Is there a command in Git to see (either dumped to stdout, or in $PAGER
or $EDITOR
) a particular version of a particular file?
11 Answers
You can use git show
with a path from the root of the repository (./
or ../
for relative pathing):
$ git show REVISION:path/to/file
Replace REVISION
with your actual revision (could be a Git commit SHA, a tag name, a branch name, a relative commit name, or any other way of identifying a commit in Git)
For example, to view the version of file <repository-root>/src/main.c
from 4 commits ago, use:
$ git show HEAD~4:src/main.c
Git for Windows requires forward slashes even in paths relative to the current directory. For more information, check out the man page for git-show
.
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6That doesn't actually seem to work -- did you try it? For "git show HEAD:path/to/file.c", I get an "ambiguous argument" error.– mikeDec 3, 2008 at 20:06
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5
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25If you're on windows, it might be a path separator thing; if I do git show HEAD:dir\subdir\file, I get the anbiguous argument. If I do git show HEAD:dir/subdir/file, it works as expected. Jul 21, 2010 at 14:56
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14The path you must provide after the : is from the root of the git repository. (this was given below as an answer but I think it was intended as a comment on this answer)– TylerFeb 28, 2011 at 19:21
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10
Doing this by date looks like this if the commit happened within the last 90 days:
git show HEAD@{2013-02-25}:./fileInCurrentDirectory.txt
Note that HEAD@{2013-02-25}
means "where HEAD was on 2013-02-25" in this repository (using the reflog), not "the last commit before 2013-02-25 in this branch in history".
This is important! It means that, by default, this method only works for history within the last 90 days. Otherwise, you need to do this:
git show $(git rev-list -1 --before="2013-02-26" HEAD):./fileInCurrentDirectory.txt
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5This command is useful with
master
instead ofHEAD@{2013-02-25}
, if you're on a branch– funrollNov 9, 2015 at 13:56 -
1Can you include the time, à la
git log --since='2016-04-28 23:59:59 +0100'
? May 3, 2016 at 12:55 -
15The fact this syntax uses the reflog is important and should be highlighted strongly, because the reflog does not contain all commits. See blog.endpoint.com/2014/05/git-checkout-at-specific-date.html Dec 30, 2016 at 4:21
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1Something which I missed: there cannot be a space after the colon
:
and before the filename. Jan 11, 2018 at 9:19 -
@AliceHeaton This cannot be stressed enough. (Thanks !) Jan 25, 2021 at 9:37
If you like GUIs, you can use gitk:
start gitk with:
gitk /path/to/file
Choose the revision in the top part of the screen, e.g. by description or date. By default, the lower part of the screen shows the diff for that revision, (corresponding to the "patch" radio button).
To see the file for the selected revision:
- Click on the "tree" radio button. This will show the root of the file tree at that revision.
- Drill down to your file.
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8
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1@Paul Slocum: May be because this command is not a conventional command, not the built-in of git. I think this command only work for Windows.– EnvilDec 4, 2013 at 2:46
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Note this only seems to work if you start from the root of your git repository.– MarcMar 23, 2016 at 16:43
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If you want to check against a certain revision with gitk you could also use this shortcut:
gitk REVISION /path/to/file
. This can come in handy when you want to check against a certain version for instance. Jul 6, 2016 at 7:42 -
1
You can also specify a commit hash
(often also called commit ID
) with the git show
command.
In a nutshell
git show <commitHash>:/path/to/file
Step by step
- Show the log of all the changes for a given file with
git log /path/to/file
- In the list of changes shown, it shows the
commit hash
such ascommit 06c98...
(06c98... being the commit hash) - Copy the
commit hash
- Run the command
git show <commitHash>:/path/to/file
using thecommit hash
of step 3 & thepath/to/file
of step 1.
Note: adding the ./
when specifying a relative path seems important, i.e. git show b2f8be577166577c59b55e11cfff1404baf63a84:./flight-simulation/src/main/components/nav-horiz.html
.
In addition to Jim Hunziker's answer,
you can export the file from the revision as,
git show HEAD@{2013-02-25}:./fileInCurrentDirectory.txt > old_fileInCurrentDirectory.txt
Hope this helps :)
To quickly see the differences with older revisions of a file:
git show -1 filename.txt
> to compare against the last revision of file
git show -2 filename.txt
> to compare against the 2nd last revision
git show -3 fielname.txt
> to compare against the last 3rd last revision
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25Those commands show the differences with the current version for me but not show the entire file. Jan 21, 2019 at 11:31
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3It's important to notice that this answer matches the question "How to show differences to given file in recent commits?" instead of "How can I view an old version of a file with Git?" the the original question asks. Jun 16, 2021 at 13:44
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The difference is about the
:
- double colon - between commit-hash and file the commenters mention about the entire file and diff to another older version.– TimoMar 5, 2022 at 14:07
git log -p
will show you not just the commit logs but also the diff of each commit (except merge commits). Then you can press /
, enter filename and press enter
. Press n
or p
to go to the next/previous occurrence. This way you will not just see the changes in the file but also the commit information.
