I moved a file using git mv
. Now I would like to do a diff on the new file to compare it with the old file (with the old, now non-existent name).
How do I do this?
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I moved a file using git mv
. Now I would like to do a diff on the new file to compare it with the old file (with the old, now non-existent name).
How do I do this?
You need to use -M to let git autodetect the moved file when diffing. Using just git diff
as knittl mentioned does not work for me.
So simply: git diff -M
should do it.
The documentation for this switch is:
-M[<n>], --find-renames[=<n>]
Detect renames. If n is specified, it is a threshold on the similarity index
(i.e. amount of addition/deletions compared to the file’s size). For example,
-M90% means git should consider a delete/add pair to be a rename if more than
90% of the file hasn’t changed.
~/.gitconfig
?
– kevinarpe
Nov 15 '15 at 7:47
git diff
. Running git diff -M
on a single (renamed) file doesn't report a rename.
– Leon
Oct 25 '17 at 10:38
git log --follow -- file_after_move.txt
works well. It shows the whole history, including before the move. Any ideas? I am running git version 2.11.0.windows.1
.
– bouvierr
May 4 '18 at 19:30
-C
option for detecting copies is useful and similar. I used it with -M
for looking at a diff where I had refactored one file into two (with neither name matching the original).
– cp.engr
Jul 19 '18 at 19:19
In addition to what knittl wrote, you can always use:
git diff HEAD:./oldfilename newfilename
where HEAD:./oldfilename
means oldfilename in the last commit (in HEAD), relative to current directory.
If you don't have new enough git, you would have to use instead:
git diff HEAD:path/to/oldfilename newfilename
git diff 39fa7c77e85c51d43ea0cf30d33aec8721812e9e:./oldfilename newfilename
– Chris Bloom
Feb 29 '12 at 19:00
git diff branch:old/filen.name newfilename
– jricher
Sep 25 '13 at 15:29
cd
to the directory and do not add --
before the commit:path
pair. Git appears to be very picky with syntax here.
– dhardy
Nov 28 '16 at 14:48
<commit-ish>:<pathname>
syntax is an object identifier, something Git-ish; after --
Git expects filenames only.
– Jakub Narębski
Nov 29 '16 at 22:18
With git 2.9 (June 2016), you won't have to add -M
anymore. git diff
uses -M
by default.
See commit 5404c11, commit 9501d19, commit a9276a6, commit f07fc9e, commit 62df1e6 (25 Feb 2016) by Matthieu Moy (moy
).
(Merged by Junio C Hamano -- gitster
-- in commit 5d2a30d, 03 Apr 2016)
diff
: activatediff.renames
by defaultRename detection is a very convenient feature, and new users shouldn't have to dig in the documentation to benefit from it.
Potential objections to activating rename detection are that it sometimes fail, and it is sometimes slow. But rename detection is already activated by default in several cases like "
git status
" and "git merge
", so activatingdiff.renames
does not fundamentally change the situation. When the rename detection fails, it now fails consistently between "git diff
" and "git status
".This setting does not affect plumbing commands, hence well-written scripts will not be affected.
For whatever reason using HEAD:./oldfilename
(or absolute path) didn’t work for me, but HEAD:oldfilename
did (thanks cmn):
git diff HEAD:oldfilename newfilename
git diff 2a80f45:oldfilename f65f3b3:newfilename
HTH
git diff -M
activates rename detection as others have said (and as @VonC pointed out, it is activated by default from git 2.9). But if you have a large changeset, inexact rename detection may still get turned off again. Git will display a warning like the following, which is easy to miss amidst the diff you are viewing:
warning: inexact rename detection was skipped due to too many files.
warning: you may want to set your diff.renameLimit variable to at least 450 and retry the command.
In that case, set the configuration option as suggested by git, for example
git config diff.renamelimit 450
and re-run your diff command.
simply run git diff
without any arguments, or git diff -- newfilename
. git is smart enough to compare the right files/contents (i.e. original content before rename with altered content after rename)
git mv
ing a single file and then comparing the staged state to another otherwise-identical branch will produce the "everything was deleted and recreated again" diff unless -M
is used.
– Reinderien
May 12 '15 at 17:00
git diff -- yourRenamedFile
will be enough. See my answer below – VonC Apr 5 '16 at 19:38