I'm from a Subversion background and, when I had a branch, I knew what I was working on with "These working files point to this branch".
But with Git I'm not sure when I am editing a file in NetBeans or Notepad++, whether it's tied to the master or another branch.
There's no problem with git
in bash, it tells me what I'm doing.
To display the current branch you're on, without the other branches listed, you can do the following:
git rev-parse --abbrev-ref HEAD
Reference:
Jistanidiot
git branch
should show all the local branches of your repo. The starred branch is your current branch.
If you want to retrieve only the name of the branch you are on, you can do:
git rev-parse --abbrev-ref HEAD
or with Git 2.22 and above:
git branch --show-current
roberttdev
You have also git symbolic-ref HEAD
which displays the full refspec.
To show only the branch name in Git v1.8 and later (thank's to Greg for pointing that out):
git symbolic-ref --short HEAD
On Git v1.7+ you can also do:
git rev-parse --abbrev-ref HEAD
Both should give the same branch name if you're on a branch. If you're on a detached head answers differ.
Note:
On an earlier client, this seems to work:
git symbolic-ref HEAD | sed -e "s/^refs\/heads\///"
– Darien 26. Mar 2014
Wernight
For my own reference (but it might be useful to others) I made an overview of most (basic command line) techniques mentioned in this thread, each applied to several use cases: HEAD is (pointing at):
- local branch (master)
- remote tracking branch, in sync with local branch (origin/master at same commit as master)
- remote tracking branch, not in sync with a local branch (origin/feature-foo)
- tag (v1.2.3)
- submodule (run inside the submodule directory)
- general detached head (none of the above)
Results:
git branch | sed -n '/\* /s///p'
- local branch:
master
- remote tracking branch (in sync):
(detached from origin/master)
- remote tracking branch (not in sync):
(detached from origin/feature-foo)
- tag:
(detached from v1.2.3)
- submodule:
(HEAD detached at 285f294)
- general detached head:
(detached from 285f294)
git status | head -1
- local branch:
# On branch master
- remote tracking branch (in sync):
# HEAD detached at origin/master
- remote tracking branch (not in sync):
# HEAD detached at origin/feature-foo
- tag:
# HEAD detached at v1.2.3
- submodule:
# HEAD detached at 285f294
- general detached head:
# HEAD detached at 285f294
git describe --all
- local branch:
heads/master
- remote tracking branch (in sync):
heads/master
(note: not remotes/origin/master
)
- remote tracking branch (not in sync):
remotes/origin/feature-foo
- tag:
v1.2.3
- submodule:
remotes/origin/HEAD
- general detached head:
v1.0.6-5-g2393761
cat .git/HEAD
:
- local branch:
ref: refs/heads/master
- submodule:
cat: .git/HEAD: Not a directory
- all other use cases: SHA of the corresponding commit
git rev-parse --abbrev-ref HEAD
- local branch:
master
- all the other use cases:
HEAD
git symbolic-ref --short HEAD
- local branch:
master
- all the other use cases:
fatal: ref HEAD is not a symbolic ref
(FYI this was done with git version 1.8.3.1)
Stefaan
As of version 2.22 of git you could just use:
git branch --show-current
As per man page:
Print the name of the current branch. In detached HEAD state, nothing is printed.
Max
One more alternative:
git name-rev --name-only HEAD
Filip Spiridonov
Well simple enough, I got it in a one liner (bash)
git branch | sed -n '/\* /s///p'
(credit: Limited Atonement)
And while I am there, the one liner to get the remote tracking branch (if any)
git rev-parse --symbolic-full-name --abbrev-ref @{u}
Olivier Refalo
You can just type in command line (console) on Linux, in the repository directory:
$ git status
and you will see some text, among which something similar to:
...
On branch master
...
which means you are currently on master
branch. If you are editing any file at that moment and it is located in the same local repository (local directory containing the files that are under Git version control management), you are editing file in this branch.
Tadeck
git symbolic-ref -q --short HEAD
I use this in scripts that need the current branch name. It will show you the current short symbolic reference to HEAD, which will be your current branch name.
