When I type git diff
, I want to view the output with my visual diff tool of choice (SourceGear "diffmerge" on Windows). How do I configure git to do this?
26 Answers
Since Git1.6.3, you can use the git difftool script: see my answer below.
May be this article will help you. Here are the best parts:
There are two different ways to specify an external diff tool.
The first is the method you used, by setting the GIT_EXTERNAL_DIFF variable. However, the variable is supposed to point to the full path of the executable. Moreover, the executable specified by GIT_EXTERNAL_DIFF will be called with a fixed set of 7 arguments:
path old-file old-hex old-mode new-file new-hex new-mode
As most diff tools will require a different order (and only some) of the arguments, you will most likely have to specify a wrapper script instead, which in turn calls the real diff tool.
The second method, which I prefer, is to configure the external diff tool via "git config". Here is what I did:
1) Create a wrapper script "git-diff-wrapper.sh" which contains something like
-->8-(snip)--
#!/bin/sh
# diff is called by git with 7 parameters:
# path old-file old-hex old-mode new-file new-hex new-mode
"<path_to_diff_executable>" "$2" "$5" | cat
--8<-(snap)--
As you can see, only the second ("old-file") and fifth ("new-file") arguments will be passed to the diff tool.
2) Type
$ git config --global diff.external <path_to_wrapper_script>
at the command prompt, replacing with the path to "git-diff-wrapper.sh", so your ~/.gitconfig contains
-->8-(snip)--
[diff]
external = <path_to_wrapper_script>
--8<-(snap)--
Be sure to use the correct syntax to specify the paths to the wrapper script and diff tool, i.e. use forward slashed instead of backslashes. In my case, I have
[diff]
external = \"c:/Documents and Settings/sschuber/git-diff-wrapper.sh\"
in .gitconfig and
"d:/Program Files/Beyond Compare 3/BCompare.exe" "$2" "$5" | cat
in the wrapper script. Mind the trailing "cat"!
(I suppose the '| cat
' is needed only for some programs which may not return a proper or consistent return status. You might want to try without the trailing cat if your diff tool has explicit return status)
(Diomidis Spinellis adds in the comments:
The
cat
command is required, becausediff(1)
, by default exits with an error code if the files differ.
Git expects the external diff program to exit with an error code only if an actual error occurred, e.g. if it run out of memory.
By piping the output ofgit
tocat
the non-zero error code is masked.
More efficiently, the program could just runexit
with and argument of 0.)
That (the article quoted above) is the theory for external tool defined through config file (not through environment variable).
In practice (still for config file definition of external tool), you can refer to:
- How do I setup DiffMerge with msysgit / gitk? which illustrates the concrete settings of DiffMerge and WinMerge for MsysGit and gitk
- How can I set up an editor to work with Git on Windows? for the definition of Notepad++ as an external editor.
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2ah, I'd set the external diff program but didn't know about the 7 arguments, thanks.– user3891Commented Oct 31, 2008 at 23:33
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5Kudos ... this is very handy. I set this up with "opendiff" (which launches the slick XCode FileMerge utility under Mac OS X). Commented Jun 12, 2009 at 20:49
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1@Ryan: that is great :) Did you use the "diff.external" setting detailed in this answer or the "git difftool" of my second answer below?– VonCCommented Jun 12, 2009 at 20:54
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1Fantastic! Thank you, tried both DiffMerge and opendiff; both work quite well.– vfilbyCommented Oct 29, 2009 at 18:24
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5So git sends 7 arguments to a diff program? The more I learn about Git, the more I feel it is was made for one person: The original programmer. This dvcs seems more like a shiny toy that doesn't do much.– C.J.Commented Sep 10, 2013 at 12:41
To complete my previous "diff.external" config answer above:
As mentioned by Jakub, Git1.6.3 introduced git difftool, originally proposed in September 2008:
USAGE='[--tool=tool] [--commit=ref] [--start=ref --end=ref] [--no-prompt] [file to merge]'
(See --extcmd
in the last part of this answer)
$LOCAL
contains the contents of the file from the starting revision and $REMOTE
contains the contents of the file in the ending revision.
