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git/Documentation/git-format-rev.adoc
Kristoffer Haugsbakk 19e3106c45 format-rev: introduce builtin for on-demand pretty formatting
Introduce a new builtin for pretty formatting one revision expression
per line or commit object names found in running text.

Sometimes you want to format commits. Most of the time you’re
walking the graph, e.g. getting a range of commits like
`master..topic`. That’s a job for git-log(1).

But there are times when you want to format commits that you encounter
on demand:

• Full hashes in running text that you might want to pretty-print
• git-last-modified(1) outputs full hashes that you can do the same
  with
• git-cherry(1) has `-v` for commit subject, but maybe you want
  something else?

But now you can’t use git-log(1), git-show(1), or git-rev-list(1):

• You can’t feed commits piecemeal to these commands, one input
  for one output; they block until standard in is closed
• You can’t feed a list of possibly duplicate commits, like the output
  of git-last-modified(1); they effectively deduplicate the output

Beyond these two points there’s also the input massage problem: you
cannot feed mixed input (revisions mixed with arbitrary text).

One might hope that git-cat-file(1) can save us. But it doesn’t
support pretty formats.

But there is one command that already both handles revisions as
arguments, revisions on standard input, and even revisions mixed in
with arbitrary text. Namely git-name-rev(1): the command for outputting
symbolic names for commits.

We made some room in `builtin/name-rev.c` two commits ago. Let’s
now add this new git-format-rev(1) command. Taking inspiration from
git-name-rev(1), there are two modes:

• revs: like git-name-rev(1) in argv mode, but one revision per line
  on standard in
• text: like git-name-rev(1) with `--annotate-stdin`

***

We need to add this command to the exception list in
`t/t1517-outside-repo.sh` because it uses “EXPERIMENTAL!”
in the usage line.

Helped-by: Phillip Wood <phillip.wood@dunelm.org.uk>
Helped-by: Ramsay Jones <ramsay@ramsayjones.plus.com>
Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Kristoffer Haugsbakk <code@khaugsbakk.name>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2026-05-12 09:09:51 +09:00

