From git I can get the timestamp:
"2011-10-04 12:58:36 -0600"
but is there any way to show it as:
"2011-10-04 06:58:36"
So all I want is to get rid of the -0600 timezone offset. How can I do this? Thanks.
If you ask about git log, you can try and select most correct form from:
git log --date={relative,local,default,iso,rfc}
--date=local
seems to be the best candidate.
To make this permanent, use git config --global log.date local
.
local
works. Apparently, a commit includes its own timezone, but local
translates them all to the local timezone. However, I really want ISO or RFC translated to a single timezone. Anyone know how to do that?
May 17, 2012 at 17:32
--date=local
with iso
format is not working my Ubuntu machines. I am still getting TZ offset. Any help please
Jan 21, 2016 at 15:35
git log --date=local
Does the trick.
git config --global log.date local
git log --date=local --pretty=format:"%ai,%an,%ae,%s"
, I still get timezone offset. Doesn't --data=local
work with iso dates?
Jan 22, 2016 at 10:05
TZ=UTC git log --date=local
in order to get non-local-timezone one-timezone output.
--date='format-local:%Y%m%dT%H%M%SZ'
for a compact ISO 8601 format (or any other format).
date = format-local:%a %d-%b-%Y %H:%M
to give Fri 05-Oct-2018 19:55
. Here is the list of date formats stackoverflow.com/a/34778736/58678
Unfortunately, using git log --date=local
as explained in previous answers changes the output format.
To keep the format as asked (YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm
) I had to use:
git log --date=iso-local
But that only works on git 2.7 or above.
To get the format (YYYY-MM-DD HH:hh
), you can use:
git log --date=format:%Y-%m-%d\ %H:%M
Works beautifully with Git Standup too: https://github.com/kamranahmedse/git-standup
jveerman's post was really helpful:
If you want to display the git date in YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS format:
DATE=$(git log -n 1 --pretty=format:"%ad" --date=iso)
echo "Date: ${DATE::20}"
For log format I was able to add this
[log]
date=format:%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S
to my ~/.gitconfig
but getting the same nicely formatted date/time added automatically to my commit messages was an ordeal. I found nothing helpful until I added this to the .git/hooks/prepare-commit-msg file:
DATE=$(git log -n 1 --pretty=format:"%ad" --date=iso)
echo "${DATE::20}" >> $1
If you're mainly using the Desktop app, it's lovely to have the exact time of change shown with the commit listing!
Is there any way to make this global, so I don't have to edit each local repo's prepare-commit-msg file ?
If you want to display the git date in YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS format:
DATE=$(git log -n 1 --pretty=format:"%ad" --date=iso)
echo "Date: ${DATE::20}"
2011-10-04 12:58:36 -0600
would be2011-10-04 18:58:36
UTC. You converted incorrectly in your example.