checkout
.--patch
does interactive merging, It applies whatever hunk(s) you approve in the shell (or whatever you save if you choose toe
dit the patch). Path alone will overwrite the file, like I wrote, "all changes".– WalfCommented Oct 31, 2018 at 6:45 -
1slight improvement:
git config --global alias.applydiffat '!git checkout --patch "$1" -- $(git diff --name-only "$1"^ "$1")'
-- then doinggit applydiffat stash@{4}
only uses files that changed between the stash and its parent.– MarkCommented May 8, 2020 at 18:38
Short answer
To see the whole file: git show stash@{0}:<filename>
To see the diff: git diff stash@{0}^1 stash@{0} -- <filename>
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1I don't think s/he was concerned with viewing the stash for a particular file--only popping that file. Commented Apr 1, 2016 at 18:29
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3This is what I was looking for. Then you can replace
diff
withdifftool
to use your favourite external diff. Commented Jan 17, 2017 at 10:36 -
2My git repo was corrupted but I had stashed the files, but couldn't apply because of the corruption. I was able to use this and pipe to a new file, diff it, and I was good to go. Thank you! Commented Nov 24, 2020 at 21:16
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Use the following to apply the changes to a file in a stash to your working tree.
git diff stash^! -- <filename> | git apply
This is generally better than using git checkout
because you won't lose any changes you made to file since you created the stash.
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1it is showing me this error:
error: No valid patches in input (allow with "--allow-empty")
Commented Mar 1 at 9:17 -
@user8395964 that means there are no changes to be applied (or the changes in the stash have already been applied) Commented Mar 5 at 23:23
You can get the diff for a stash with "git show stash@{0}
" (or whatever the number of the stash is; see "git stash list"). It's easy to extract the section of the diff for a single file.
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6Simpler still for minds like me: use
git show stash
to show the topmost stash (normally the only one you have). Similarly you can show the diff between your current branch and the stash withgit diff head stash
.– DizzleyCommented Nov 2, 2013 at 10:00
For VS Code users, there is one method. Make sure to have GitLens extension installed.
- Go on
SOURCE CONTROL
tab - Click on
STASHES
. - You will be able to see available stashes.
- Click on the desired stash.
- Right click on the desired file which you want to unstash.
- You will get 2 options,
Apply Changes
andRestore (Checkout)
. You can click any of the options and you will get your file underChanges
if you chooseApply Changes
orStaged Changes
if you chooseRestore (Checkout)
.
The simplest concept to understand, although maybe not the best, is you have three files changed and you want to stash one file.
If you do git stash
to stash them all, git stash apply
to bring them back again and then git checkout f.c
on the file in question to effectively reset it.
When you want to unstash that file run do a git reset --hard
and then run git stash apply
again, taking advantage ofthe fact that git stash apply
doesn't clear the diff from the stash stack.
If the stashed files need to merge with the current version so use the previous ways using diff. Otherwise you might use git pop
for unstashing them, git add fileWantToKeep
for staging your file, and do a git stash save --keep-index
, for stashing everything except what is on stage.
Remember that the difference of this way with the previous ones is that it "pops" the file from stash. The previous answers keep it git checkout stash@{0} -- <filename>
so it goes according to your needs.