1107

git branch -a shows both remote and local branches.

git branch -r shows remote branches.

Is there a way to list just the local branches?

12 Answers 12

1627

Just git branch without options.

From the manpage:

With no arguments, existing branches are listed and the current branch will be highlighted with an asterisk.

9
  • 54
    I was hoping to find a way to list local branches that have no corresponding remote branch. Jun 10, 2014 at 14:57
  • 5
    Not completely but answers to my question How do I list local branches that have no remote branch provide some help. Jun 17, 2014 at 11:10
  • 3
    @c00kiemon5ter I love how you found a way to get a bunch of points anyway! So funny.
    – Abram
    Jun 1, 2015 at 15:21
  • 5
    how is this the right answer to what was asked ("... to list *just the local branches...")??? Nov 9, 2017 at 19:43
  • 12
    @gr4viton: In the dialects of English that I'm familiar with, "list only local branches" usually parses as "list only those branches that are local". (To say "list those branches that are only local", I would say "list local-only branches".)
    – Mathieu K.
    Mar 16, 2018 at 2:46
247

Just the plain command

git branch
0
123

git branch -a - All branches.

git branch -r - Remote branches only.

git branch - Local branches (contains local branches linked to a remote branch).

0
47

One of the most straightforward ways to do it is

git for-each-ref --format='%(refname:short)' refs/heads/

This works perfectly for scripts as well.

2
  • 2
    Exactly what I was looking for git branch tends to list things that are not local branches ... like HEAD.
    – BCS
    Feb 23, 2022 at 0:23
  • 2
    Thanks for showing the scripting-friendly way to do it! May 18, 2022 at 16:05
36

If the leading asterisk is a problem, I pipe the git branch as follows

git branch | awk -F ' +' '! /\(no branch\)/ {print $2}'

This also eliminates the '(no branch)' line that shows up when you have detached head.

2
  • 1
    Had to modify this to git branch | awk -F ' +' '$2 !~ /detached/ {print $2}' for git version 1.9.1.
    – iurii
    Jun 18, 2014 at 16:52
  • 6
    cut -c 3- is an easier option
    – Alexey
    Mar 28, 2016 at 11:56
19

Here's how to list local branches that do not have a remote branch in origin with the same name:

git branch | sed 's|* |  |' | sort > local
git branch -r | sed 's|origin/||' | sort > remote
comm -23 local remote
1
  • 6
    Nice, also oneliner: comm -23 <(git branch | sed 's|* | |' | sort) <(git branch -r | sed 's|origin/||' | sort )
    – gr4viton
    Nov 22, 2017 at 12:29
14

Other way for get a list just local branch is:

git branch -a | grep -v 'remotes'
0
8

There's a great answer to a post about how to delete local-only branches. In it, the following builds a command to list out the local branches:

git branch -vv | cut -c 3- | awk '$3 !~/\[/ { print $1 }'

The answer has a great explanation about how this command was derived, so I would suggest you go and read that post.

1
  • 1
    Thank you for linking the answer. I needed an algo to list local branches that DO NOT track a remote. This one is the only one that does the job.
    – JuroOravec
    Apr 26, 2020 at 18:53
5

To complement gertvdijk's answer - I'm adding few screenshots in case it helps someone quick.

In my Git Bash shell if I run below command:

git branch

This command (without parameters) shows all my local branches. The current branch which is currently checked out is shown in different color (green) along with an asterisk (*) prefix which is really intuitive.

Enter image description here

When you try to see all branches including the remote branches using -a(stands for all) parameter:

git branch -a

Then remote branches which aren't checked out yet are also shown in different (red) color:

Enter image description here

0
1

Using git branch's --format, you can show local branches and their configured remote and merge configuration (as found in the repo's .git/config file).

git branch --format='%(HEAD) %(refname:short) -> %(upstream:short)'

See the format doc for git for-each-ref which is used by git branch

You can add it as an alias in your ~/.gitconfig

[alias]
        [...]
        brem = branch --format='%(HEAD) %(refname:short) -> %(upstream:short)'
        [...]

Example

  • There are 5 local branches
  • There are 2 remote locations: origin and upstream
  • Local branch named upstream is configured to push/pull to the upstream's main branch
  • Local branch named test has not been pushed anywhere and does not have a remote / merge configured
> git branch --format='%(HEAD) %(refname:short) -> %(upstream:short)'
* main -> origin/main
  release/v0.01 -> origin/release/v0.01
  release/v0.02 -> origin/release/v0.02
  test ->
  upstream -> upstream/main
0

Use:

git show-ref --heads

The answer by gertvdijk is the most concise and elegant, but this may help grasp the idea that refs/heads/* are equivalent to local branches.

Most of the time the refs/heads/master ref is a file at .git/refs/heads/master that contains a Git commit hash that points to the Git object that represents the current state of your local master branch, so each file under .git/refs/heads/* represents a local branch.

0

PowerShell users can use its Compare-Object cmdlet to do something like this:

function match-branch {
    $localBranches = ((git branch -l) -replace "\*", "") -replace " ", ""
    $remoteBranches = (((git branch -r) -replace "\*", "") -replace " ", "") -replace "origin/", ""
    Compare-Object -ReferenceObject $localBranches -DifferenceObject $remoteBranches -IncludeEqual
    | Select-Object @{Label = "branch"; Expression = { $_.InputObject } },
    @{Label = ”both”; Expression = { $_.SideIndicator -eq "==" } },
    @{Label = ”remoteOnly”; Expression = { $_.SideIndicator -eq "=>" } },
    @{Label = ”localOnly”; Expression = { $_.SideIndicator -eq "<=" } }
}

Example Output

branch        both remoteOnly localOnly
------        ---- ---------- ---------
master        True      False     False
HEAD->master False       True     False
renamed      False       True     False

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