50

How can I list the author names of a particular folder that's versioned by git?

I see that I can git blame a file and list the author of each line, but I can't do that for a folder, and I would also like only a unique list (each author listed only once)

1
  • 1
    I think you should write a shell script to do that, with for-loop, pipe, grep, sort, uniq, etc. Also, git blame won't show all the authors but just the last-modifiers, I think you should do that with git log.
    – nicky_zs
    Jul 17, 2014 at 15:45

3 Answers 3

111

Actually, there is a native Git command for that, git shortlog:

git shortlog -n -s -- myfolder

The options do:

  • Option -s just shows the number of commits per contributor. Without it, the command lists the individual commits per author.
  • Option -n sorts the authors by number of commits (descending order) instead of alphabetical.
Illustrative output example
ojdo@machine:someRepo$ git shortlog -n -s -- myFolder
    37  John Doe
    31  Eager Contributor
    11  Jane Doe
    10  Pipeline Fixer
     5  Docs Specialist

And in case you encounter "duplicate" entries, use a .mailmap file to group multiple entries to the same contributor. This is much saner than trying to rewrite the whole history of a repo, although there is a Q&A for that, too.


What is -- good for?

And just in case you have not encountered a loose -- in a git command yet: it is a separator option to mark that what follows cannot be a <revspec> (range of commits), but only a <pathspec> (file and folder names). That means: if you would omit the -- and by accident had a branch or tag named myfolder, the command git shortlog -n -s myfolder would not filter for the directory myfolder, but instead filter for history of branch or tag "myfolder". This separator is therefore useful (and necessary) in a number of git commands, like log or checkout, whenever you want to be clear whether what you specify is either a revision (commmit, branch, tag) or a path (folder or file name). And of course, this site already has a question on this.

3
  • 3
    What does -- do? Dec 7, 2019 at 4:46
  • 7
    git shortlog accepts a <revision range> argument. If myfolder by accident would be the name of a tag or branch, the shortlog would be limited to that label's commit history. The separator -- is used by many git commands to specify that what follows may only ever be a file or directory name (a path specification), no command or revision.
    – ojdo
    Dec 9, 2019 at 8:21
  • 5
    @AaronFranke thanks for asking; now I also incorporated the -- part directly in the answer and linked to the canonical question on SO.
    – ojdo
    Mar 30, 2020 at 7:58
26

Based on The shortest possible output from git log containing author and date

do this

git log --pretty=format:"%an%x09" myfolder | sort | uniq
3
  • 1
    I found this more reliable: git log --pretty=format:"%an%x09" myfolder | sort | uniq -c | sort -t ' ' -k 1 -r
    – schoetbi
    Oct 17, 2017 at 9:47
  • 1
    folder or file .
    – ahnbizcad
    Jan 20, 2021 at 21:20
  • 2
    I think this answer is now suboptimal when looking at git shortlog below. The right answer should be that other one.
    – Charles
    Feb 12, 2021 at 15:14
3

If you want only the list of authors of a repository:

git ls-files | xargs -n1 git blame --line-porcelain | sed -n 's/^author //p' | sort -d | uniq

If you want to do it for a file order by the number of lines of code contributions it is simple:

git blame --line-porcelain "_MY_FILE_" | sed -n 's/author //p' | sort | uniq -c | sort -rn

If you want to do it for the whole repository also ordered by code contributions:

git ls-files | xargs -n1 git blame --line-porcelain | sed -n 's/^author //p' | sort -f | uniq -ic | sort -nr

1
  • 1
    Very useful git blame --line-porcelain. A relief for unix philosophy with | grep author Jan 15, 2021 at 21:25

Your Answer

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

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