600

I have an old branch, which I would like to delete. However, before doing so, I want to check that all commits made to this branch were at some point merged into some other branch. Thus, I'd like to see all commits made to my current branch which have not been applied to any other branch [or, if this is not possible without some scripting, how does one see all commits in one branch which have not been applied to another given branch?].

2

10 Answers 10

734

To see a list of which commits are on one branch but not another, use git log:

git log --no-merges oldbranch ^newbranch

...that is, show commit logs for all commits on oldbranch that are not on newbranch. You can list multiple branches to include and exclude, e.g.

git log  --no-merges oldbranch1 oldbranch2 ^newbranch1 ^newbranch2

Note: on Windows command prompt (not Powershell) ^ is an escape key, so it needs to be escaped with another ^:

git log --no-merges oldbranch ^^newbranch
22
  • 42
    This is exactly what I was looking for. But, using ^ as a prefix here confused me. In this context it means exclude that branch. Using ^ as a suffix would be a relative reference to the parent commit of that branch.
    – Joe Flynn
    Jul 18, 2013 at 16:38
  • 4
    very useful thanks. I'm curious, why is the --no-merges flag necessary? Surely one wants to see those commits also? Aug 1, 2013 at 8:17
  • 4
    Thanks @jimmyor, As a side note I didn't need ^^ in windows when using PoshGit in PowerShell. I only need ^ Aug 9, 2016 at 4:24
  • 17
    This is a great answer, but oldbranch and newbranch are (to me) somewhat confusingly named. I'd suggest something like branch_withcommits and branch_missingcommits, even though it's a little verbose, because it's immediately clear what the command is looking for. I'd make the edit myself, but that feels like a pretty major alteration to make preemptively. Would you mind if I make this change (or could you make it yourself)? Jun 1, 2017 at 16:51
  • 6
    Or, to clarify the meaning of ^, we could replace ^newbranch with ^excludebranch. Jun 1, 2017 at 17:58
360

You probably just want

git branch --contains branch-to-delete

This will list all branches which contain the commits from "branch-to-delete". If it reports more than just "branch-to-delete", the branch has been merged.

Your alternatives are really just rev-list syntax things. e.g. git log one-branch..another-branch shows everything that one-branch needs to have everything another-branch has.

You may also be interested in git show-branch as a way to see what's where.

4
  • 2
    +1. See also stackoverflow.com/questions/850607/…
    – VonC
    Nov 10, 2009 at 20:30
  • 1
    The line 'If it reports something, the branch has merged' can be misinterpreted: if git branch --contains some-branch only returns some-branch, then it does return something, but it has not been merged.
    – Confusion
    Mar 21, 2012 at 16:26
  • 5
    Note that git log foo..bar will show the commits between bar's latest and foo's latest, but not other commits missing from further back in time. To see everything in bar but not in foo, you should use @jimmyorr's solution. Jul 10, 2014 at 16:34
  • It's much better to use git branch --merged which will show all branches merged into current (safe to delete them). Obviously both will fail in case of rebase/squash. yesterday
126

To show the commits in oldbranch but not in newbranch:

git log newbranch..oldbranch

To show the diff by these commits (note there are three dots):

git diff newbranch...oldbranch

Here is the doc with a diagram illustration https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Git-Tools-Revision-Selection#Commit-Ranges

8
  • 1
    See Paul A Jungwirth's comment above. It seems this will miss out on some old commits? Jan 9, 2015 at 5:22
  • 2
    I'm not sure what old commits mean. The double dots basically asks Git to resolve a range of commits that are reachable from one commit but aren’t reachable from another. Here is the doc with a digram illustration git-scm.com/book/en/v2/…
    – Xuan
    Jan 9, 2015 at 9:22
  • 1
    and if we are on either newbranch or oldbranch, we can do git log ..oldbranch or git log newbranch.. respectively
    – YakovL
    Feb 5, 2019 at 19:17
  • 1
    jimmyorr's solution didn't work for me, but this one did thanks to the two dots .. between the refs' names. I also used the --cherry-pick option to hide commits that are present on both branches but have a different hash because they were cherry-picked from one branch to the other. Jun 2, 2020 at 13:16
  • The problem with this one is that it only shows (besides new branch and old branch) the commits that were made chronologically between the two branches. If some commits on the newbranch were made before oldbranch was created, they won't show up.
    – MrMas
    May 6, 2021 at 18:08
77

For those still looking for a simple answer, check out git cherry. It compares actual diffs instead of commit hashes. That means it accommodates commits that have been cherry picked or rebased.

