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I am fairly new to Github and have come across an amateur-ish problem.

I have been asked to do a code review and have been provided with a commit hash, however I have tried looking in Git if I can search using commit hashes but couldn't find anything.

Is there a way I can find the changed code just by using the commit hash?

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    I find it utterly bizarre that github doesn't recognise hashes in searches and show you the commit if there's one matching that hash. Dec 3, 2015 at 13:45
  • Actually @CraigRinger, github search will match hashes if they occur in a pull request. Indeed, you can search the whole of github for a seven-character hash prefix if you like. But it must be a pull request, not just any commit.
    – Todd Owen
    Sep 26, 2016 at 12:24
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    @ToddOwen Which is nice, but not the point. It should match commit hashes within a repo when you search within that repo, it's truly wacky that it does not. Sep 27, 2016 at 2:40
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    @CraigRinger It does now, at last! See my new answer.
    – Todd Owen
    May 31, 2017 at 0:32
  • hash:<sha> since 2017 via ⬇️
    – cachius
    Sep 10, 2022 at 9:38

4 Answers 4

543

A URL of the form https://github.com/<owner>/<project>/commit/<hash> will show you the changes introduced in that commit. For example here's a recent bugfix I made to one of my projects on GitHub:

https://github.com/jerith666/git-graph/commit/35e32b6a00dec02ae7d7c45c6b7106779a124685

You can also shorten the hash to any unique prefix, like so:

https://github.com/jerith666/git-graph/commit/35e32b


I know you just asked about GitHub, but for completeness: If you have the repository checked out, from the command line, you can achieve basically the same thing with either of these commands (unique prefixes work here too):

git show 35e32b6a00dec02ae7d7c45c6b7106779a124685
git log -p -1 35e32b6a00dec02ae7d7c45c6b7106779a124685

Note: If you shorten the commit hash too far, the command line gives you a helpful disambiguation message, but GitHub will just return a 404.

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    i came across this when trying to trace an assertion in mongo, and found that there's a similar URL pattern to view a specific file, given the hash of a commit: github.com/$owner/$project/blob/$hash/path/to/file.ext - e.g. github.com/mongodb/mongo/blob/… Mar 5, 2013 at 16:56
  • In this: git log -p -1 35e32b6a00dec02ae7d7c45c6b7106779a124685, the -1 is necessary because otherwise it would show all the olders commits; it's good to know that you can use the four initial numbers of the hash (the minimum in my tests), because there’s no auto completion for the hash; and you can't specify the branch like this: git log master -p -1 35e3. Git version: 1.7.9.5. Dec 4, 2013 at 23:08
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    In case anyone's wondering (I was!), this also works with the first 8 of the hash both on github: github.com/jerith666/git-graph/commit/35e32b6a and on the command line: git log -p -1 35e32b6a
    – SimplGy
    Aug 11, 2014 at 17:08
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    It's kind of dumb that the UI doesn't make this easier than it is... I hope the feature request will make it.
    – ocroquette
    Jan 19, 2015 at 9:07
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    The UI now supports this. Do a search for hash:<sha> and Voila!
    – Greg Tarsa
    Sep 15, 2017 at 16:40
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View single commit:
https://github.com/<user>/<project>/commit/<hash>

View log:
https://github.com/<user>/<project>/commits/<hash>

View full repo:
https://github.com/<user>/<project>/tree/<hash>

<hash> can be any length as long as it is unique.

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    if the length is at least 7 characters it is ok Jan 10, 2017 at 11:34
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    No minimum length for the commit hash is 4 characters (again, as long as it is unique in the entire repository)
    – qwertzguy
    Jan 16, 2017 at 21:24
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The ability to search commits has recently been added to GitHub.

To search for a hash, just enter at least the first 7 characters in the search box. Then on the results page, click the "Commits" tab to see matching commits (but only on the default branch, usually master), or the "Issues" tab to see pull requests containing the commit.

To be more explicit you can add the hash: prefix to the search, but it's not really necessary.

There is also a REST API (at the time of writing it is still in preview).

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    I am surprised that it actually works this way. It's so not intuitive. By default Github will show the "Code" tab, with obviously no results in it. Shouldn't it show the only tab with any results in it by default?
    – summerian
    Jun 13, 2017 at 14:23
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    So to be clear, if you have your own enterprise install of github, you can find any commit in any repo by searching for it like so: https://YourGithubDomain/search?q=YOUR_COMMIT_HASH&type=Commits Note that I tried this on Github as well, and it worked there too e.g. https://github.com/search?q=38db172d13962ea177c00c9a3b4b3169b317e94b&type=Commits
    – Brad Parks
    Mar 31, 2020 at 11:19
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    @Todd I haven't been able to get this working once in our repo. The other solution using the URL works great though.
    – Darkhydro
    Aug 2, 2021 at 19:27
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    Seems kind of crazy in 2022 we still can't search for a hash across all branches using GitHub.com search. The URL-based solution in the accepted answer is clunky but will likely work reliably until the end of time.
    – Neman
    Jan 17, 2022 at 2:21
  • To search for a hash across all branches, I had to use git show -s <hash> within the repo on my local.
    – Annemie
    Jun 7 at 8:38
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With the GitHub CLI gh v2.22.0 (Jan. 2023), you can search from within your local cloned GitHub repository:

See gh search commits:

Examples:

# search commits matching hash "8dd03144ffdc6c0d486d6b705f9c7fba871ee7c3"
$ gh search commits --hash=8dd03144ffdc6c0d486d6b705f9c7fba871ee7c3

But also:

# search commits matching set of keywords "readme" and "typo"
$ gh search commits readme typo

# search commits matching phrase "bug fix"
$ gh search commits "bug fix"

# search commits committed by user "monalisa"
$ gh search commits --committer=monalisa

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