37

How can I see how much work is left on a rebase while it's in progress?

I.e. I want to see how much work git has left to check.

3
  • 2
    This doesn't sound related to conflicts, it sounds like the OP wants to know what step is currently being executed. Oct 10, 2015 at 17:55
  • 1
    @EdwardThomson You are correct, sir.
    – Kit Sunde
    Oct 11, 2015 at 23:49
  • 1
    @jubobs, when the rebase makes a lot of progress, it shows a counter such as (10/35), so it must be possible, the information exists
    – Fire Crow
    Aug 28, 2016 at 21:54

6 Answers 6

26

Starting with git version 2.26

Here's the shell command that prints the rebase progress:

( RMD="$( git rev-parse --git-path 'rebase-merge/' )" && N=$( cat "${RMD}msgnum" ) && L=$( cat "${RMD}end" ) && echo "${N} / ${L}" ; )

Sample output will be like

4 / 7

You can modify the last echo command parameter to print it using the format you like.

For git with versions that are <= 2.25

( RaD="$( git rev-parse --git-path 'rebase-apply/' )" && N=$( cat "${RaD}next" ) && L=$( cat "${RaD}last" ) && echo "${N} / ${L}" ; )
4
  • Just a note: those commands will only work on Linux. Might be useful to also just list the directories as well. Aug 9, 2020 at 5:52
  • @MattVukomanovic , I am not quite sure what exactly you mean by "only work on Linux". It works in GNU+Linux, macOS and windows. It works perfectly in ZSH and Bash. I do use ZSH in Cygwin. And Bash as shell that comes with "Git for Windows". Aug 10, 2020 at 16:49
  • 1
    ah I don't use git bash on windows I use cmd.exe with the linux tools included in the system folder, so that is the confusion. Aug 23, 2020 at 18:09
  • @MattVukomanovic, I also don't quite use Bash for Windows. At least not the shell itself. I do use Cygwin (yes, its a little bit slow :( ) which is much better than anything else in windows as for me. Aug 25, 2020 at 17:31
20

You are probably looking for this information for a normal rebase instead of an interactive rebase.

That information isn't shown for non interactive rebases. However you can find it out by looking in your rebase-apply directory.

In that directory there is all the information you need. Specifically if you are running with the default .git directory location you can find it out by running these commands

cat .git/rebase-apply/next
cat .git/rebase-apply/last

If you want to know the commit which is currently being applied then you can use the following

cat .git/rebase-apply/original-commit

And if you want to see the actual patches which are being applied then you can look at the numbered files in .git/rebase-apply

1
  • Starting with version 2.26 of git the git rebase $Onto $Branch command now triggers interactive rebase by default. This answer is not valid for that case anymore. Please see my answer here - stackoverflow.com/a/57292015/2753851 for a proper solution. Jun 15, 2020 at 10:53
3

If you're using git-prompt.sh, your prompt will show something like |REBASE-i (x/y) when resolving a conflict during an interactive rebase, where x is rebase step out of y where the conflict occurred.

0

If you just want to take a look at it and you're using Bash, you can run: __git_ps1. It will display something similar to (feature/avarias|MERGING)(base), but concerning rebase. This string is meant to compose your prompt by assigning it to variable PS1.

0

I think you are looking for

git rebase --edit-todo
0

git status

Example content:

On branch xxx
Your branch and 'origin/xxx' have diverged,
and have 4 and 7 different commits each, respectively.
  (use "git pull" if you want to integrate the remote branch with yours)

No commands done.
Next commands to do (5 remaining commands):
   pick d33eb3d Add 3ds not performed case -
   edit c58cad6 Refactor extract method to update models
  (use "git rebase --edit-todo" to view and edit)
You are currently editing a commit while rebasing branch 'xxx' on '18cc67c'.
  (use "git commit --amend" to amend the current commit)
  (use "git rebase --continue" once you are satisfied with your changes)

nothing to commit, working tree clean

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