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How to make github follow directory history after renames?

Once a directory is renamed, "git log" no longer 开发者_如何学运维shows its history, unless you force it to, by using "git log --follow".

Is there a way to force the "history" function on the GitHub web UI to use "--follow"?

Alternatively - is there any way to see pre-rename history on GitHub?


Update June 2022: GitHub now supports viewing commit history across file renames and moves!

How to make github follow directory history after renames?

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2011: This was requested in 2009 (Request 129), and then in 2010 (Request 897), and then in 2021 (github/feedback discussion 6964):

I like this.
There could be other issues preventing us from plopping the --follow argument in.
I'll take a look and let you know.

... and then nothing for now.


Note: Git 2.6+ (Q3 2015) will propose that in command line: see "Why does git log not default to git log --follow?"


Note: Git 2.6.0 has been released and includes this feature. Following path changes in the log command can be enabled by setting the log.follow config option to true as in:

git config log.follow true


I wrote a chrome extension to enable this. Source on github.

How to make github follow directory history after renames?


I've sent a mail to support@github.com (salutations removed):

Will "git --follow" functionality ever be implemented on Github? If yes, where can I track its progress?

(By "git --follow", I mean a way to easily see the object revisions before a rename. Currently, when an item is renamed, Github doesn't offer an easy way to display the directory / file history.)

Response:

> Will "git --follow" functionality ever be implemented on Github? If yes, where can I track its progress?

This is something a few other users have requested as well -- we might add it in the future. We currently don't have a public issue tracker, but I'll put another +1 next to it on the Feature Request List™ for the team to see.

So, "git --follow" is unfortunately not supported yet.

To get such functionality in the meantime, I guess you could write a user script that looks up the hash of the parent object, (recursively) look up its history and render the result.

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