$BASE
contains the contents of the file in the wor
It's basically
git-mergetool
modified to operate on the git index/worktree.The usual use case for this script is when you have either staged or unstaged changes and you'd like to see the changes in a side-by-side diff viewer (e.g.
xxdiff
,tkdiff
, etc).
git difftool [<filename>*]
Another use case is when you'd like to see the same information but are comparing arbitrary commits (this is the part where the revarg parsing could be better)
git difftool --start=HEAD^ --end=HEAD [-- <filename>*]
The last use case is when you'd like to compare your current worktree to something other than HEAD (e.g. a tag)
git difftool --commit=v1.0.0 [-- <filename>*]
Note: since Git 2.5, git config diff.tool winmerge
is enough!
See "git mergetool winmerge"
And since Git 1.7.11, you have the option --dir-diff
, in order to to spawn external diff tools that can compare two directory hierarchies at a time after populating two temporary directories, instead of running an instance of the external tool once per a file pair.
Before Git 2.5:
Practical case for configuring difftool
with your custom diff tool:
C:\myGitRepo>git config --global diff.tool winmerge
C:\myGitRepo>git config --global difftool.winmerge.cmd "winmerge.sh \"$LOCAL\" \"$REMOTE\""
C:\myGitRepo>git config --global difftool.prompt false
With winmerge.sh stored in a directory part of your PATH:
#!/bin/sh
echo Launching WinMergeU.exe: $1 $2
"C:/Program Files/WinMerge/WinMergeU.exe" -u -e "$1" "$2" -dl "Local" -dr "Remote"
If you have another tool (kdiff3, P4Diff, ...), create another shell script, and the appropriate difftool.myDiffTool.cmd
config directive.
Then you can easily switch tools with the diff.tool
config.
You have also this blog entry by Dave to add other details.
(Or this question for the winmergeu
options)
The interest with this setting is the winmerge.sh
script: you can customize it to take into account special cases.
See for instance David Marble's answer below for an example which deals with:
- new files in either origin or destination
- removed files in either origin or destination
As Kem Mason mentions in his answer, you can also avoid any wrapper by using the --extcmd
option:
--extcmd=<command>
Specify a custom command for viewing diffs.
git-difftool
ignores the configured defaults and runs$command $LOCAL $REMOTE
when this option is specified.
For instance, this is how gitk
is able to run/use any diff
tool.
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11I had to escape the $, for $LOCAL and $REMOTE to prevent them from becoming "" and "". I would edit to say git config --globla difftool.winmerge.cmd "winmerge.sh \"\$LOCAL\" \"\$REMOTE\"" Commented Aug 19, 2009 at 16:52
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Also, any idea of how to get the -s option (open several diffs in one winmerge window) to work in this scheme? Commented Aug 19, 2009 at 16:57
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1@Carlos: Frank (see comment above) wanted you to look at stackoverflow.com/questions/1220309/… (for opening several diffs in one winmerge window)– VonCCommented Apr 19, 2010 at 3:58
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1The
--start=
and--end=
options are not recognised in v1.7.11– MichaelCommented Oct 21, 2013 at 2:17 -
1@SteveChambers Yes, I mentioned it in stackoverflow.com/a/10879804/6309. I will edit this answer.– VonCCommented May 15, 2018 at 8:08
Try this solution:
$ meld my_project_using_git
Meld understands Git and provides navigating around the recent changes.
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20That's great, much easier to type
meld .
thangit difftool
and have to view changed files sequentially. And it's much closer to Mercurial'shg vdiff
plugin.– TomCommented Nov 16, 2010 at 6:44 -
7Also,
meld .
works on Mercurial and Subversion projects too, in case anyone is curious.– TomCommented Nov 16, 2010 at 6:48 -
Hmm, when I do this a list of modified files shows. When I click on one of them or do 'compare' it opens alone in a separate tab. How do I get a diff?– misiu_mpCommented Jun 15, 2011 at 8:15
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@misiu_mp, I just tried it, on clicking the modified files, it shows the diff (old file as well as modified file).– db42Commented Jul 7, 2011 at 17:34
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2That's excellent if you want to see current changes. I found
git difftool -y -t meld --dir-diff other_branch
to be useful too, to see the difference with any branch. Commented Feb 22, 2022 at 9:07
With new git difftool, its as simple as adding this to your .gitconfig file:
[diff]
tool = any-name
[difftool "any-name"]
cmd = "\"C:/path/to/my/ext/diff.exe\" \"$LOCAL\" \"$REMOTE\""
Optionally, also add:
[difftool]
prompt = false
Also check out diffall, a simple script I wrote to extend the annoying (IMO) default diff behaviour of opening each in serial.
