git pull fetches updates for all local branches, which track remote branches, and then merges the current branch.
Or you could create a "dummy" commit on your branch using git commit -m a "WIP" (which is my preference). Switch to the other branch. You could use the UI in your IDE (e.g. Visual Studio, Rider), or you could use the command line git checkout other-feature , or git switch other-feature . Wait for your IDE to catch up.
You can do this on a Git repository:
git grep "string/regexp" $(git rev-list --all)
GitHub advanced search has code search capability:
The code search will look through all of the code publicly hosted on GitHub. You can also filter by:
language:
repo:
path:
If you use @manojlds Git grep command and get an error:
-bash: /usr/bin/git: Argument list too long"
then you should use xargs:
git rev-list --all | xargs git grep "string/regexp"
Also see How to grep (search) committed code in the Git history
In many cases git rev-list --all
can return a huge number of commits, taking forever to scan. If you, instead of searching through every commit on every branch in your repository history, just want to search all branch tips, you can replace it with git show-ref -s --heads
. So in total:
git grep "string" `git show-ref -s --heads`
or:
git show-ref -s --heads | xargs git grep "string"
Tip: You can write output in file to view in an editor:
nano ~/history.txt
git show-ref -s --heads | xargs git grep "search string here" >> ~/history.txt
There are a few issues with the solutions listed here (even accepted).
You do not need to list all the hashes as you'll get duplicates. Also, it takes more time.
It builds on this where you can search a string "test -f /"
on multiple branches master
and dev
as
git grep "test -f /" master dev
which is same as
printf "master\ndev" | xargs git grep "test -f /"
So here goes.
This finds the hashes for the tip of all local branches and searches only in those commits:
git branch -v --no-abbrev | awk -F' *' '{print $3}' | xargs git grep "string/regexp"
If you need to search in remote branches too then add -a
:
git branch -a -v --no-abbrev | awk -F' *' '{print $3}' | xargs git grep "string/regexp"
Further:
# Search in local branches
git branch | cut -c3- | xargs git grep "string"
# Search in remote branches
git branch -r | cut -c3- | xargs git grep "string"
# Search in all (local and remote) branches
git branch -a | cut -c3- | cut -d' ' -f 1 | xargs git grep "string"
# Search in branches, and tags
git show-ref | grep -v "refs/stash" | cut -d' ' -f2 | xargs git grep "string"
You can try this:
git log -Sxxxx # Search all commits
git log -Sxxxx --branches[=<pattern>] # Search branches
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