History
Goals
- Learn how to view the history of the project.
Getting a listing of what changes have been made is the function of the git log
command.
Execute:
git log
You should see …
Output:
$ git log
commit 4254c9466673a6ddbeb35e2802315dbcfc1dbb62
Author: Jim Weirich <jim (at) edgecase.com>
Date: Sat Jun 20 20:37:05 2020 +0100
Added a comment
commit c8b3af1cdc72ea8162d08f182a3e8f69a1ebf9b2
Author: Jim Weirich <jim (at) edgecase.com>
Date: Sat Jun 20 20:37:05 2020 +0100
Added a default value
commit 30c2cd4b78087f4c6fc8c464e490af6894454c08
Author: Jim Weirich <jim (at) edgecase.com>
Date: Sat Jun 20 20:37:05 2020 +0100
Using ARGV
commit 4445720e0ab1008f680c49a26f6392ce15a4dae0
Author: Jim Weirich <jim (at) edgecase.com>
Date: Sat Jun 20 20:37:05 2020 +0100
First Commit
Here is a list of all four commits that we have made to the repository so far.
One Line Histories
You have a great deal of control over exactly what the log
command displays. I like the one line format:
Execute:
git log --pretty=oneline
You should see …
Output:
$ git log --pretty=oneline
4254c9466673a6ddbeb35e2802315dbcfc1dbb62 Added a comment
c8b3af1cdc72ea8162d08f182a3e8f69a1ebf9b2 Added a default value
30c2cd4b78087f4c6fc8c464e490af6894454c08 Using ARGV
4445720e0ab1008f680c49a26f6392ce15a4dae0 First Commit
Controlling Which Entries are Displayed
There are a lot of options for selecting which entries are displayed in the log. Play around with the following options:
git log --pretty=oneline --max-count=2
git log --pretty=oneline --since='5 minutes ago'
git log --pretty=oneline --until='5 minutes ago'
git log --pretty=oneline --author=<your name>
git log --pretty=oneline --all
See man git-log for all the details.
Getting Fancy
Here’s what I use to review the changes made in the last week. I’ll add --author=jim
if I only want to see changes I made.
git log --all --pretty=format:'%h %cd %s (%an)' --since='7 days ago'
The Ultimate Log Format
Over time, I’ve decided that I like the following log format for most of my work.
Execute:
git log --pretty=format:'%h %ad | %s%d [%an]' --graph --date=short
It looks like this:
Output:
$ git log --pretty=format:'%h %ad | %s%d [%an]' --graph --date=short
* 4254c94 2020-06-20 | Added a comment (HEAD -> master) [Jim Weirich]
* c8b3af1 2020-06-20 | Added a default value [Jim Weirich]
* 30c2cd4 2020-06-20 | Using ARGV [Jim Weirich]
* 4445720 2020-06-20 | First Commit [Jim Weirich]
Let’s look at it in detail:
--pretty="..."
defines the format of the output.%h
is the abbreviated hash of the commit%d
are any decorations on that commit (e.g. branch heads or tags)%ad
is the author date%s
is the comment%an
is the author name--graph
informs git to display the commit tree in an ASCII graph layout--date=short
keeps the date format nice and short
This is a lot to type every time you want to see the log. Fortunately we will learn about git aliases in the next lab.
Other Tools
Both gitx
(for Macs) and gitk
(any platform) are useful in exploring log history.