Question

What are the Git commands to do the following workflow?

Scenario

I cloned from a repository and did some commits of my own to my local repository. In the meantime, my colleagues made commits to the remote repository. Now, I want to:

  1. Check whether there are any new commits from other people on the remote repository, i.e. origin?

  2. Say there were 3 new commits on the remote repository since my last pull, I would like to diff the remote repository's commits, i.e. HEAD~3 with HEAD~2, HEAD~2 with HEAD~1 and HEAD~1 with HEAD.

  3. After knowing what changed remotely, I want to get the latest commits from the others.

My findings so far

For step 2: I know the caret notation HEAD^, HEAD^^ etc. and the tilde notation HEAD~2, HEAD~3 etc.

For step 3: That is, I guess, just a git pull.

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3  
Possible duplicate of Check if pull needed in Git – Daniele Orlando Mar 14 '16 at 12:36
    
@Daniele that answer you are linking to is superb and even comes with a customizable bash script. +1 – gorbysbm Jun 18 '16 at 3:43
up vote 192 down vote accepted

You could git fetch origin to update the remote branch in your repository to point to the latest version. For a diff against the remote:

git diff origin/master

Yes, you can use caret notation as well.

If you want to accept the remote changes:

git merge origin/master
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26  
The diff looks reversed. I find it easier to use git diff HEAD origin/master so the diff shows what will be applied if I accept the remote changes. – cbliard Jul 30 '13 at 7:41
1  
"git fetch origin" and "git show-branch *master" were useful to me. – Léa Massiot May 16 '17 at 17:31
git remote update && git status 

Found this on the answer to Check if pull needed in Git

git remote update to bring your remote refs up to date. Then you can do one of several things, such as:

  1. git status -uno will tell you whether the branch you are tracking is ahead, behind or has diverged. If it says nothing, the local and remote are the same.

  2. git show-branch *master will show you the commits in all of the branches whose names end in master (eg master and origin/master).

If you use -v with git remote update you can see which branches got updated, so you don't really need any further commands.

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12  
This should be the accepted answer – mork Apr 28 '15 at 12:11
    
Best way to do it! – mrt Apr 11 '16 at 9:36
    
Not enough. I have to do a git pull <remote> <branch> afterwards as soon as I need to push, because the tip of my local branch was behind the remote counterpart. – Overdrivr Sep 5 '16 at 7:02
1  
@Overdrivr the question asks for a way to check changes before getting the commits to the local branch. so, yes, you have to update your local branch after checking for changes. – Rajani Karuturi Sep 6 '16 at 4:14
    
Is this for remote being origin or upstream ? – vikramvi Sep 29 '17 at 8:54

A good way to have a synthetic view of what's going on "origin" is:

git remote show origin
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7  
But that command doesn't show me how many commits there have been on "origin" since my last pull, does it? The way I understood it "git remote show origin" is a local operation and does not go over the network to fetch information. – Lernkurve Mar 25 '10 at 12:05

One potential solution

Thanks to Alan Haggai Alavi's solution I came up with the following potential workflow:

Step 1:

git fetch origin

Step 2:

git checkout -b localTempOfOriginMaster origin/master
git difftool HEAD~3 HEAD~2
git difftool HEAD~2 HEAD~1
git difftool HEAD~1 HEAD~0

Step 3:

git checkout master
git branch -D localTempOfOriginMaster
git merge origin/master
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13  
Why do you need to make a temporary branch for diff between revisions of the remote? you can just git diff origing/master^ origing/master^^ – Pablo Marin-Garcia Dec 13 '11 at 17:07
    
@PabloMarin-Garcia: Thanks. I didn't know that back then. – Lernkurve Apr 8 '13 at 12:06

I just use

git remote update
git status

The latter then reports how many commits behind my local is. (if Any)

then

git pull origin master

to bring my local up to date :)

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My regular question is rather "anything new or changed in repo" so whatchanged comes handy. Found it here.

git whatchanged origin/master -n 1
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whatchanged seems to be deprecated: stackoverflow.com/a/18585297/33311 – Lernkurve Sep 7 '16 at 16:07

git status not always shows the difference between master and origin/master even after a fetch. If you want the combination git fetch origin && git status to work, you need to specify the tracking information between local branch and origin:

# git branch --set-upstream-to=origin/<branch> <branch>

For master branch:

git branch --set-upstream-to=origin/master master
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