How can I diff a file, say pom.xml
, from the master branch to an arbitrary older version in Git?
14 Answers
You can do:
git diff master~20:pom.xml pom.xml
... to compare your current pom.xml
to the one from master
20 revisions ago through the first parent. You can replace master~20
, of course, with the object name (SHA1sum) of a commit or any of the many other ways of specifying a revision.
Note that this is actually comparing the old pom.xml
to the version in your working tree, not the version committed in master
. If you want that, then you can do the following instead:
git diff master~20:pom.xml master:pom.xml
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23Note that this doesn't just work for files, it also works for (sub)directories as well, for example
git diff <revision>:foo/ HEAD:foo/
.– user456814Commented Jul 5, 2014 at 18:59 -
3Also note that on windows you need to use forward slashes for directories if you are using a revision specifier or git will give you an error about the file/directory not existing in that revision. Commented Nov 21, 2014 at 13:38
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1@DylanNissley or it will give you no error and no diff. That's what I see. In any case, thank you for the hint about using forward slashes instead of backslashes. Commented Aug 17, 2017 at 20:05
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1With windows files I've found it easier to change directory and then call git diff master~20:./pom.xml ./pom.xml– lloydCommented Aug 24, 2018 at 6:16
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Some version of git require "--" between the <revision> & <path> Commented Apr 27, 2020 at 3:36
git diff <revision> <path>
For example:
git diff b0d14a4 foobar.txt
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1does not work for version 1.7.11 if file is not in current directory. Example: 'git diff f76d078 test/Config' yields "error: Could not access 'test/f76d078'" Commented Dec 4, 2013 at 21:21
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2@user1663987 just pass a full path relative to the project root:
git diff <revision> root/path/file
.– user456814Commented Jun 27, 2014 at 17:23 -
1test/Config is relative to the root (as in test is a sub-directory of the root). but then your example root/path/file would seem to INCLUDE the root? Commented Jun 29, 2014 at 5:55
If you want to see the difference between the last commit of a single file you can do:
git log -p -1 filename
This will give you the diff of the file in git, is not comparing your local file.
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2
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@AndreiCristianProdan Then you have no changes there. You can increment the
-1
step by step until you get the changes.– kaiserCommented Oct 30, 2014 at 11:30 -
This is very nice. I created a bash function that might be useful:
gitlog () { git log -${3:-p} -${2:-1} $1; }
Used like:gitlog Rakefile
orgitlog Rakefile 5
andgitlog Rakefile 10 s
. The first shows one diff; the second shows five diffs; the third shows ten--no-patch
.– auxbussCommented Jun 7, 2018 at 13:12 -
works just fine with WSL Ubuntu 20.04 LTS running on Windows 11. Commented Sep 6, 2023 at 11:05
To see what was changed in a file in the last commit:
git diff HEAD~1 -- path/to/file
You can change the number (~1) to the n-th commit which you want to diff with.
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This answer is really just a specific case of this more general answer, where
HEAD~1
is substituted for<revision>
, which makes this answer a duplicate.– user456814Commented Jul 17, 2014 at 21:52 -
2this isn't working! fatal: ambiguous argument 'HEAD~1': unknown revision or path not in the working tree. Use '--' to separate paths from revisions Commented Oct 17, 2014 at 12:04
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This works better for me! using WSL Ubuntu 20.04 LTS running on Windows 11. Commented Sep 6, 2023 at 11:12
git diff -w HEAD origin/master path/to/file
-w ignores whitespaces
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You could at least give some explanation as to what the -w flag means. Writing a solution that works is great, but I personally wouldn't use some random command without knowing what each flag in it means. Commented Apr 20, 2023 at 12:58
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1@TalKohavy You are right, I wrote that in a hurry, I have updated the answer. Commented Apr 21, 2023 at 15:07
Generic Syntax :
$git diff oldCommit..newCommit -- **FileName.xml > ~/diff.txt
for all files named "FileName.xml" anywhere in your repo.
Notice the space between "--" and "**"
Answer for your question:
$git checkout master
$git diff oldCommit..HEAD -- **pom.xml
or
$git diff oldCommit..HEAD -- relative/path/to/pom.xml
as always with git, you can use a tag/sha1/"HEAD^" to id a commit.
Tested with git 1.9.1 on Ubuntu.
If neither commit is your HEAD then bash's brace expansion proves really useful, especially if your filenames are long, the example above:
git diff master~20:pom.xml master:pom.xml
Would become
git diff {master~20,master}:pom.xml
More on Brace expansion with bash.
For comparing to 5 commit to the current one, both on master
, just simply do:
git diff master~5:pom.xml master:pom.xml
Also you can refer to commit hash number, for example if the hash number is x110bd64
, you can do something like this to see the difference:
git diff x110bd64 pom.xml
If you are fine using a graphical tool (or even prefer it) you can:
gitk pom.xml
In gitk you can then click any commit (to "select" it) and right click any other commit to select "Diff this -> selected" or "Diff selected -> this" in the popup menu, depending on what order you prefer.
For people interested in doing the same from GitHub, see comparing commits across time.
If you need to diff on a single file in a stash for example you can do
git diff stash@{0} -- path/to/file
lets say you want to diff the file interrupt.c
located in firmware/src/
difftool between working area (what yet to be committed or staged) and latest commit:
git difftool head firmware/src/interrupt.c
or
git difftool head *interrupt.c
Note: to diff x versions before the last committed version replace "head" with head~x. For example replace "head" with "head~2" to diff between working area and 2 versions prior to the latest commit
difftool between two specific committed versions:
first get the ids for the versions you want to compare by using next line
git log --oneline
you will get a list of all your committed version. choose two and copy their id's.
enter the ids inside {}
:
git difftool {2fae9e6,a21dd00} firmware/src/interrupt.c
or
git difftool {2fae9e6,a21dd00} *interrupt.c
Note: if there is no difference between the files, nothing will open. You will just get an empty line in the git bash
If you are looking for the diff on a specific commit and you want to use the github UI instead of the command line (say you want to link it to other folks), you can do:
https://github.com/<org>/<repo>/commit/<commit-sha>/<path-to-file>
For example:
Note the Previous and Next links at the top right that allow you to navigate through all the files in the commit.
This only works for a specific commit though, not for comparing between any two arbitrary versions.