193

Is it able to show changed file name only with git log?

1

6 Answers 6

279

I use

git log --name-only 

or

git log --name-only --oneline

for short.

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  • 5
    The --name-only argument will work even with the git show command.
    – Johwhite
    Nov 12, 2020 at 13:42
96

I guess you could use the --name-only flag. Something like:

git log 73167b96 --pretty="format:" --name-only

I personally use git show for viewing files changed in a commit:

git show --pretty="format:" --name-only 73167b96

(73167b96 could be any commit/tag name)

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  • 8
    this solution is pretty nice to ONLY have the list of files without author, date or commit message info
    – Labynocle
    Mar 26, 2014 at 14:59
  • 1
    That's pretty much exactly what I was looking for - but it does include the commit message for me - as I wanted to pipe the output, that wasn't optimal.
    – bytepusher
    Jan 1, 2020 at 10:51
  • super, thanks a lot! All i now need to open all changed files in last commit is alias gshsubl='git show --name-only --pretty="format:" --name-only|xargs subl'
    – lain0
    Apr 29, 2022 at 12:37
46

I stumbled in here looking for a similar answer without the "git log" restriction. The answers here didn't give me what I needed but this did so I'll add it in case others find it useful:

git diff --name-only

You can also couple this with standard commit pointers to see what has changed since a particular commit:

git diff --name-only HEAD~3
git diff --name-only develop
git diff --name-only 5890e37..ebbf4c0

This succinctly provides file names only which is great for scripting. For example:

git diff --name-only develop | while read changed_file; do echo "This changed from the develop version: $changed_file"; done

#OR

git diff --name-only develop | xargs tar cvf changes.tar
2
  • Also works with git log --name-only May 24, 2021 at 19:26
  • And it works with git show --name-only HEAD to see the files changed in the latest commit.
    – Tim Swast
    Aug 15 at 15:03
38

This gives almost what you need:

git log --stat --oneline

The commit ID and a short one line still remains, followed by a list of changed files by that commit.

24

Now I use the following to get the list of changed files my current branch has, comparing it to master (the compare-to branch is easily changed):

git log --oneline --pretty="format:" --name-only master.. | awk 'NF' | sort -u

Before, I used to rely on this:

git log --name-status <branch>..<branch> | grep -E '^[A-Z]\b' | sort -k 2,2 -u

which outputs a list of files only and their state (added, modified, deleted):

A   foo/bar/xyz/foo.txt
M   foo/bor/bar.txt
...

The -k2,2 option for sort, makes it sort by file path instead of the type of change (A, M, D,).

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  • 4
    This is literally the only answer that actually provides the answer to the question of "file name only". Jun 13, 2017 at 19:43
  • Short addition: this command will also shows that have been added and subsequently renamed or removed in the same branch. These files may no longer exist. May 25, 2018 at 10:08
12

If you need just file names, like:

dir/subdir/file1.txt
dir/subdir2/file2.sql
dir2/subdir3/file6.php

(which I use as a source for tar command), you will also need to filter out commit messages.

In order to do this, I use the following command:

git log --name-only --oneline | grep -v '.{7} '

The grep command excludes (the -v parameter) every line which starts with seven symbols (which is the length of my Git hash for the git log command) followed by space. So it filters out every Git hash message line and leave only lines with file names.

One useful improvement is to append uniq to remove duplicate lines, so it will look as follows:

git log --name-only --oneline | grep -v '.{7} ' | uniq
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  • 4
    In OSX bash shell, its necessary to put backslashes before the brackets. I also added the line start matching and space matcher. "git show --name-only --oneline | grep -v '^.\{7\}\s'"
    – Geuis
    Jun 12, 2014 at 0:31

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