Global .gitconfig on Windows is in %USERPROFILE%\.gitconfig
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1
-
3
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@CJohnson: Path to the original file and path to the edited file, respectively.– jhewlettCommented Oct 1, 2013 at 5:19
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in case the blog-link dies, here's the linked SO answer: stackoverflow.com/a/1291578/321973 Commented Sep 19, 2014 at 8:27
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1@CJohnson: $LOCAL is always the latest commit. However $REMOTE isn't consistent. When looking at changes in the local sandbox, it's the current/edited file, But when diffing historical commits, it's the parent commit. IOW for normal diffs $LOCAL = old and $REMOTE = new. For historical, $LOCAL = newer and $REMOTE = older.– GrangerCommented Jan 8, 2018 at 20:41
Since Git version 1.6.3 there is "git difftool" which you can configure to use your favorite graphical diff tool.
Currently supported (at the time of writing this answer) out-of-the-box are KDiff3, Kompare, tkdiff, Meld, xxdiff, emerge, vimdiff, gvimdiff, ecmerge, Diffuse and opendiff; if the tool you want to use isn't on this list, you can always use 'difftool.<tool>.cmd
' configuration option.
"git difftool" accepts the same options as "git diff".
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1Araxis Merge is also configured. araxis.com/merge/scm_integration.html– ΩmegaManCommented Nov 7, 2011 at 13:08
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12
I have one addition to this. I like to regularly use a diff app that isn't supported as one of the default tools (e.g. kaleidoscope), via
git difftool -t
I also like to have the default diff
just be the regular command line, so setting the GIT_EXTERNAL_DIFF
variable isn't an option.
You can use an arbitrary diff
app as a one-off with this command:
git difftool --extcmd=/usr/bin/ksdiff
It just passes the 2 files to the command you specify, so you probably don't need a wrapper either.
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2Good point: nobody has mentioned yet that
--extcmd
option. +1. I have included it in my answer.– VonCCommented Feb 3, 2011 at 5:17 -
Building on VonC's answer to deal with file removals and additions, use the following commands and scripts:
git config --global diff.tool winmerge
git config --global difftool.winmerge.cmd "winmerge.sh \"$LOCAL\" \"$REMOTE\" \"$BASE\""
git config --global difftool.prompt false
Which is the same as putting this in your global file .gitconfig:
[diff]
tool = winmerge
[difftool "winmerge"]
cmd = winmerge.bat "$LOCAL" "$REMOTE" "$BASE"
[difftool]
prompt = false
Then put the following in file winmerge.sh which must be on your path:
#!/bin/sh
NULL="/dev/null"
if [ "$2" = "$NULL" ] ; then
echo "removed: $3"
elif [ "$1" = "$NULL" ] ; then
echo "added: $3"
else
echo "changed: $3"
"C:/Program Files (x86)/WinMerge/WinMergeU.exe" -e -ub -dl "Base" -dr "Mine" "$1" "$2"
fi
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-
1
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Can you make this for many tools ? And associate them by file extension ?– yucerCommented Apr 6, 2017 at 12:39
Solution for Windows/MSYS Git
After reading the answers, I discovered a simpler way that involves changing only one file.
Create a batch file to invoke your diff program, with argument 2 and 5. This file must be somewhere in your path. (If you don't know where that is, put it in C:\windows.) Call it, for example, "gitdiff.bat". Mine is:
@echo off REM This is gitdiff.bat "C:\Program Files\WinMerge\WinMergeU.exe" %2 %5
Set the environment variable to point to your batch file. For example:
GIT_EXTERNAL_DIFF=gitdiff.bat
. Or through PowerShell by typinggit config --global diff.external gitdiff.bat
.It is important to not use quotes, or specify any path information, otherwise it won't work. That's why gitdiff.bat must be in your path.
