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.