I use tons of separate git repositories to organize my work (>30) in a well-organized folder structure with a single root. Since I work on >= 2 computers I always must make sure that all changes are pushed before I leave my office.
To identify all repositories with files which have been:
- changed/added/deleted/etc (i.e. they files are already under version control) or
- not tracked yet (i.e., new files which git doesn't know yet what to do with)
... I use the following convenient one-liner (without I could not do my work anymore):
find . -name '.git' | while read repo ; do repo=${repo//.git/}; git -C "$repo" status -s | grep -q -v "^$" && echo -e "\n\033[1m${repo}\033[m" && git -C "$repo" status -s || true; done
(written by hoijui, posted here). Of course I define an alias for it (which I call gitstatus) that I can execute before I leave my office.
This awesome script has sadly one single disadvantage: It can't identify repositories in which I have committed files that I forgot to push. The reason is that the script checks for files with a certain status, but in this case there are no such files. Instead I need to search for an output message of the form:
- "Your branch is ahead of 'origin/master' by 1 commit." or
- "Your branch is ahead of 'origin/master' by 2 commits."
- (Or values >2. I just added both messages to emphasize that these messages have slightly different strings for n=1 and n>1 commits.)
I assume that this is a trivial task for anybody who has written a few bash scripts in the past. I however already struggle reading the script above without investing >1 hour... Also, I was surprised to not have found any similar script on stackoverflow -- even the above-mentioned (incredibly useful) script was not posted here before! (As far as I can tell.) Thus, although I'm technically asking for help here, I thought that even the question itself (due to the script above) might already be helpful to many! :) And the improved script (if anybody provides an answer) would hopefully be even more helpful.
Anyway, thank you!
Just FYI: The dual (complement) to this question is how to find/identify repositories in which I have remote (rather than local) changes. You find it here.
git fetch
to update the local Git repository's idea of what's on the default remote (orgit remote update
to update all remotes, similar togit fetch --all
, but now you have a more complicated problem because there are seven remotes of which three are up to date and four aren't, for instance). Then you'll need to figure out who's "right" and who's "wrong": just because the local is ahead of or behind the remote doesn't mean the local or remote is more-correct.