jonhud wrote: > > Hi, > > We are using github (but that's more or less irrelevant, since I'm just > running git 1.6 locally on Ubuntu). Some time ago, I created a new branch > (release.2.2) and pushed it out to the remote repository. All the digging > through log, gitk, etc. has not made it possible for me to figure out the > commit (or point in time) at which I cut the branch. > Um, unfortunately, all the commits that are prior to HEAD count as being on the branch. Have you tried using 'gitk --all' to look through? You should be able to see the split point there. jonhud wrote: > > What I want to do is to get a list of files (and/or diffs for those files) > from that point in time to HEAD on the branch. I understand that git-diff > --name-only is part of the solution. What I can't figure out is how to > pinpoint the first commit. So that's my first question... how do I do > that? > Once you've found the commit, you can 'git diff COMMIT', or you can even, straight in gitk, (make sure you have your branch selected), right click on the commit and select 'diff this->selected'. jonhud wrote: > > To complicate things, I was also working on a side branch which I merged > to master before cutting the release.2.2 branch. In the best of all > worlds, I would trace my changes back to the point at which I cut *that* > branch and follow through the HEAD of release.2.2. How do I do that? I > know I might have to take 2 passes, one for release 2.2 and one for the > side branch and that's OK. > > Thanks! > > Jon > The same method should work for that as well. Good luck, Tim. -- View this message in context: http://www.nabble.com/How-do-I-see-all-of-my-changes-on-a-branch--tp25879435p26093515.html Sent from the git mailing list archive at Nabble.com. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe git" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html