Now when you type "git diff", it will invoke your external diff viewer.
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1+1 (+10 if I could.) This is really the most simple solution. I struggled for hours with the accepted answer, and finally gave up (some of my problems were probably related to running Git through PowerShell...) However, I used
git config --global diff.external winmerge.cmd
, instead of setting theGIT_EXTERNAL_DIFF
environment variable, and it works equally well. Commented Aug 17, 2012 at 8:57 -
A couple of issues with this solution: 1. Doesn't work for new files. WinMerge asks me to enter a second file to compare against. 2. Window to compare next file only opens up after you close the current WinMerge window, no easy way to see all files at the same time.– Jesus HCommented Jul 2, 2019 at 15:41
If you're doing this through Cygwin, you may need to use cygpath:
$ git config difftool.bc3.cmd "git-diff-bcomp-wrapper.sh \$LOCAL \$REMOTE"
$ cat git-diff-bcomp-wrapper.sh
#!/bin/sh
"c:/Program Files (x86)/Beyond Compare 3/BComp.exe" `cygpath -w $1` `cygpath -w $2`
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For some reason, using "bc3" is no longer working for me, but if I use "beyond" instead, it's fine.– idbriiCommented Jun 18, 2012 at 19:03
After looking at some other external diff tools, I found that the diff
view in IntelliJ IDEA (and Android Studio) is the best one for me.
Step 1 - setup IntelliJ IDEA to be run from the command line
If you want to use IntelliJ IDEA as your diff tool you should first setup IntelliJ IDEA to be run from the command line following the instructions here:
On macOS or UNIX:
- Make sure IntelliJ IDEA is running.
- On the main menu, choose
Tools | Create Command-line Launcher
. The dialog box Create Launcher Script opens, with the suggested path and name of the launcher script. You can accept default, or specify your own path. Make notice of it, as you'll need it later. Outside of IntelliJ IDEA, add the path and name of the launcher script to your path.
On Windows:
- Specify the location of the IntelliJ IDEA executable in the Path system environment variable. In this case, you will be able to invoke the IntelliJ IDEA executable and other IntelliJ IDEA commands from any directory.
Step 2 - configure git to use IntelliJ IDEA as the difftool
Following the instructions on this blog post:
Bash
export INTELLIJ_HOME /Applications/IntelliJ\ IDEA\ CE.app/Contents/MacOS
PATH=$IDEA_HOME $PATH
Fish
set INTELLIJ_HOME /Applications/IntelliJ\ IDEA\ CE.app/Contents/MacOS
set PATH $INTELLIJ_HOME $PATH
Now add the following to your git config:
[merge]
tool = intellij
[mergetool "intellij"]
cmd = idea merge $(cd $(dirname "$LOCAL") && pwd)/$(basename "$LOCAL") $(cd $(dirname "$REMOTE") && pwd)/$(basename "$REMOTE") $(cd $(dirname "$BASE") && pwd)/$(basename "$BASE") $(cd $(dirname "$MERGED") && pwd)/$(basename "$MERGED")
trustExitCode = true
[diff]
tool = intellij
[difftool "intellij"]
cmd = idea diff $(cd $(dirname "$LOCAL") && pwd)/$(basename "$LOCAL") $(cd $(dirname "$REMOTE") && pwd)/$(basename "$REMOTE")
You can try it out with git difftool
or git difftool HEAD~1
A short summary of the previous great answers:
git difftool --tool-help
git config --global diff.tool <chosen tool>
git config --global --add difftool.prompt false
Then use it by typing (optionally specifying the file name as well):
git difftool
This works for me on Windows 7. There isn't any need for intermediary sh scripts
Contents of .gitconfig:
[diff]
tool = kdiff3
[difftool]
prompt = false
[difftool "kdiff3"]
path = C:/Program Files (x86)/KDiff3/kdiff3.exe
cmd = "$LOCAL" "$REMOTE"
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Do you also have kdiff3 defined as your mergetool? Mind sharing that part of your gitconfig if so?– blongCommented Sep 12, 2012 at 19:54
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2Thanks. This didn't quite work for me but it did work when I removed
path
and changedcmd
to"\"C:/Program Files (x86)/KDiff3/kdiff3.exe\" \"$LOCAL\" \"$REMOTE\""
Commented Nov 1, 2013 at 14:05
Install Meld:
# apt-get install meld
Then choose that as the difftool:
$ git config --global diff.tool meld
If you want to run it in the console, type:
$ git difftool
If you want to use graphic mode, type:
$ git mergetool
And the output would be:
'git mergetool' will now attempt to use one of the following tools:
meld opendiff kdiff3 tkdiff xxdiff tortoisemerge gvimdiff diffuse
diffmerge ecmerge p4merge araxis bc3 codecompare emerge vimdiff
Merging:
www/css/style.css
www/js/controllers.js
Normal merge conflict for 'www/css/style.css':
{local}: modified file
{remote}: modified file
Hit return to start merge resolution tool (meld):
So just press Enter to use meld (default). This would open graphic mode. Make the magic save and press that that resolve the merge. That's all.