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git-format-rev(1)
=================
NAME
----
git-format-rev - EXPERIMENTAL: Pretty format revisions on demand
SYNOPSIS
--------
[synopsis]
(EXPERIMENTAL!) git format-rev --stdin-mode=<mode> --format=<pretty> [--[no-]notes=<ref>] [-z] [--[no-]null-output] [--[no-]null-input]
DESCRIPTION
-----------
Pretty format revisions from standard input.
THIS COMMAND IS EXPERIMENTAL. THE BEHAVIOR MAY CHANGE.
OPTIONS
-------
`--stdin-mode=<mode>`::
How to interpret standard input data:
+
--
`revs`;; Each line or record (see the <<io,INPUT AND OUTPUT FORMATS>>
section) is interpreted as a commit. Any kind of revision
expression can be used (see linkgit:gitrevisions[7]). Annotated
tags are peeled (see linkgit:gitglossary[7]).
+
The argument `rev` is also accepted.
`text`;; Formats all commit object names found in freeform text. These
must the full object names, i.e. abbreviated hexidecimal object
names will not be interpreted.
+
Anything that is parsed as an object name but that is not found to be a
commit object name is left alone (echoed).
--
`--format=<pretty>`::
Pretty format string.
`--notes=<ref>`::
`--no-notes`::
Custom notes ref. Notes are displayed when using the `%N`
atom. See linkgit:git-notes[1].
`-z`::
`--null`::
Use _NUL_ character to terminate both input and output instead
of newline. This option cannot be negated.
+
This is useful if both the input and output could contain newlines or if
the input to this command also uses _NUL_ character termination; see the
<<io,INPUT AND OUTPUT FORMATS>> section below.
+
The mode `--stdin-mode=text` can have use for this option when it needs
to process input like for example `git last-modified -z`; see the
<<examples,EXAMPLES>> section below.
`--null-output`::
`--no-null-output`::
Use _NUL_ character to terminate output instead of newline. The
default is `--no-null-output`.
+
This is useful if the output could contain newlines, for example if the
`%n` (newline) atom is used.
`--null-input`::
`--no-null-input`::
Use _NUL_ character to terminate input instead of newline. The
default is `--no-null-input`.
+
This is useful if the input revision expressions could contain newlines.
[[io]]
INPUT AND OUTPUT FORMAT
-----------------------
The command uses newlines for both input and output termination by
default. See the `-z`, `--null-output`, and `--null-input` options for
using _NUL_ character as the terminator.
The mode `--stdin-mode=revs` outputs one formatted commit followed by
the terminator. This could either be called a _line_ or a _record_ in
case "line" is too suggestive of newline termination.
Note that this means that the terminator character (newline or _NUL_)
acts as a _terminator_, not a _separator_. In other words, the final
line or record is also terminated by the terminator character.
The mode `--stdin-mode=text` replaces each object name with the
formatted commit, i.e. the format `%s` would transform some commit
object name to `<subject>` without any termination. Like this:
----
Did we not fix this in "<subject>"?
----
It is safe to interactively read and write from this command since each
record is immediately flushed.
[[examples]]
EXAMPLES
--------
The command linkgit:git-last-modified[1] shows the commit that each file
was last modified in.
----
$ git last-modified -- README.md Makefile
7798034171030be0909c56377a4e0e10e6d2df93 Makefile
c50fbb2dd225e7e82abba4380423ae105089f4d7 README.md
----
We can pipe the result to this command in order to replace the object
name with the commit author.
----
$ git last-modified -- README.md Makefile |
git format-rev --stdin-mode=text --format=%an
Junio C Hamano Makefile
Todd Zullinger README.md
----
Another example is _formatting commits in commit messages_. Given this commit message:
----
Fix off-by-one error
Fix off-by-one error introduced in
e83c5163316f89bfbde7d9ab23ca2e25604af290.
We thought we fixed this in 5569bf9bbedd63a00780fc5c110e0cfab3aa97b9 but
that only covered 1/3 of the faulty cases.
----
We can format the commits and use par(1) to reflow the text, say in a
`commit-msg` hook:
----
$ git config set hook.reference-commits.event commit-msg
$ git config set hook.reference-commits.command reference-commits
$ cat $(which reference-commits)
#/bin/sh
msg="$1"
rewritten=$(mktemp)
git format-rev --stdin-mode=text --format=reference <"$msg" |
par >"$rewritten"
mv "$rewritten" "$msg"
----
Which will produce something like this:
----
Fix off-by-one error
Fix off-by-one error introduced in e83c5163316 (Implement better memory
allocator, 2005-04-07).
We thought we fixed this in 5569bf9bbed (Fix memory allocator,
2005-06-22) but that only covered 1/3 of the faulty cases.
----
DISCUSSION
----------
This command lets you format any number of revisions in any order
through one command invocation. Consider the
linkgit:git-last-modified[1] case from the <<examples,EXAMPLES>> section
above:
1. There might be hundreds of files
2. Commits can be repeated, i.e. two or more files were last modified in
the same commit
Two widely-used commands which pretty formats commits are
linkgit:git-log[1] and linkgit:git-show[1]. It turns out that they are
not a good fit for the above use case.
- The output of linkgit:git-last-modified[1] would have to be processed
in stages since you need to transform the first column separately and
then link the author to the filename. But this is surmountable.
- You can feed each commit to `git show` or `git log --no-walk -1`. But
that means that you need to create a process for each line.
- Lets say that you want to use one process, not one per line. So you
want to feed all the commits to the command. Now you face the problem
that you have to feed all the commits to the commands before you get
any output (this is also the case for the `--stdin` modes). In other
words, you cannot loop through each line, get the author for the
commit, and output the author and the filename. You need to feed all
the commits, get back all the output, and match the output with the
filename.
- But the next problem is that commands will deduplicate the input and
only output one commit one single time only. Thus you cannot make the
output order match the input order, since a commit could have been
repeated in the original input.
In short, it is straightforward to use these two commands if you use one
process per line. It is much more work if you just want to use one
process, but still doable. In contrast, this problem is solved with just
another shell pipeline with this command.
SEE ALSO
--------
linkgit:git-name-rev[1],
linkgit:git-log[1].
GIT
---
Part of the linkgit:git[1] suite