How can I show files in Git which change most often?
问题:
回答1:
you can use the git effort
(from the git-extras
package) command which shows statistics about how many commits per files (by commits and active days).
EDIT: git effort is just a bash script you can find here and adapt to your needs if you need something more special.
回答2:
You could do something like the following:
git log --pretty=format: --name-only | sort | uniq -c | sort -rg | head -10
The log just outputs the names of the files that have been changed in each commit, while the rest of it just sorts and outputs the top 10 most frequently appearing filenames.
回答3:
I noticed that both
Mark’s
and
sehe’s
answers do not --follow
the files, that is to say they stop once they reach a file rename. This script will be much slower, but will work for that purpose.
git ls-files |
while read aa
do
printf . >&2
set $(git log --follow --oneline "$aa" | wc)
printf '%s\t%s\n' $1 "$aa"
done > bb
echo
sort -nr bb
rm bb
git-most.sh
回答4:
For powershell, assuming you got git bash installed
git log --pretty=format: --name-only | sort | uniq -c | sort -Descending | select -First 10
回答5:
This is a windows version
git log --pretty=format: --name-only > allfiles.csv
then open in excel
A1: FileName
A2: isVisibleFilename >> =IFERROR(IF(C2>0,TRUE,FALSE),FALSE)
A3: DotLocation >> =FIND("@",SUBSTITUTE(A2,".","@",(LEN(A2)-LEN(SUBSTITUTE(A2,".","")))/LEN(".")))
A4: HasExt >> =C2>1
A5: TYPE >> =IF(D2=TRUE,MID(A2,C2+1,18),"")
create pivot table
values: Type
Filter: isFilename = true
Rows : Type
Sub : FileName
click [Count Of TYPE] -> Sort -> Sort Largest To Smallest
回答6:
git whatchanged --all | \grep "\.\.\." | cut -d' ' -f5- | cut -f2- | sort | uniq -c | sort
If you only want to see your files add --author
to git whatchanged --author=name --all
.
回答7:
We can also find out files changed between two commits or branches, for e.g.
git log --pretty=format: --name-only <source_branch>...<target_branch> | sort | uniq -c | sort -rg | head -50
回答8:
This is probably obvious, but, the queries provided will show all files, but, perhaps you're not interested in knowing that your configuration or project files are the most updated. A simple grep will isolate to your code files, for example:
git log --pretty=format: --name-only | grep .cs$ | sort | uniq -c | sort -rg | head -20