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4
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7You can also run
git log -p -- filename.txt
to restrain the history to only the desired file. Jan 21, 2019 at 12:25
WAY 1:
Find commit id with:
git reflog
List files from commit
git diff-tree --no-commit-id --name-only -r <commitHash>
Example:
git diff-tree --no-commit-id --name-only -r d2f9ba4
whered2f9ba4
is commit id from step 1.Open required file with following command:
git show <commitHash>:/path/to/file
Example:
git show d2f9ba4:Src/Ext/MoreSwiftUI/ListCustom.swift
Src/...
is file path from step 2.
WAY 2:
///////////////
/// WARNING:
/// Ability to lose uncommitted data.
/// Perform commit or save your uncommited files to stash.
///////////////
- Find commit id with:
git reflog
- Make hard reset to this commit:
git reset --hard %commit ID%
Example:
git reset --hard c14809fa
- Make necessary changes and do a new commit into required branch
WAY 3: ( MacOS, TaoGit - it's free to use )
I prefer this way.
After steps on screenshot below you will have ability to copy all needed data even if commited data is "lost" in commit to detached head
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WARNING: Please be careful with the second method as you will lose all uncommited changes when you do a hard reset! Dec 1, 2020 at 16:25
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yes, this is ok with hard reset. that's because of reset is"hard" but not "soft". But you need to do hard because of possibilities of conflicts. Dec 1, 2020 at 18:31
You can use a script like this to dump all the versions of a file to separate files:
e.g.
git_dump_all_versions_of_a_file.sh path/to/somefile.txt
Get the script here as an answer to another similar question
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1
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Good catch! I double posted this answer to 2 different spots, and just removed this one and linked to the other one, where people told me about this before... thanks @mogsie ! Jan 26, 2018 at 14:32
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Helper to fetch multiple files from a given revision
When trying to resolve merge conflicts, this helper is very useful:
#!/usr/bin/env python3
import argparse
import os
import subprocess
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
parser.add_argument('revision')
parser.add_argument('files', nargs='+')
args = parser.parse_args()
toplevel = subprocess.check_output(['git', 'rev-parse', '--show-toplevel']).rstrip().decode()
for path in args.files:
file_relative = os.path.relpath(os.path.abspath(path), toplevel)
base, ext = os.path.splitext(path)
new_path = base + '.old' + ext
with open(new_path, 'w') as f:
subprocess.call(['git', 'show', '{}:./{}'.format(args.revision, path)], stdout=f)
Usage:
git-show-save other-branch file1.c path/to/file2.cpp
Outcome: the following contain the alternate versions of the files:
file1.old.c
path/to/file2.old.cpp
This way, you keep the file extension so your editor won't complain, and can easily find the old file just next to the newer one.
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@MickeyPerlstein if you can make achieve the same interface with a better implementation, I'm all ears. Mar 24, 2019 at 16:38
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maybe i don't understand (and if so, my apologies) but isn't it just : "git show version:./path > new_path " ? Mar 26, 2019 at 11:34
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@MickeyPerlstein hi, yes, my command generates that CLI, but it loops over multiple files and produces output name from input, so you don't have to type too much. Nothing revolutionary of course, but convenient. Mar 26, 2019 at 21:16
None of the previous answers addressed the second possibility mentioned by the OP, which is how to open the results into $EDITOR
.
Most editors on the terminal will accept reading from stdin
if you pass a single dash -
as the filename, which allows piping the output of the git show
command to the command you would use to open the editor.
As a Vim user, I'll use it as an example to clarify. You could do the following:
# The reference to a commit, branch, tag, etc
$ REVISION='...'
$ git show "$REVISION":path/to/file | vim -
One drawback of doing this is that the editor has no good hint of what is the file type you are dealing with and it may have trouble with syntax highlighting, for example. This happens because there is no file extension to look at. From the editor's perspective, it just receives a blob of bytes from stdin
.
In Vim, this can be easily solved by explicitly setting the filetype
:
$ git show "$REVISION":path/to/file.py | vim -c 'set filetype=python' -
Something very useful is to combine git show
with process substitution to compare two historical versions of a file directly using a diff utility (diff
, vimdiff
, etc). The file may have changed in position a lot inside the Git repository or maybe it was deleted for a while and later recreated. These situations give a hard time to Git to show the diff you want, but the following command does the trick:
$ vimdiff <(git show "$REV_0":path/to/file) <(git show "$REV_1":another/path/to/file)
Nice to find something to add to an almost 15 years old question!
git checkout <sha1-of-the-commit-you-need>
, afterwards,git checkout HEAD