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1git-range-diff(1)
2=================
3
4NAME
5----
6git-range-diff - Compare two commit ranges (e.g. two versions of a branch)
7
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8SYNOPSIS
9--------
10[verse]
11'git range-diff' [--color=[<when>]] [--no-color] [<diff-options>]
27526793 12 [--no-dual-color] [--creation-factor=<factor>]
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13 ( <range1> <range2> | <rev1>...<rev2> | <base> <rev1> <rev2> )
14
15DESCRIPTION
16-----------
17
18This command shows the differences between two versions of a patch
19series, or more generally, two commit ranges (ignoring merge commits).
20
21To that end, it first finds pairs of commits from both commit ranges
22that correspond with each other. Two commits are said to correspond when
23the diff between their patches (i.e. the author information, the commit
24message and the commit diff) is reasonably small compared to the
25patches' size. See ``Algorithm`` below for details.
26
27Finally, the list of matching commits is shown in the order of the
28second commit range, with unmatched commits being inserted just after
29all of their ancestors have been shown.
30
31
32OPTIONS
33-------
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34--no-dual-color::
35 When the commit diffs differ, `git range-diff` recreates the
36 original diffs' coloring, and adds outer -/+ diff markers with
37 the *background* being red/green to make it easier to see e.g.
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38 when there was a change in what exact lines were added.
39+
40Additionally, the commit diff lines that are only present in the first commit
41range are shown "dimmed" (this can be overridden using the `color.diff.<slot>`
42config setting where `<slot>` is one of `contextDimmed`, `oldDimmed` and
43`newDimmed`), and the commit diff lines that are only present in the second
44commit range are shown in bold (which can be overridden using the config
45settings `color.diff.<slot>` with `<slot>` being one of `contextBold`,
46`oldBold` or `newBold`).
47+
48This is known to `range-diff` as "dual coloring". Use `--no-dual-color`
49to revert to color all lines according to the outer diff markers
50(and completely ignore the inner diff when it comes to color).
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51
52--creation-factor=<percent>::
53 Set the creation/deletion cost fudge factor to `<percent>`.
54 Defaults to 60. Try a larger value if `git range-diff` erroneously
55 considers a large change a total rewrite (deletion of one commit
56 and addition of another), and a smaller one in the reverse case.
57 See the ``Algorithm`` section below for an explanation why this is
58 needed.
59
60<range1> <range2>::
61 Compare the commits specified by the two ranges, where
62 `<range1>` is considered an older version of `<range2>`.
63
64<rev1>...<rev2>::
65 Equivalent to passing `<rev2>..<rev1>` and `<rev1>..<rev2>`.
66
67<base> <rev1> <rev2>::
68 Equivalent to passing `<base>..<rev1>` and `<base>..<rev2>`.
69 Note that `<base>` does not need to be the exact branch point
70 of the branches. Example: after rebasing a branch `my-topic`,
71 `git range-diff my-topic@{u} my-topic@{1} my-topic` would
72 show the differences introduced by the rebase.
73
74`git range-diff` also accepts the regular diff options (see
75linkgit:git-diff[1]), most notably the `--color=[<when>]` and
76`--no-color` options. These options are used when generating the "diff
77between patches", i.e. to compare the author, commit message and diff of
78corresponding old/new commits. There is currently no means to tweak the
79diff options passed to `git log` when generating those patches.
80
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81OUTPUT STABILITY
82----------------
83
84The output of the `range-diff` command is subject to change. It is
85intended to be human-readable porcelain output, not something that can
86be used across versions of Git to get a textually stable `range-diff`
87(as opposed to something like the `--stable` option to
88linkgit:git-patch-id[1]). There's also no equivalent of
89linkgit:git-apply[1] for `range-diff`, the output is not intended to
90be machine-readable.
91
92This is particularly true when passing in diff options. Currently some
93options like `--stat` can, as an emergent effect, produce output
94that's quite useless in the context of `range-diff`. Future versions
95of `range-diff` may learn to interpret such options in a manner
96specific to `range-diff` (e.g. for `--stat` producing human-readable
97output which summarizes how the diffstat changed).
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98
99CONFIGURATION
100-------------
101This command uses the `diff.color.*` and `pager.range-diff` settings
102(the latter is on by default).
103See linkgit:git-config[1].
104
105
106EXAMPLES
107--------
108
109When a rebase required merge conflicts to be resolved, compare the changes
110introduced by the rebase directly afterwards using:
111
112------------
113$ git range-diff @{u} @{1} @
114------------
115
116
117A typical output of `git range-diff` would look like this:
118
119------------
120-: ------- > 1: 0ddba11 Prepare for the inevitable!
