Documentation / git-rev-list.txton commit Const tightening. (9201c70)
   1git-rev-list(1)
   2===============
   3
   4NAME
   5----
   6git-rev-list - Lists commit objects in reverse chronological order
   7
   8
   9SYNOPSIS
  10--------
  11[verse]
  12'git-rev-list' [ \--max-count=number ]
  13             [ \--max-age=timestamp ]
  14             [ \--min-age=timestamp ]
  15             [ \--sparse ]
  16             [ \--no-merges ]
  17             [ \--remove-empty ]
  18             [ \--all ]
  19             [ \--topo-order ]
  20             [ \--parents ]
  21             [ [\--objects | \--objects-edge] [ \--unpacked ] ]
  22             [ \--pretty | \--header ]
  23             [ \--bisect ]
  24             <commit>... [ \-- <paths>... ]
  25
  26DESCRIPTION
  27-----------
  28Lists commit objects in reverse chronological order starting at the
  29given commit(s), taking ancestry relationship into account.  This is
  30useful to produce human-readable log output.
  31
  32Commits which are stated with a preceding '{caret}' cause listing to stop at
  33that point. Their parents are implied. "git-rev-list foo bar {caret}baz" thus
  34means "list all the commits which are included in 'foo' and 'bar', but
  35not in 'baz'".
  36
  37A special notation <commit1>..<commit2> can be used as a
  38short-hand for {caret}<commit1> <commit2>.
  39
  40
  41OPTIONS
  42-------
  43--pretty::
  44        Print the contents of the commit changesets in human-readable form.
  45
  46--header::
  47        Print the contents of the commit in raw-format; each
  48        record is separated with a NUL character.
  49
  50--objects::
  51        Print the object IDs of any object referenced by the listed commits.
  52        'git-rev-list --objects foo ^bar' thus means "send me all object IDs
  53        which I need to download if I have the commit object 'bar', but
  54        not 'foo'".
  55
  56--objects-edge::
  57        Similar to `--objects`, but also print the IDs of
  58        excluded commits refixed with a `-` character.  This is
  59        used by `git-pack-objects` to build 'thin' pack, which
  60        records objects in deltified form based on objects
  61        contained in these excluded commits to reduce network
  62        traffic.
  63
  64--unpacked::
  65        Only useful with `--objects`; print the object IDs that
  66        are not in packs.
  67
  68--bisect::
  69        Limit output to the one commit object which is roughly halfway
  70        between the included and excluded commits. Thus, if 'git-rev-list
  71        --bisect foo ^bar ^baz' outputs 'midpoint', the output
  72        of 'git-rev-list foo ^midpoint' and 'git-rev-list midpoint
  73        ^bar ^baz' would be of roughly the same length. Finding the change
  74        which introduces a regression is thus reduced to a binary search:
  75        repeatedly generate and test new 'midpoint's until the commit chain
  76        is of length one.
  77
  78--max-count::
  79        Limit the number of commits output.
  80
  81--max-age=timestamp, --min-age=timestamp::
  82        Limit the commits output to specified time range.
  83
  84--sparse::
  85        When optional paths are given, the command outputs only
  86        the commits that changes at least one of them, and also
  87        ignores merges that do not touch the given paths.  This
  88        flag makes the command output all eligible commits
  89        (still subject to count and age limitation), but apply
  90        merge simplification nevertheless.
  91
  92--remove-empty::
  93        Stop when a given path disappears from the tree.
  94
  95--all::
  96        Pretend as if all the refs in `$GIT_DIR/refs/` are
  97        listed on the command line as <commit>.
  98
  99--topo-order::
 100        By default, the commits are shown in reverse
 101        chronological order.  This option makes them appear in
 102        topological order (i.e. descendant commits are shown
 103        before their parents).
 104
 105Author
 106------
 107Written by Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
 108
 109Documentation
 110--------------
 111Documentation by David Greaves, Junio C Hamano and the git-list <git@vger.kernel.org>.
 112
 113GIT
 114---
 115Part of the gitlink:git[7] suite
 116