Question

I have a commit c. I want to get the changeset of that exact commit c + metainformation and no other one. Is there a simpler way than git log -p c^..c to do that?

Was it helpful?

Solution

You can use show:

git show commit_id

OTHER TIPS

Michal Trybus' answer is the best for simplicity. But if you don't want the diff in your output you can always do something like:

git log -1 -U c

That will give you the commit log, and then you'll have full control over all the git logging options for your automation purposes. In your instance you said you wanted the change-set. The most human-readable way to accomplish that would be:

git log --name-status --diff-filter="[A|C|D|M|R|T]" -1 -U c

Or, if you're using a git version greater than 1.8.X it would be:

git log --name-status --diff-filter="ACDMRT" -1 -U c

This will give you results similar to:

commit {c}
Author: zedoo <zedoo@stackoverflow.com>
Date: Thu Aug 2 {time-stamp}

   {short description}
D    zedoo/foo.py
A    zedoo/bar.py

Of course you can filter out whichever events you see fit, and format the return as you wish via the traditional git-log commands which are well documented here.

git log -p c -1 does just that .

Licensed under: CC-BY-SA with attribution
Not affiliated with StackOverflow
scroll top