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I love meld but it has been behaving very poorly on MacOs, so I've switched to sublime merge. Commented Sep 22, 2020 at 14:36
Here's a batch file that works for Windows - assumes DiffMerge installed in default location, handles x64, handles forward to backslash replacement as necessary and has ability to install itself. Should be easy to replace DiffMerge with your favourite diff program.
To install:
gitvdiff --install
gitvdiff.bat:
@echo off
REM ---- Install? ----
REM To install, run gitvdiff --install
if %1==--install goto install
REM ---- Find DiffMerge ----
if DEFINED ProgramFiles^(x86^) (
Set DIFF="%ProgramFiles(x86)%\SourceGear\DiffMerge\DiffMerge.exe"
) else (
Set DIFF="%ProgramFiles%\SourceGear\DiffMerge\DiffMerge.exe"
)
REM ---- Switch forward slashes to back slashes ----
set oldW=%2
set oldW=%oldW:/=\%
set newW=%5
set newW=%newW:/=\%
REM ---- Launch DiffMerge ----
%DIFF% /title1="Old Version" %oldW% /title2="New Version" %newW%
goto :EOF
REM ---- Install ----
:install
set selfL=%~dpnx0
set selfL=%selfL:\=/%
@echo on
git config --global diff.external %selfL%
@echo off
:EOF
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Great script, it saved me the trouble of looking DiffMerge commands. You might want to modify the install line to use quotes - I had trouble on my machine: "%1"=="--install".– MarioCommented Mar 23, 2010 at 13:33
If you're on a Mac and have Xcode, then you have FileMerge installed. The terminal command is opendiff, so you can just do:
git difftool -t opendiff
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2Use the -y option to avoid annoying prompts. Unfortunately, git will wait until FileMerge quits before offering the next changed file. Use the -d option to do a directory compare in one shot.– miner49rCommented Jul 5, 2013 at 14:45
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The option -t seems to require the complete path. Maybe using git difftool --extcmd=opendiff is better.– yucerCommented Apr 6, 2017 at 12:38
Introduction
For reference I'd like to include my variation on VonC's answer. Keep in mind that I am using the MSys version of Git (1.6.0.2 at this time) with modified PATH, and running Git itself from PowerShell (or cmd.exe), not the Bash shell.
I introduced a new command, gitdiff
. Running this command temporarily redirects git diff
to use a visual diff program of your choice (as opposed to VonC's solution that does it permanently). This allows me to have both the default Git diff functionality (git diff
) as well as visual diff functionality (gitdiff
). Both commands take the same parameters, so for example to visually diff changes in a particular file you can type
gitdiff path/file.txt
Setup
Note that $GitInstall
is used as a placeholder for the directory where Git is installed.
Create a new file,
$GitInstall\cmd\gitdiff.cmd
@echo off setlocal for /F "delims=" %%I in ("%~dp0..") do @set path=%%~fI\bin;%%~fI\mingw\bin;%PATH% if "%HOME%"=="" @set HOME=%USERPROFILE% set GIT_EXTERNAL_DIFF=git-diff-visual.cmd set GIT_PAGER=cat git diff %* endlocal
Create a new file,
$GitInstall\bin\git-diff-visual.cmd
(replacing[visual_diff_exe]
placeholder with full path to the diff program of your choice)@echo off rem diff is called by git with 7 parameters: rem path old-file old-hex old-mode new-file new-hex new-mode echo Diffing "%5" "[visual_diff_exe]" "%2" "%5" exit 0
You're now done. Running
gitdiff
from within a Git repository should now invoke your visual diff program for every file that was changed.
