There are all kinds of wonderful ways to specify commits - see the specifying revisions section of man git-rev-parse
for more details. In this case, you probably want:
git diff HEAD@{1}
The @{1}
means "the previous position of the ref I've specified", so that evaluates to what you had checked out previously - just before the pull. You can tack HEAD
on the end there if you also have some changes in your work tree and you don't want to see the diffs for them.
I'm not sure what you're asking for with "the commit ID of my latest version of the file" - the commit "ID" (SHA1 hash) is that 40-character hex right at the top of every entry in the output of git log. It's the hash for the entire commit, not for a given file. You don't really ever need more - if you want to diff just one file across the pull, do
git diff HEAD@{1} filename
This is a general thing - if you want to know about the state of a file in a given commit, you specify the commit and the file, not an ID/hash specific to the file.
I like to use:
git diff HEAD^
Or if I only want to diff a specific file:
git diff HEAD^ -- /foo/bar/baz.txt
If you do a straight git pull
then you will either be 'fast-forwarded' or merge an unknown number of commits from the remote repository. This happens as one action though, so the last commit that you were at immediately before the pull will be the last entry in the reflog and can be accessed as HEAD@{1}
. This means that you can do:
git diff HEAD@{1}
However, I would strongly recommend that if this is something you find yourself doing a lot then you should consider just doing a git fetch
and examining the fetched branch before manually merging or rebasing onto it. E.g. if you're on master and were going to pull in origin/master:
git fetch
git log HEAD..origin/master
# looks good, lets merge
git merge origin/master
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