How do I see the differences between branches branch_1
and branch_2
?
9 Answers
Use git diff
.
git diff [<options>] <commit>..<commit> [--] [<path>…]
<commit>
is a branch name, a commit hash, or a shorthand symbolic reference.
Examples: git diff abc123..def567
, git diff HEAD..origin/master
.
That will produce the diff between the tips of the two branches. If you'd prefer to find the diff from their common ancestor to test, you can use three dots instead of two:
git diff <commit>...<commit>
To check which files differ, not how the content differs, use --name-only
:
git diff --name-only <commit>..<commit>
Note that in the <commit>..<commit>
(two dot) syntax, the dots are optional; the following is synonymous:
git diff commit1 commit2
-
57The same syntax works for comparing a branch with a tag or a tag with another tag. May 27, 2013 at 7:02
-
67Note that you can also add a file or folder name after the above two commands.– msanfordJul 28, 2014 at 16:54
-
13@chiyachaiya your explanation helped me but git diff b1...b2 is not same as git diff b2...b1. For example once we started b2 from b1 and when if we make some changes to b1, git diff b2...b1 will show changes made to b1 after b2 started. If we do git diff b1...b2 it will give changes made to b2 which are not in b1. Feb 10, 2015 at 6:45
-
52If you get
fatal: bad revision 'some-branch'
then this is probably a remote branch. You probably need something likegit diff remotes/origin/some-branch my-local-branch
– DalinOct 13, 2015 at 17:41 -
82
git diff ..branch_2
compares the checked out branch to branch_2 Mar 6, 2017 at 13:10
Go to a branch (e.g. main
), then run diff
against another branch (e.g. branch2
):
git checkout main
git diff branch2
-
3this didn't work for me, it showed no changes. I only had local commits though.– robMar 4, 2022 at 11:46
git diff master..develop
Options:
- Add
--name-only
to only see the names of the files. - Add
-- folderOrFileName
at the end to see the changes of specific files or folders. - To compare the local branch with the remote one, then run
git fetch --all
to fetch all remote branches, and run:
Example:git diff --name-only [branchName]..origin/[branchName]
git diff --name-only develop..origin/develop
.
You can simply show difference by-
git diff b1...b2
Or you can show commit difference using-
git log b1..b2
You can see commit difference in a nice graphical way using -
git log --oneline --graph --decorate --abbrev-commit b1..b2
-
1
-
personally I like the graph. It looks awesome when you work in multiple branches and merge them.– Bip LobSep 25, 2022 at 13:55
There are many different ways to compare branches, and it's depend on the specific use case you need.
Many times you want to compare because something broken and you want to see what has been changes, then fix it, and see again what changed before commiting.
Personally when I want to see the diff what I like to do:
git checkout branch_1 # checkout the oldest branch
git checkout -b compare-branch # create a new branch
git merge --no-commit --squash branch_2 # put files from the new branch in the working folder
git status # see file names that changes
git diff # see the content that changed.
Using this solution you will see the diff, you can also see only the file names using git status
, and the most important part you will be able to execute branch_2
while seeing the diff (branch_2 is on the working tree). If something had broken you can editing the files and fix it. Anytime, you can type again git status
or git diff
to see the diff from the new edit to branch_a
.
Sometimes it's nice to see the diff as a tree...
git difftool --dir-diff branch..otherBranch
For example, when bitbucket decides for performance reasons it will only show you a "three way merge" diff rather than the actual complete differences between the two branches you've selected.
This will show the diff as a tree in the tool you've selected. e.g. in meld.
Inspired by @GregRundlett comment.
-
I had neglected to link to the damning admission that they've removed a key diff capability to optimize their performance ('cost?').– poleguyyesterday
There are two ways to see the differences between two branches.The modifications that have been made to the files in each branch will be shown by these commands.
Use the
git diff
command to view the differences between two branches in a Git repository.git diff branch1 branch2
will show all the differences.If you wish to compare a specific file between the two branches, you can use this command as:
git diff branch1 branch2 path/to/file
The
git log
command can also be used to view the differences between two branches. Run the git log command with the —left-right parameter and the two branches you wish to compare like this:git log --left-right branch1...branch2
In Eclipse(J2EE version) , open "Window --> Show view --> Git Repository". if you have checked out 2 local git branches for examples then you will have bunch of branches in Local section. select any 2 git local branches and do " right click and select "Compare with each other in Tree menu".
Open view "Git Tree Compare" and u will be able to see side by side diff for all files.
When on the feature branch, merge your target branch and then run a diff against it. For example, if you want to see what changes your feature
branch add to master
, do the following:
// Fetch from all remotes
git fetch
// Check out your feature branch
git checkout feature
// Merge origin/master to your branch
git merge origin/master
// Compare to origin/master
git diff origin/master
git diff branch_1 branch_2
? (Note, if the names branch_1 and branch_2 also name files, you needgit diff branch_1 branch_2 --
)git diff --name-status master..branchName
is markedly different than seeing the exact differences between branches with something likegit diff branch_1 branch_2
. Or maybe I'm missing something obvious...git difftool branch..otherBranch
lets you SEE the differences in the Visual tool that you choose. e.g. Meld. This is the answer.