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I have created one branch xyz from master. I have done approximately 1000 commits and probably modified 20 files in xyz branch. Now I want to list all the files which I have modified in xyz branch.

Following command lists files modified in both branches.

git diff --name-only master...xyz
2
  • drop the ... : git diff --name-only master xyz
    – LeGEC
    Sep 26, 2016 at 7:56
  • According git diff documentation the master...xyz syntax for diff (not the log) should give just what you needed. If you think it gives you wrong result, could you provide a minimal example?
    – max630
    Sep 27, 2016 at 5:07

2 Answers 2

11

The fundamental problem here is that git diff compares two specific commits.1 No matter what arguments you give it, it's still going to choose two specific commits, and compare those two.2

What this means is that to get git diff to show you what you have done in some branch, you must pick two commits within that branch: one to call a "starting point" and one to call an "ending point". If you choose to do this, it usually helps to draw the commit graph. You can do this manually, or use git log --oneline --graph to help out. (A nice way to see this graph for your two branches in comparison with each other is git log --oneline --graph --decorate --boundary master...xyz.) Another way is to try drawing your graph yourself, which can let you represent it more compactly, or to use gitk or some other graphical viewer that will draw the graph.

If there is a single merge base commit between the tip commit on master and the tip commit on xyz, then:

git diff --name-only master...xyz

will compare (and list the names of files modified) that particular merge base, vs the tip-most commit of branch XYZ. That is, if the graph looks something like:

          o--o--o--o--...--o--Z   <-- master
         /
...--o--*
         \
          F--G-...--X             <-- xyz

then * is the merge base commit, Z is the tip commit on master,3 X is the tip commit on xyz, and git diff master...xyz will compare commit * vs commit X. (By contrast, git diff master..xyz—note the two dots instead of three, here—will compare commit Z vs commit X.)

That said, given that git diff --name-only master...xyz is not showing you what you want, you might want git log --name-only master..xyz (probably also with --oneline; I see gucce added this as a comment as well), to show you what happens in each commit that is in xyz that is not also in master. That is, given the above graph, this will diff commit * against commit F, then F against G, and so on up to the comparison against X. Note that this is using git log's built-in ability to diff each commit against its parent.4


1It can also compare one commit to the index, or one commit to the work-tree, or the index to the work-tree. In another mode it can be used to compare two specific files, either or both of which need not be stored in the repository at all, but that's even more different from the way you want to use it.

2This, too, is a bit of an overstatement: by giving git diff more than one pair of commits, you can get it to produce what it calls a combined diff. This is normally used for merge commits, to show points where the merged contents differ from all parent commits, i.e., where a merge conflict was resolved by choosing something other than "what was in one branch". But this, too, goes quite a bit in the wrong direction, compared to what you want to achieve.

3I had this as T, for tip-of-master, for a moment, but then realized that T is alphabetically between F and X. X is for xyz, so I changed T to Z here so that it comes after X. The general idea is that we're not interested in most of the commits exclusively on master, except for the tip-most one that the name master selects.

4If any of the commits in the F-through-X chain is a merge commit, git log won't even bother to diff it at all unless you add some additional options. That is, git log skips over merges when it comes time to diff them, unless you either ask for combined diffs (-c or --cc) or to split merges (-m). All three of these options have drawbacks as well, so your best bet is to work with a no-merges situation in the first place.

6

As pointed out by @torek, the git diff command ignores the dot notation completely.

Therefore, the following command should lead to the desired results:

git log --oneline --name-only develop..xyz | sort | uniq

Which prints out something like this, with the modified files at the end:

0871be6 commit 1
9caad09 commit 2
bb714f0 commit 3
...
path/to/file1
path/to/file2
path/to/file3
path/to/file4

Notice, there are only two dots. This means, take into consideration all revisions which are in xyz but not in develop.

Using three dots uses all revisions which are exclusively in one of the two branches, but not in both.

Reference: https://git-scm.com/book/tr/v2/Git-Tools-Revision-Selection#Commit-Ranges

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  • I tried this too, It lists files even which I have not modified in xyz branch.
    – Vivek Nuna
    Sep 26, 2016 at 8:30
  • This is correct for all other Git commands, particularly git log, but not for git diff, which (ab)uses the two and three dot notations for other purposes. In particular git diff X...Y means git diff $(git merge-base X Y) Y, while git diff X..Y means git diff X Y. git diff will not look at intermediate commits. (The triple-dot notation is also susceptible to another issue if there is no merge base, or if there are multiple merge bases.)
    – torek
    Sep 26, 2016 at 9:00
  • Maybe you have accidentally added a new line at the end, or changed line endings. To verify what has been changed for a specific file in your xyz branch you can use git log -p develop..xyz -- path/to/file. This will list all the commits from xyz (but not develop) which have modified path/to/file and the diff itself (-p is for 'patch'). Try this on one of the files you think you have not modified.
    – gucce
    Sep 26, 2016 at 9:04
  • As @torek has pointed out. git diff does not work correctly with the dot notation. In this case I would suggest git log --oneline --name-only develop..xyz | sort | uniq which will first list the shortened commit hashed and messages, and after that all the files which have been changed.
    – gucce
    Sep 26, 2016 at 9:08
  • 2
    Thanks people! Instead of --online I'm using --pretty="" to only display files: git log origin..HEAD --name-only --pretty="" | sort | uniq
    – olvlvl
    Oct 9, 2017 at 21:25

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