I would like to know if my local repo is up to date (and if not, ideally, I would like to see the changes).
How could I check this without doing git fetch
or git pull
?
Try git fetch --dry-run
The manual (git help fetch
) says:
--dry-run
Show what would be done, without making any changes.
git fetch --dry-run
nothing shows up?
Aug 20, 2018 at 18:58
--all
?
Aug 21, 2018 at 13:57
git pull
is roughly equivalent to a git fetch && git merge
. If you at any point ran the fetch without the --dry-run
, then you already have fetched things locally.
Oct 22, 2019 at 14:20
git fetch
is not sufficient to "know if my local repo is up to date". It's not clear to me if the OP didn't understand this when this answer was accepted or the question isn't clearly worded.
Oct 22, 2019 at 16:32
First use git remote update
, to bring your remote refs up to date. Then you can do one of several things, such as:
git status -uno
will tell you whether the branch you are tracking
is ahead, behind or has diverged. If it says nothing, the local and
remote are the same. Sample result:On branch DEV
Your branch is behind 'origin/DEV' by 7 commits, and can be fast-forwarded.
(use "git pull" to update your local branch)
git show-branch *master
will show you the commits in all of the
branches whose names end in 'master' (eg master and origin/master).If you use -v
with git remote update (git remote -v update
) you can see which branches got updated, so you don't really need any further commands.
git remote update ; git status -uno
solved it. git fetch --dry-run
gave no output even in cases where the local was behind remote.
Sep 26, 2019 at 21:58
git remote show origin
Result:
HEAD branch: master
Remote branch:
master tracked
Local branch configured for 'git pull':
master merges with remote master
Local ref configured for 'git push':
master pushes to master (local out of date) <-------
git remote show origin | grep $(git rev-parse --abbrev-ref HEAD) | tail -1
you can use git remote update; git status -uno
to check if your local branch is up-to-date with the origin one.
git remote update ; git status -uno
did the trick! The git fetch --dry-run
gave no output when I expected it to (and git pull
would pull things).
Sep 26, 2019 at 21:59
git remote update
, so my previous comment no longer applies, although now it's just a duplicate of this answer: stackoverflow.com/a/52307619/1191147.
Nov 24, 2022 at 16:07
Not really - but I don't see how git fetch
would hurt as it won't change any of your local branches.
You'll need to issue two commands:
You must run git fetch
before you can compare your local repository against the files on your remote server.
This command only updates your remote tracking branches and will not affect your worktree until you call git merge
or git pull
.
To see the difference between your local branch and your remote tracking branch once you've fetched you can use git diff or git cherry as explained here.
Another alternative is to view the status of the remote branch using
git show-branch remote/branch
to use it as a comparison you could see git show-branch *branch
to see the branch in all remotes as well as your repository! check out this answer for more https://stackoverflow.com/a/3278427/2711378
If you use
git fetch --dry-run -v <link/to/remote/git/repo>
you'll get feedback about whether it is up-to-date. So basically, you just need to add the "verbose" option to the answer given before.
git remote show origin
Enter passphrase for key ....ssh/id_rsa:
* remote origin
Fetch URL: git@github.com:mamaque/systems.git
Push URL: git@github.com:mamaque/systems.git
HEAD branch: main
Remote branch:
main tracked
Local ref configured for 'git push':
main pushes to main (up-to-date)
Both are up to date
main pushes to main (fast-forwardable)
Remote can be updated with Local
main pushes to main (local out of date)
Local can be update with Remote
git fetch origin
git status
you'll see result like
Your branch is behind 'origin/master' by 9 commits
to update to remote changes
git pull
git fetch
, if this is not possible your answer should explain why before using it (if at all)
This is impossible without using git fetch
or git pull
. How can you know whether or not the repository is "up-to-date" without going to the remote repository to see what "up-to-date" even means?
git pull
, which the OP explicitly forbids in his question.
Nov 11, 2014 at 8:47
git status -uno
this works and one can also use git show-branch *master
to see the status of all the master branches! Are you still saying it is impossible? You can see the status of any branch as long as u have access to the remote!
Nov 11, 2014 at 8:51
git status
only tells you the status of your local refs, it does not tell you whether your local refs are up-to-date with the remote refs. Again: it is simply logically impossible to know what the state of the remote repo is without getting the state of the remote repo. Period. This is just the basic laws of spacetime.
Nov 11, 2014 at 8:53