Do you have a clean way to list all the files that ever existed in specified branch?
4 Answers
This is a simplified variation of Strager's solution:
git log --pretty=format: --name-status | cut -f2- | sort -u
Edit: Thanks to Jakub for teaching me a bit more in the comments, this version has a shorter pipeline and gives git more opportunity to get things right.
git log --pretty=format: --name-only --diff-filter=A | sort -u
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9@Dustlin: Add --diff-filter=A option (list only added files). Current version (without sed filtering only added files) would fail if you have enabled rename detection and have renames in history. I think you can then use --name-only instead of --name-status and remove 'cut -f2-' from pipeline. Commented Feb 13, 2009 at 12:39
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In one of my repos, I get quite a few duplicate lines (including a number of blank lines at the beginning of the output) with the second command that aren't dupes with the first. Commented May 8, 2012 at 16:19
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If you need a bit more info than the file name: $ git log --pretty=format:"%h %an [%cd]: %s" --name-only | cut -f2- | sort -u | grep Filename.ext– NitayCommented Apr 6, 2014 at 11:13
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4Note:
--all
is something you will need if you have more than a single orphaned tip. Eg, multiple separate histories in one repo. Commented Apr 27, 2015 at 5:50 -
5
--diff-filter=A
ignores files that were created by copying an already existing file, so adding it may not always be what you want. Commented May 31, 2018 at 14:21
This does the right thing for checking if a filename was ever present in the repo not just on the current branch.
git log --all --pretty=format: --name-only --diff-filter=A | sort - | grep fubar
Here is two useful alias: FindFile ff
and FindFilewithCopies ffc
:
# Find if one file ever had into repository
ff = "!git log --pretty=format: --name-status --all -M -B | sort -u | grep $1 #"
# The same as above but showing copied files
ffc = "!git log --pretty=format: --name-status --all -C -M -B | sort -u | grep $1 #"
You get information about file names and operations with them.
Sample use:
$ git ff create
A database/migrations/2014_10_12_000000_create_users_table.php
A database/migrations/2014_10_12_100000_create_password_resets_table.php
A database/migrations/2015_05_11_200932_create_boletin_table.php
A database/migrations/2015_05_15_133500_create_usuarios_table.php
D database/migrations/2015_05_12_000000_create_users_table.php
M database/migrations/2015_05_11_200932_create_boletin_table.php
R051 database/migrations/2014_10_12_000000_create_users_table.php database/migrations/2015_05_12_000000_create_users_table.php
$ git ffc create
A database/migrations/2014_10_12_000000_create_users_table.php
A database/migrations/2014_10_12_100000_create_password_resets_table.php
A database/migrations/2015_05_11_200932_create_boletin_table.php
A database/migrations/2015_05_15_133500_create_usuarios_table.php
C052 database/migrations/2014_10_12_000000_create_users_table.php database/migrations/2015_05_11_210246_create_boletin_nosend_table.php
D database/migrations/2015_05_12_000000_create_users_table.php
M database/migrations/2015_05_11_200932_create_boletin_table.php
R051 database/migrations/2014_10_12_000000_create_users_table.php database/migrations/2015_05_12_000000_create_users_table.php
You can run git-log --name-status
, which echoes something like:
commit afdbbaf52ab24ef7ce1daaf75f3aaf18c4d2fee0
Author: Your Name <[email protected]>
Date: Tue Aug 12 13:28:34 2008 -0700
Added test file.
A test
Then extract files added:
git-log --name-status | sed -ne 's/^A[^u]//p' | sort -u