Kousha
git branch | grep -e "^*" | cut -d' ' -f 2
will show only the branch name
ungalcrys
git branch
show current branch name only.
While git branch will show you all branches and highlight the current one with an asterisk, it can be too cumbersome when working with lots of branches.
To show only the branch you are currently on, use:
git rev-parse --abbrev-ref HEAD
Lawrence Paje
Found a command line solution of the same length as Oliver Refalo's, using good ol' awk:
git branch | awk '/^\*/{print $2}'
awk
reads that as "do the stuff in {}
on lines matching the regex". By default it assumes whitespace-delimited fields, so you print the second. If you can assume that only the line with your branch has the *, you can drop the ^. Ah, bash golf!
Silas Barta
A less noisy version for git status would do the trick
git status -bsuno
It prints out
## branch-name
dgolovin
#!/bin/bash
function git.branch {
br=`git branch | grep "*"`
echo ${br/* /}
}
git.branch
Dziamid
Why not use git-aware shell prompt, which would tell you name of current branch? git status
also helps.
How git-prompt.sh from contrib/
does it (git version 2.3.0), as defined in __git_ps1
helper function:
First, there is special case if rebase in progress is detected. Git uses unnamed branch (detached HEAD) during the rebase process to make it atomic, and original branch is saved elsewhere.
If the .git/HEAD
file is a symbolic link (a very rare case, from the ancient history of Git), it uses git symbolic-ref HEAD 2>/dev/null
Else, it reads .git/HEAD
file. Next steps depends on its contents:
If this file doesn't exist, then there is no current branch. This usually happens if the repository is bare.
If it starts with 'ref: '
prefix, then .git/HEAD
is symref (symbolic reference), and we are on normal branch. Strip this prefix to get full name, and strip refs/heads/
to get short name of the current branch:
b="${head#ref: }"
# ...
b=${b##refs/heads/}
If it doesn't start with 'ref: '
, then it is detached HEAD (anonymous branch), pointing directly to some commit. Use git describe ...
to write the current commit in human-readable form.
I hope that helps.
Jakub Narębski
Sorry this is another command-line answer, but that's what I was looking for when I found this question and many of these answers were helpful. My solution is the following bash shell function:
get_branch () {
git rev-parse --abbrev-ref HEAD | grep -v HEAD || \
git describe --exact-match HEAD 2> /dev/null || \
git rev-parse HEAD
}
This should always give me something both human-readable and directly usable as an argument to git checkout
.
- on a local branch:
feature/HS-0001
- on a tagged commit (detached):
v3.29.5
- on a remote branch (detached, not tagged): SHA1
- on any other detached commit: SHA1
dmaestro12
you can use git bash on the working directory
command is as follow
git status -b
it will tell you on which branch you are on
there are many commands which are useful some of them are
-s
--short
Give the output in the short-format.
-b
--branch
Show the branch and tracking info even in short-format.
--porcelain[=]
Give the output in an easy-to-parse format for scripts. This is similar to the short output, but will remain stable across Git versions and regardless of user configuration. See below for details.
The version parameter is used to specify the format version. This is optional and defaults to the original version v1 format.
--long
Give the output in the long-format. This is the default.
-v
--verbose
In addition to the names of files that have been changed, also show the textual changes that are staged to be committed (i.e., like the output of git diff --cached). If -v is specified twice, then also show the changes in the working tree that have not yet been staged (i.e., like the output of git diff).
Prateek Gangwal
Over time, we might have a really long list of branches.
While some of the other solutions are great, Here is what I do (simplified from Jacob's answer):
git branch | grep \*
Now,
git status
works, but only If there are any local changes
karthikr
git status
will also give the branch name along with changes.
e.g.
>git status
On branch master // <-- branch name here
.....
Satheesh Kumar
I recommend using any of these two commands.
git branch | grep -e "^*" | cut -d' ' -f 2
OR
git status | sed -n 1p | cut -d' ' -f 3
OR (more verbose)
git status -uno -bs| cut -d'#' -f 3 | cut -d . -f 1| sed -e 's/^[ \t]//1'| sed -n 1p
jackotonye
In Netbeans, ensure that versioning annotations are enabled (View -> Show Versioning
Labels). You can then see the branch name next to project name.
http://netbeans.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=213582
Saroj
What about this?
