Git: See my last commit
As determined via comments, it appears that the OP is looking for
$ git log --name-status HEAD^..HEAD
This is also very close to the output you'd get from svn status
or svn log -v
, which many people coming from subversion to git are familiar with.
--name-status
is the key here; as noted by other folks in this question, you can use git log -1
, git show
, and git diff
to get the same sort of output. Personally, I tend to use git show <rev>
when looking at individual revisions.
Use git show:
git show --summary
This will show the names of created or removed files, but not the names of changed files. The git show
command supports a wide variety of output formats that show various types of information about commits.
By far the simplest command for this is:
git show --name-only
As it lists just the files in the last commit and doesn't give you the entire guts
An example of the output being:
commit fkh889hiuhb069e44254b4925d2b580a602
Author: Kylo Ren <[email protected]>
Date: Sat May 4 16:50:32 2168 -0700
Changed shield frequencies to prevent Millennium Falcon landing
www/controllers/landing_ba_controller.js
www/controllers/landing_b_controller.js
www/controllers/landing_bp_controller.js
www/controllers/landing_h_controller.js
www/controllers/landing_w_controller.js
www/htdocs/robots.txt
www/htdocs/templates/shields_FAQ.html
git log -1 --stat
could work