How can I query git to find out which branches contain a given commit? gitk
will usually list the branches, unless there are too many, in which case it just says "many (38)" or something like that. I need to know the full list, or at least whether certain branches contain the commit.
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4See also: How to list all tags that contain a commit?. – Andrew Marshall Jan 18 '13 at 17:51
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Related question for an equivalent commit per comments: stackoverflow.com/questions/16304574/… – UpAndAdam Feb 25 '15 at 16:38
From the git-branch manual page:
git branch --contains <commit>
Only list branches which contain the specified commit (HEAD if not specified). Implies
--list
.
git branch -r --contains <commit>
Lists remote tracking branches as well (as mentioned in user3941992's answer below) that is "local branches that have a direct relationship to a remote branch".
As noted by Carl Walsh, this applies only to the default refspec
fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/*
If you need to include other ref namespace (pull request, Gerrit, ...), you need to add that new refspec, and fetch again:
git config --add remote.origin.fetch "+refs/pull/*/head:refs/remotes/origin/pr/*"
git fetch
git branch -r --contains <commit>
See also this git ready article.
The
--contains
tag will figure out if a certain commit has been brought in yet into your branch. Perhaps you’ve got a commit SHA from a patch you thought you had applied, or you just want to check if commit for your favorite open source project that reduces memory usage by 75% is in yet.
$ git log -1 tests
commit d590f2ac0635ec0053c4a7377bd929943d475297
Author: Nick Quaranto <nick@quaran.to>
Date: Wed Apr 1 20:38:59 2009 -0400
Green all around, finally.
$ git branch --contains d590f2
tests
* master
Note: if the commit is on a remote tracking branch, add the -a
option.
(as MichielB comments below)
git branch -a --contains <commit>
MatrixFrog comments that it only shows which branches contain that exact commit.
If you want to know which branches contain an "equivalent" commit (i.e. which branches have cherry-picked that commit) that's git cherry
:
Because
git cherry
compares the changeset rather than the commit id (sha1), you can usegit cherry
to find out if a commit you made locally has been applied<upstream>
under a different commit id.
For example, this will happen if you’re feeding patches<upstream>
via email rather than pushing or pulling commits directly.
__*__*__*__*__> <upstream>
/
fork-point
\__+__+__-__+__+__-__+__> <head>
(Here, the commits marked '-
' wouldn't show up with git cherry
, meaning they are already present in <upstream>
.)
-
3
tests
andmaster
-master
is the current branch, therefore the asterisk. – blueyed Mar 25 '11 at 13:31 -
56This only shows which branches contain that exact commit. If you want to know which branches contain an "equivalent" commit (i.e. which branches have cherry-picked that commit) that's
git cherry
: "Because git cherry compares the changeset rather than the commit id (sha1), you can use git cherry to find out if a commit you made locally has been applied <upstream> under a different commit id. For example, this will happen if you’re feeding patches <upstream> via email rather than pushing or pulling commits directly." kernel.org/pub/software/scm/git/docs/git-cherry.html – MatrixFrog Apr 14 '11 at 1:04 -
65
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29You can also do
git tag --contains <commit>
. See Searching for all tags that contain a commit?. – Andrew Marshall Jan 18 '13 at 17:42 -
5For the
git cherry
part @UpAndAdam asked the question here: stackoverflow.com/questions/16304574/…, alas, the question has not (yet) been answered. – adeelx Aug 6 '14 at 19:24
You may run:
git log <SHA1>..HEAD --ancestry-path --merges
From comment of last commit in the output you may find original branch name
Example:
c---e---g--- feature
/ \
-a---b---d---f---h---j--- master
git log e..master --ancestry-path --merges
commit h
Merge: g f
Author: Eugen Konkov <>
Date: Sat Oct 1 00:54:18 2016 +0300
Merge branch 'feature' into master
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6Nice! I used
git log <SHA1>..master --ancestry-path --merges --oneline | tail -n1
to get this in one line – James EJ Aug 11 '17 at 19:59 -
1If you would like to use pure git command, you could use:
git log <SHA1>..master --ancestry-path --merges --oneline -1
– Bartosz Mar 23 '18 at 12:03 -
Note: When your commit sha is the most recent commit on the master/foo branch (HEAD)... you can't do an
A..B
commit range, just dont use a range like so::git log HEAD --oneline -1
>82c12a9 (HEAD, origin/remote-branch-name, origin/master, origin/dev, origin/HEAD, master, dev) commit message
. – Devin Rhode Dec 1 '19 at 3:38 -
If this git repo is a submodule and you are trying to solve the detached HEAD problem... then you have a hard question of a preferred branch... In my previous example you could easily say that
master
is always preferred if it's in this list. From there it's less clear. You could try and read git branch from .gitmodules file:git config -f .gitmodules submodule.src/foo/submodule.branch
. This could be a long standing fork/pr. You can cd to repo root and rungit config submodule.src/foo/submodule.branch
. You can also use the superprojects current git branch. – Devin Rhode Dec 1 '19 at 3:46 -
As a small aside:
git config submodule.src/foo/submodule.branch
Can be influenced by any variety of git configs, including a repo-local .gitconfig file. (requires runninggit config --local include.path ./path/to/your/.gitconfig
) – Devin Rhode Dec 1 '19 at 3:51
The answer for git branch -r --contains <commit>
works well for normal remote branches, but if the commit is only in the hidden head
namespace that GitHub creates for PRs, you'll need a few more steps.
Say, if PR #42 was from deleted branch and that PR thread has the only reference to the commit on the repo, git branch -r
doesn't know about PR #42 because refs like refs/pull/42/head
aren't listed as a remote branch by default.
In .git/config
for the [remote "origin"]
section add a new line:
fetch = +refs/pull/*/head:refs/remotes/origin/pr/*
(This gist has more context.)
Then when you git fetch
you'll get all the PR branches, and when you run git branch -r --contains <commit>
you'll see origin/pr/42
contains the commit.
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@VonC Thanks for improving my answer! I didn't realized I was doing
git commit --add
. – Carl Walsh Nov 9 '20 at 19:10