{ git symbolic-ref HEAD 2> /dev/null || git rev-parse --short HEAD 2> /dev/null } | sed "s#refs/heads/##"
ShogunPanda
I have a simple script called git-cbr
(current branch) which prints out the current branch name.
#!/bin/bash
git branch | grep -e "^*"
I put this script in a custom folder (~/.bin
). The folder is in $PATH
.
So now when I'm in a git repo, I just simply type git cbr
to print out the current branch name.
$ git cbr
* master
This works because the git
command takes its first argument and tries to run a script that goes by the name of git-arg1
. For instance, git branch
tries to run a script called git-branch
, etc.
Diego Pino
The following shell command tells you the branch that you are currently in.
git branch | grep ^\*
When you don't want to type that long command every time you want to know the branch and you are using Bash, give the command a short alias, for example alias cb
, like so.
alias cb='git branch | grep ^\*'
When you are in branch master and your prompt is $
, you will get * master
as follows.
$ cb
* master
mrrusof
You can permanently set up your bash output to show your git-branch name. It is very handy when you work with different branches, no need to type $ git status
all the time.
Github repo git-aware-prompt
.
Open your terminal (ctrl-alt-t) and enter the commands
mkdir ~/.bash
cd ~/.bash
git clone git://github.com/jimeh/git-aware-prompt.git
Edit your .bashrc with sudo nano ~/.bashrc
command (for Ubuntu) and add the following to the top:
export GITAWAREPROMPT=~/.bash/git-aware-prompt
source "${GITAWAREPROMPT}/main.sh"
Then paste the code
export PS1="\${debian_chroot:+(\$debian_chroot)}\[\033[01;32m\]\u@\h\[\033[00m\]:\[\033[01;34m\]\w\[\033[00m\] \[$txtcyn\]\$git_branch\[$txtred\]\$git_dirty\[$txtrst\]\$ "
at the end of the same file you pasted the installation code into earlier. This will give you the colorized output:
Kirill Zhuravlov
Returns either branch name or SHA1 when on detached head:
git rev-parse --abbrev-ref HEAD | grep -v ^HEAD$ || git rev-parse HEAD
This is a short version of @dmaestro12's answer and without tag support.
user
If you really want the last branch/tag checked out in detached HEAD state as well.
git reflog HEAD | grep 'checkout:' | head -1 | rev | cut -d' ' -f1 | rev
Update
This is nicer if you have and aren't scared of awk.
git reflog HEAD | grep 'checkout:' | head -1 | awk '{print $NF}'
Ryan
I know this is late but on a linux/mac ,from the terminal you can use the following.
git status | sed -n 1p
Explanation:
git status -> gets the working tree status
sed -n 1p -> gets the first line from the status body
Response to the above command will look as follows:
"On branch your_branch_name"
skippy
Add it to PS1
using Mac :
PS1='\W@\u >`[ -d .git ] && git branch | grep ^*|cut -d" " -f2`> $ '
Before running the command above :
After running that command :
Dont worry, if it is not GIT repository , it will not display error because of [-d .git]
which checks if .git
folder exists or not.
Abdennour TOUMI
if you run in Jenkins, you can use GIT_BRANCH variable as appears here:
https://wiki.jenkins-ci.org/display/JENKINS/Git+Plugin
The git plugin sets several environment variables you can use in your scripts:
GIT_COMMIT - SHA of the current
GIT_BRANCH - Name of the branch currently being used, e.g. "master" or "origin/foo"
GIT_PREVIOUS_COMMIT - SHA of the previous built commit from the same branch (the current SHA on first build in branch)
GIT_URL - Repository remote URL
GIT_URL_N - Repository remote URLs when there are more than 1 remotes, e.g. GIT_URL_1, GIT_URL_2
GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL - Committer/Author Email
GIT_COMMITTER_EMAIL - Committer/Author Email
user3405314Retrieved from : http:www.stackoverflow.com/questions/6245570/how-to-get-the-current-branch-name-in-git