For a Linux version of how to configure a diff tool on Git versions prior to 1.6.3 (1.6.3 added difftool to Git), this is a great concise tutorial.
In brief:
Step 1: add this to your .gitconfig
[diff]
external = git_diff_wrapper
[pager]
diff =
Step 2: create a file named git_diff_wrapper, put it somewhere in your $PATH
#!/bin/sh
vimdiff "$2" "$5"
On Mac OS X,
git difftool -t diffuse
does the job for me in the Git folder. For installing Diffuse, one can use port -
sudo port install diffuse
-
-
Can you add references to 'port' and 'diffuse'? And presumed platforms/operating system(s)? Commented Jul 3, 2021 at 11:45
The following can be gleaned from the other answers here, but for me it's difficult, (too much information), so here's the 'just type it in' answer for tkdiff:
git difftool --tool=tkdiff <path to the file to be diffed>
You can substitute the executable name of your favorite diffing tool for tkdiff. As long as (e.g. tkdiff), (or your favorite diffing tool) is in your PATH, it will be launched.
You can use git difftool
.
For example, if you have Meld, you can edit the branches master
and devel
by:
git config --global diff.external meld
git difftool master..devel
I tried the fancy stuff here (with tkdiff) and nothing worked for me. So I wrote the following script, tkgitdiff. It does what I need it to do.
$ cat tkgitdiff
#!/bin/sh
#
# tkdiff for git.
# Gives you the diff between HEAD and the current state of your file.
#
newfile=$1
git diff HEAD -- $newfile > /tmp/patch.dat
cp $newfile /tmp
savedPWD=$PWD
cd /tmp
patch -R $newfile < patch.dat
cd $savedPWD
tkdiff /tmp/$newfile $newfile
I've been using this bit in file ~/.gitconfig
for a long time:
[diff]
external = ~/Dropbox/source/bash/git-meld
With git-meld
:
#!/bin/bash
if [ "$DISPLAY" = "" ];
then
diff $2 $5
else
meld $2 $5
fi
But now I got tired of always using Meld in a graphical environment, and it's not trivial to invoke the normal diff with this setup, so I switched to this:
[alias]
v = "!sh -c 'if [ $# -eq 0 ] ; then git difftool -y -t meld ; else git difftool -y $@ ; fi' -"
With this setup, things like this work:
git v
git v --staged
git v -t kompare
git v --staged -t tkdiff
And I still get to keep the good old git diff
.
I use Kompare on Ubuntu:
sudo apt-get install kompare
To compare two branches:
git difftool -t kompare <my_branch> master
If you happen to already have a diff tool associated with filetypes (say, because you installed TortoiseSVN which comes with a diff viewer) you could just pipe the regular git diff
output to a "temp" file, then just open that file directly without needing to know anything about the viewer:
git diff > "~/temp.diff" && start "~/temp.diff"
Setting it as a global alias works even better: git what
[alias]
what = "!f() { git diff > "~/temp.diff" && start "~/temp.diff"; }; f"
If you're not one for the command line then if you install TortoiseGit, you can right click on a file to get a TortoiseGit submenu with the "Diff later" option.
When you select this on the first file, you can then right click on the second file, go to the TortoiseGit submenu and select "Diff with ==yourfilehere==". This will give the TortoiseGit merge GUI for the result.
You may want to try out xd, which is a GUI wrapper for Git/SVN diff. It is not a diff tool itself.
You run xd
when you want to run git diff
or svn diff
and it will show you a list of files, a preview window and you can launch any diff tool you like, including tkdiff, xxdiff, gvimdiff, Emacs (ediff), XEmacs (ediff), Meld, Diffuse, Kompare and KDiff3. You can also run any custom tool.
Unfortunately the tool doesn't support Windows.
Disclosure: I am the author of this tool.
git config diff.tool winmerge
. Verify it worked by typinggit difftool
. Get rid of the prompt typinggit config --global difftool.prompt false
. I recommend p4merge instead of winmerge.