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I need the last commit date in git. This means the latest update date in my program.

I used the command : $ git log -1 but this command will give me the date from the local repository. Rather I need date from remote repository.

I tried some commands as follow.

git log -n 1 origin/Sprint-6.
git rev-parse --verify HEAD
1
  • 1
    you can always use gitk --all to open the tree view for all branches (including remotes)
    – mTorres
    Aug 29, 2014 at 7:32

6 Answers 6

49

Get the last commit date:

You want the "repository wide last commit date for a given git user and git project, for a given branch. For example the date is shown at the top when you visit your repo and go to commits -> master for example:

https://github.com/sentientmachine/TeslaAverageGainByMonthWeekDay/commits/master

Get the last local commit date in git using terminal

Use git help log for more info on format codes to pass to --format to tell git log what kind of data to fetch.

The last commit date in git:

git log -1 --format="%at" | xargs -I{} date -d @{} +%Y/%m/%d_%H:%M:%S
#prints 2018/07/18 07:40:52

But as you pointed out, you have to run that command on the machine that performed the last commit. If the last commit date was performed on another machine, the above command only reports local last commit... So:

Or Repository wide: Get the last git commit date

Same as above, but do a git pull first

git pull; 
git log -1 --format="%at" | xargs -I{} date -d @{} +%Y/%m/%d_%H:%M:%S
#prints 2018/07/18 09:15:10

Or use the JSON API:

Doing git pulls is very slow and you're banging GitHub with a heavy operation. Just query the GitHub rest api:

#assuming you're using github and your project URL is visible to public:
# https://github.com/yourusername/your_repo_name

#then do:
curl https://api.github.com/repos/yourusername/your_repo_name/commits/master

That blasts you in the face with a screen full of json, so send it your favorite json parser and get the field called date:

curl https://api.github.com/repos/<your_name>/<your_repo>/commits/master 2>&1 | \
grep '"date"' | tail -n 1
#prints "date": "2019-06-05T14:38:19Z"

From comments below, gedge has handy dandy improvements to incantations:

git log -1 --date=format:"%Y/%m/%d %T" --format="%ad"
2019/11/13 15:25:44

Or even simpler: ( https://git-scm.com/docs/git-log/1.8.0 )

git --no-pager log -1 --format="%ai"
2019-12-13 09:08:38 -0500

Your choices are north, south, east, and "Dennis".

7
  • 2
    Just curious; any special reason for using xargs? I am thinking date -d @`git log -1 --format="%at"` will be a more concise solution.
    – papigee
    Oct 12, 2018 at 15:09
  • 3
    My choice of xargs was a blend of google-fu, guess and check, and brownian motion. Your solution appears to remove unnecessary layers of the onion. Have an up boat. Oct 12, 2018 at 15:27
  • For Mac OSX, date is different and will not work. You might want to use DT=`git log -1 --format="%at"` && python -c "import time; print(time.strftime('%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S', time.localtime($DT)))"
    – ishahak
    Jan 2, 2019 at 14:17
  • 2
    This osx command needs more layers. Maybe you can add a javascript ajax hit to mongodb so that is more webscale. Jan 2, 2019 at 14:23
  • 10
    sarcasm when using xargs...date? when this would do: git log -1 --date=format:"%Y/%m/%d %T" --format="%ad"
    – Gedge
    Jul 5, 2019 at 13:48
7

To get the last commit date from git repository in a long(Unix epoch timestamp)

  • Command: git log -1 --format=%ct
  • Result: 1605103148

Note: You can visit the git-log documentation to get a more detailed description of the options.

3

git log -1 will give you the Merge id, Author and Date

git log -1 --format=%cd will give the output as below

Wed Apr 13 15:32:54 2022 +0530

We can format the date as below: git log -1 --pretty='format:%cd' --date=format:'%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S'

output 2022-04-13 15:32:54

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    Hello @Divya - thank you for your contribution, but your answer is a duplicate of already existing answers.
    – KJH
    May 25, 2022 at 21:59
2

Another oneliner for Linux, get UTC ISO 8601 time formatted up to the minutes:

TZ=utc date -d @$(git log -1 --format=%ct) --iso-8601=m

Gives 2022-12-07T10:01+00:00

1

Late to the party but here's how to get the UNIX timestamp of the latest remote commit:

git log -1 --date=raw origin/master | grep ^Date | tr -s ' ' | cut -d ' ' -f2
0

Using git version 2.39.2 .

As I set up my ~/.gitconfig with showSignature = true, executing git log -1 --format=%cI will additionally include commit signature information, e.g.

Good "git" signature for abdull@example.com with RSA key SHA256:abcd
2023-04-14T20:02:23+02:00

To remove the commit signature information, add the --no-show-signature flag, e.g. git log --no-show-signature -1 --format=%cI:

2023-04-14T20:02:23+02:00

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