43

I am trying to access the commit history of a single file as in:

git log --follow -- <filename>

I have to use gitpython, so what I am doing now is:

import git 
g = git.Git('repo_dir') 
hexshas = g.log('--pretty=%H','--follow','--',filename).split('\n') 

then I build commit objects:

repo = git.Repo('repo_dir')
commits = [repo.rev_parse(c) for c in r]

Is there a way to do it in a more gitpython-ic way? I tried both commit.iter_parents() and commit.iter_items(), but they both rely on git-rev-list, so they don't have a --follow option.

gpoo
  • 8,408
  • 3
  • 38
  • 53
Alberto Bacchelli
  • 1,029
  • 1
  • 9
  • 9

2 Answers2

19

For example,

With range time:

g = git.Git("C:/path/to/your/repo") 
loginfo = g.log('--since=2013-09-01','--author=KIM BASINGER','--pretty=tformat:','--numstat')
print loginfo

Output:

3       2       path/in/your/solutions/some_file.cs

You can see the added lines, removed lines and the file with these changes.

Sailesh Sriram
  • 144
  • 2
  • 17
mimin0
  • 871
  • 8
  • 9
4

You can try PyDriller instead (it uses GitPython internally). I'm the owner.

I created it so it's easier to use then other frameworks:

for commit in RepositoryMining("path_to_repo", filepath="here_the_file").traverse_commits():
    # here you have the commit object
    print(commit.hash)
Davide Spadini
  • 271
  • 2
  • 7