First checkout the branch you want to delete:

git checkout [branch-to-delete]

then use git cherry to compare it to your main development branch:

git cherry -v master

Example output:

+ 8a14709d08c99c36e907e47f9c4dacebeff46ecb Commit message
+ b30ccc3fb38d3d64c5fef079a761c7e0a5c7da81 Another commit message
- 85867e38712de930864c5edb7856342e1358b2a0 Yet another message

Note: The -v flag is to include the commit message along with the SHA hash.

Lines with the '+' in front are in the branch-to-delete, but not the master branch. Those with a '-' in front have an equivalent commit in master.

For JUST the commits that aren't in master, combine cherry pick with grep:

git cherry -v master | grep "^\+"

Example output:

+ 8a14709d08c99c36e907e47f9c4dacebeff46ecb Commit message
+ b30ccc3fb38d3d64c5fef079a761c7e0a5c7da81 Another commit message
2
  • I've tried this, but it still reports that there are many commits in the fb (feature branch) that aren't in the mb (main branch). However, if I'm in the fb and do a git diff mb, I see no differences. I did use rebase and squashed everything. I'm nearly certain this is why, but I just want to be be certain. If this is the case, then I'm going to avoid squashing if at all possible; I'm in the "no lost info camp." I wonder if it would be possible to add a log display mode that can display merges as if they were rebases to keep the history clean and yet lose no info. Jun 29, 2016 at 14:57
  • 2
    Not sure of your exact scenario here, but if you've squashed multiple commits together into one and are comparing that to another branch where the commits are separate, this definitely won't work. In that case, you may just want to use the unix diff utility to compare the various files. Or, you could create a temporary branch and squash all the commits in that similar to what you did with the original branch, and then use this, which I think would work.
    – Tim S
    Jul 1, 2016 at 0:04
52

While some of the answers posted here will help find what you seek, the following sub-command of git branch is a more suitable solution for your task.

--merged is used to find all branches which can be safely deleted, since those branches are fully contained by HEAD.

While in master one could run the command to enumerate the branches one could safely remove, like so:

git branch --merged
  develop
  fpg_download_links
* master
  master_merge_static

# Delete local and remote tracking branches you don't want
git branch -d fpg_download_links
git push origin :fpg_download_links
git branch -d master_merge_static
git push origin :master_merge_static

# There is also a flag to specify remote branches in the output
git branch --remotes --merged
0
21

jimmyorr's answer does not work on Windows. it helps to use --not instead of ^ like so:

git log oldbranch --not newbranch --no-merges
2
  • 7
    That is correct, +1. Note though that ^ is supported on Windows, but needs to be escaped, which, in Windows, is (another) ^: git log oldbranch ^^newbranch --no-merges.
    – VonC
    Jun 18, 2015 at 9:42
  • 5
    To be specific, it does work in Windows in Powershell console, but require extra "^" in CMD.
    – Rod
    Sep 7, 2015 at 5:39
8

If it is one (single) branch that you need to check, for example if you want that branch 'B' is fully merged into branch 'A', you can simply do the following:

$ git checkout A
$ git branch -d B

git branch -d <branchname> has the safety that "The branch must be fully merged in HEAD."

Caution: this actually deletes the branch B if it is merged into A.

0
4

I'd like to count the commits too, so here's how to do that:

Count how many commits are on the current branch (HEAD), but NOT on master:

git log --oneline ^master HEAD | wc -l

wc -l means "word count"--count the number of 'l'ines.

And of course to see the whole log messages, as other answers have given:

git log ^master HEAD

...or in a condensed --oneline form:

git log --oneline ^master HEAD

If you don't want to count merge commits either, you can exclude those with --no-merges:

git log --oneline --no-merges ^master HEAD | wc -l

etc.

3

You can use this simple script to see commits that are not merged

#!/bin/bash
# Show commits that exists only on branch and not in current
# Usage:
#   git branch-notmerge <branchname>
#
# Setup git alias
#   git config alias.branch-notmerge [path/to/this/script]
grep -Fvf <(git log --pretty=format:'%H - %s') <(git log $1 --pretty=format:'%H - %s')

You can use also tool git-wtf that will display state of branches

3

Show commits and commit contents from other-branch that are not in your current branch:

git show @..other-branch

Additionally you can apply the commits from other-branch directly to your current branch:

git cherry-pick @..other-branch

Your Answer

Reminder: Answers generated by Artificial Intelligence tools are not allowed on Stack Overflow. Learn more

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge that you have read and understand our privacy policy and code of conduct.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.