1211: c0debee = 2: cab005e Add a helpful message at the start
1222: f00dbal ! 3: decafe1 Describe a bug
123 @@ -1,3 +1,3 @@
124 Author: A U Thor <author@example.com>
125
126 -TODO: Describe a bug
127 +Describe a bug
128 @@ -324,5 +324,6
129 This is expected.
130
131 -+What is unexpected is that it will also crash.
132 ++Unexpectedly, it also crashes. This is a bug, and the jury is
133 ++still out there how to fix it best. See ticket #314 for details.
134
135 Contact
1363: bedead < -: ------- TO-UNDO
137------------
138
139In this example, there are 3 old and 3 new commits, where the developer
140removed the 3rd, added a new one before the first two, and modified the
141commit message of the 2nd commit as well its diff.
142
143When the output goes to a terminal, it is color-coded by default, just
144like regular `git diff`'s output. In addition, the first line (adding a
145commit) is green, the last line (deleting a commit) is red, the second
146line (with a perfect match) is yellow like the commit header of `git
147show`'s output, and the third line colors the old commit red, the new
148one green and the rest like `git show`'s commit header.
149
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150A naive color-coded diff of diffs is actually a bit hard to read,
151though, as it colors the entire lines red or green. The line that added
152"What is unexpected" in the old commit, for example, is completely red,
153even if the intent of the old commit was to add something.
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155To help with that, `range` uses the `--dual-color` mode by default. In
156this mode, the diff of diffs will retain the original diff colors, and
157prefix the lines with -/+ markers that have their *background* red or
158green, to make it more obvious that they describe how the diff itself
159changed.
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160
161
162Algorithm
163---------
164
165The general idea is this: we generate a cost matrix between the commits
166in both commit ranges, then solve the least-cost assignment.
167
168The cost matrix is populated thusly: for each pair of commits, both
169diffs are generated and the "diff of diffs" is generated, with 3 context
170lines, then the number of lines in that diff is used as cost.
171
172To avoid false positives (e.g. when a patch has been removed, and an
173unrelated patch has been added between two iterations of the same patch
174series), the cost matrix is extended to allow for that, by adding
175fixed-cost entries for wholesale deletes/adds.
176
177Example: Let commits `1--2` be the first iteration of a patch series and
178`A--C` the second iteration. Let's assume that `A` is a cherry-pick of
179`2,` and `C` is a cherry-pick of `1` but with a small modification (say,
180a fixed typo). Visualize the commits as a bipartite graph:
181
182------------
183 1 A
184
185 2 B
186
187 C
188------------
189
190We are looking for a "best" explanation of the new series in terms of
191the old one. We can represent an "explanation" as an edge in the graph:
192
193
194------------
195 1 A
196 /
197 2 --------' B
198
199 C
200------------
201
202This explanation comes for "free" because there was no change. Similarly
203`C` could be explained using `1`, but that comes at some cost c>0
204because of the modification:
205
206------------
207 1 ----. A
208 | /
209 2 ----+---' B
210 |
211 `----- C
212 c>0
213------------
214
215In mathematical terms, what we are looking for is some sort of a minimum
216cost bipartite matching; `1` is matched to `C` at some cost, etc. The
217underlying graph is in fact a complete bipartite graph; the cost we
218associate with every edge is the size of the diff between the two
219commits' patches. To explain also new commits, we introduce dummy nodes
220on both sides:
221
222------------
223 1 ----. A
224 | /
225 2 ----+---' B
226 |
227 o `----- C
228 c>0
229 o o
230
231 o o
232------------
233
234The cost of an edge `o--C` is the size of `C`'s diff, modified by a
235fudge factor that should be smaller than 100%. The cost of an edge
236`o--o` is free. The fudge factor is necessary because even if `1` and
237`C` have nothing in common, they may still share a few empty lines and
238such, possibly making the assignment `1--C`, `o--o` slightly cheaper
239than `1--o`, `o--C` even if `1` and `C` have nothing in common. With the
240fudge factor we require a much larger common part to consider patches as
241corresponding.
242
243The overall time needed to compute this algorithm is the time needed to
244compute n+m commit diffs and then n*m diffs of patches, plus the time
245needed to compute the least-cost assigment between n and m diffs. Git
246uses an implementation of the Jonker-Volgenant algorithm to solve the
247assignment problem, which has cubic runtime complexity. The matching
248found in this case will look like this:
249
250------------
251 1 ----. A
252 | /
253 2 ----+---' B
254 .--+-----'
255 o -' `----- C
256 c>0
257 o ---------- o
258
259 o ---------- o
260------------
261
262
263SEE ALSO
264--------
265linkgit:git-log[1]
266
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267GIT
268---
269Part of the linkgit:git[1] suite