Say I have uncommitted changes in my working directory. How can I make a patch from those without having to create a commit?
-
37Accepted answer should probably be changed, given the second answer is nearly four times more popular. – Tim Ogilvy Feb 19 '18 at 12:37
-
6@TimOgilvy agreed. OP should do it. Second answer is far more popular and gives more information – John Demetriou Apr 19 '18 at 7:21
-
1I think it worth to mention you need patch from uncommitted changes in the title either. – 2i3r Feb 4 '20 at 11:09
git diff
for unstaged changes.
git diff --cached
for staged changes.
git diff HEAD
for both staged and unstaged changes.
-
18
-
36
git format-patch
also includes binary diffs and some meta info. Actually that would be the best bet for creating a patch, but afaik this does only work for checked in sources/ changes, right? – Eric Mar 18 '12 at 12:24 -
26Sometimes it might be useful to create a patch relative to the current directory. To achieve this, use
git diff --relative
– ejboy Jan 8 '13 at 14:03 -
35
-
147
If you haven't yet commited the changes, then:
git diff > mypatch.patch
But sometimes it happens that part of the stuff you're doing are new files that are untracked and won't be in your git diff
output. So, one way to do a patch is to stage everything for a new commit (git add
each file, or just git add .
) but don't do the commit, and then:
git diff --cached > mypatch.patch
Add the 'binary' option if you want to add binary files to the patch (e.g. mp3 files):
git diff --cached --binary > mypatch.patch
You can later apply the patch:
git apply mypatch.patch
-
5I did exactly that and got "fatal: unrecognized input" upon executing git apply. Any idea what can cause this and how to fix it? – Vitaly Dec 22 '13 at 20:11
-
8@Vitaly: is your patch readable if you open it with a text editor? it should be clean with no strange characters, for example if the color.diff setting is set your patch will have some 'color characters' that can make 'git apply' fail, in that case try
git diff --no-color
. Otherwise, it looks like an encoding problem. – jcarballo Dec 22 '13 at 21:06 -
1To create the patch from the already staged changes you could also do
git diff --staged > mypatch.patch
, because--staged
is a synonym for--cached
. I think it easier to remember. – matthaeus Mar 3 '17 at 16:52 -
3Related to "new files that are untracked": "git diff" and "git diff --cached" only work if "git add <file>" has been called first. (I am new to git and wondered why I got an empty patch everytime) – Anonymous Apr 25 '17 at 8:41
-
5This got me out of a strange merge/rebase hell pretty easily, thanks :) – John Hunt Aug 31 '17 at 10:34
git diff
and git apply
will work for text files, but won't work for binary files.
You can easily create a full binary patch, but you will have to create a temporary commit. Once you've made your temporary commit(s), you can create the patch with:
git format-patch <options...>
After you've made the patch, run this command:
git reset --mixed <SHA of commit *before* your working-changes commit(s)>
This will roll back your temporary commit(s). The final result leaves your working copy (intentionally) dirty with the same changes you originally had.
On the receiving side, you can use the same trick to apply the changes to the working copy, without having the commit history. Simply apply the patch(es), and git reset --mixed <SHA of commit *before* the patches>
.
Note that you might have to be well-synced for this whole option to work. I've seen some errors when applying patches when the person making them hadn't pulled down as many changes as I had. There are probably ways to get it to work, but I haven't looked far into it.
Here's how to create the same patches in Tortoise Git (not that I recommend using that tool):
- Commit your working changes
- Right click the branch root directory and click
Tortoise Git
->Create Patch Serial
- Choose whichever range makes sense (
Since
:FETCH_HEAD
will work if you're well-synced) - Create the patch(es)
- Choose whichever range makes sense (
- Right click the branch root directory and click
Tortise Git
->Show Log
- Right click the commit before your temporary commit(s), and click
reset "<branch>" to this...
- Select the
Mixed
option
And how to apply them:
- Right click the branch root directory and click
Tortoise Git
->Apply Patch Serial
- Select the correct patch(es) and apply them
- Right click the branch root directory and click
Tortise Git
->Show Log
- Right click the commit before the patch's commit(s), and click
reset "<branch>" to this...
- Select the
Mixed
option
-
5Technically this does require creating a commit which OP asked to avoid, but it's a temporary one and the answer is useful regardless. – davenpcj Jan 24 '14 at 21:25
To create a patch with both modified & new files (staged) you can run:
git diff HEAD > file_name.patch
-
Thanks, in my case, this answer works, but
git diff --cached > mypatch.patch
is not working. – mining Sep 23 '16 at 6:12 -
I have a question: can
file_name.patch
be used by thepatch
command? Are they compatible with each other? – Rakshith Ravi Sep 4 '19 at 7:58 -
1git diff + git diff --cached/staged == git diff HEAD (show all the changes since the last commit) – K. Symbol Feb 12 '20 at 5:17
-
1@RakshithRavi afaik, yes they are. you may use your patch created by
git diff HEAD > file-name.patch
e.g. as follows:patch --forward --strip=1 < file-name.patch
– whyer Jul 23 '20 at 19:19
I like:
git format-patch HEAD~<N>
where <N>
is number of last commits to save as patches.
The details how to use the command are in the DOC
UPD
Here you can find how to apply them then.
UPD For those who did not get the idea of format-patch
Add alias:
git config --global alias.make-patch '!bash -c "cd ${GIT_PREFIX};git add .;git commit -m ''uncommited''; git format-patch HEAD~1; git reset HEAD~1"'
Then at any directory of your project repository run:
git make-patch
This command will create 0001-uncommited.patch
at your current directory. Patch will contain all the changes and untracked files that are visible to next command:
git status .
-
2There is a simpler way than creating a commit and uncommiting. git diff --cached --binary – Gaurav Agarwal Apr 4 '19 at 6:24
We could also specify the files, to include just the files with relative changes, particularly when they span multiple directories e.x.
git diff ~/path1/file1.ext ~/path2/file2.ext...fileN.ext > ~/whatever_path/whatever_name.patch
I found this to be not specified in the answers or comments, which are all relevant and correct, so chose to add it. Explicit is better than implicit!