2756

How do I get the hash of the current commit in Git?

2
  • 3
    Use git log to retrieve recent commits, that will show full commit hash
    – onmyway133
    Commented Mar 15, 2022 at 14:23
  • Useful question! I was able to use this in a build script: "record_commit_hash_and_build_time": "now=$(date -u \"+%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S\") && last_commit=$(git rev-parse HEAD) && echo \"{\\\"commit\\\": \\\"$last_commit\\\", \\\"build_time\\\": \\\"$now\\\"}\" > frontend/dist/version.json", stackoverflow.com/a/11493416/470749
    – Ryan
    Commented Nov 29, 2022 at 18:53

25 Answers 25

4006

To turn any extended object reference into a hash, use git-rev-parse:

git rev-parse HEAD

or

git rev-parse --verify HEAD

To retrieve the short hash:

git rev-parse --short HEAD

To turn references (e.g. branches and tags) into hashes, use git show-ref and git for-each-ref.

22
  • 108
    --verify implies that: The parameter given must be usable as a single, valid object name. Otherwise barf and abort. Commented Jul 24, 2011 at 17:50
  • 707
    git rev-parse --short HEAD returns the short version of the hash, just in case anyone was wondering. Commented Oct 25, 2012 at 21:28
  • 70
    Adding to what Thane said, you can also add a specific length to --short, such as --short=12, to get a specific number of digits from the hash. Commented Feb 21, 2014 at 17:18
  • 47
    @TysonPhalp: --short=N is about minimal number of digits; git uses larger number of digits if shortened one would be undistinguishable from shortened other commit. Try e.g. git rev-parse --short=2 HEAD or git log --oneline --abbrev=2. Commented Feb 21, 2014 at 18:08
  • 46
    Adding to what Thane, Tyson, and Jakub said, you can print the full hash, but highlight the hexits necessary to identify the commit blue with git rev-parse HEAD | GREP_COLORS='ms=34;1' grep $(git rev-parse --short=0 HEAD)
    – Zaz
    Commented Aug 5, 2014 at 16:44
558

To get the shortened commit hash, use the %h format specifier:

git log --pretty=format:'%h' -n 1

%H represents the long commit hash. Also, -1 can be used directly in place of -n 1.

10
  • 117
    Or, it seems, adding --short to the rev-parse command above seems to work. Commented Sep 30, 2011 at 23:39
  • 24
    I think git log is porcelain and git rev-parse is plumbing. Commented Jan 29, 2016 at 10:40
  • 5
    This is a bad/ incorrect way of doing it because this method will give you the wrong hash if you have a detached head. For example if the current commit is 12ab34... and the previous commit was 33aa44... then if i do 'git checkout 33aa44' and then I run your command I will still be getting back 12ab34... despite my head actually pointing to 33aa44... Commented Jul 17, 2017 at 0:03
  • 6
    @theQuestionMan I don't experience the behavior you describe; git checkout 33aa44; git log -n 1 gives me 33aa44. What version of git are you using? Commented Jul 19, 2017 at 17:32
  • 19
    @AmedeeVanGasse, ah! I HAD NO IDEA this is a toilet analogy! I've been seeing porcelain in the git man pages for years, but had NO idea it was referring to a toilet! The porcelain is the toilet, and it's "closer to the user" (who figuratively sits on this toilet) than the plumbing, which is lower-level and farther from the user--ie: below the "porcelain"! Mind blown. Commented Feb 21, 2021 at 7:26
199

Another one, using git log:

git log -1 --format="%H"

It's very similar to the of @outofculture though a bit shorter.

6
  • 1
    And the result is not single-quoted.
    – crokusek
    Commented Feb 28, 2017 at 23:11
  • 12
    This is the correct answer, since it works even if you checkout a specific commit instead of HEAD.
    – Parsa
    Commented Feb 22, 2019 at 19:16
  • 3
    @Parsa: when checking out a specific commit HEAD points to this commit rather than a named branche know as detached head. Commented Jan 28, 2020 at 20:46
  • 2
    From the command line, to avoid pager: git --no-pager log -1 --format="%H"
    – ederag
    Commented May 9, 2021 at 20:27
  • 1
    @Parsa - maybe we misunderstand each other: after checkout from commit a1b1 to c1d1 git rev-parse HEAD prints c1d1. So, HEAD points to the "current commit" which the OP asked for. From your upvoted comment I mistakenly concluded that git rev-parse HEAD was wrong.
    – spawn
    Commented May 17, 2022 at 12:31
159

To get the full SHA:

$ git rev-parse HEAD
cbf1b9a1be984a9f61b79a05f23b19f66d533537

To get the shortened version:

$ git rev-parse --short HEAD
cbf1b9a
1
  • If two git commit hashes are needed, such as one from the branch you are currently working with and a master branch, you could also use git rev-parse FETCH_HEAD if you need the hash for the master commit that you merged into your current branch. e.g. if you have branches master and feature/new-feature for a given repo., while on feature/new-feature you could use git fetch origin master && git merge FETCH_HEAD and then git rev-parse --short FETCH_HEAD if you needed the commit hash from the master you just merged in for any scripts you may have.
    – Mike
    Commented Sep 3, 2018 at 21:43
104

Commit hash

git show -s --format=%H

Abbreviated commit hash

git show -s --format=%h

The -s flag is same as --no-patch and stands for "Suppress diff output".

Click here for more git show examples.

95

For completeness, since no one has suggested it yet. .git/refs/heads/master is a file that contains only one line: the hash of the latest commit on master. So you could just read it from there.

Or, as a command:

cat .git/refs/heads/master

Update:

Note that git now supports storing some head refs in the pack-ref file instead of as a file in the /refs/heads/ folder. https://www.kernel.org/pub/software/scm/git/docs/git-pack-refs.html

11
  • 15
    This assumes the current branch is master, which is not necessarily true.
    – gavrie
    Commented Oct 23, 2012 at 15:10
  • 13
    Indeed. That's why I explicitly said this is for master.
    – Deestan
    Commented Oct 23, 2012 at 15:22
  • 23
    .git/HEAD typically points to a ref, if you have a SHA1 in there, you are in detached head mode.
    – eckes
    Commented Apr 9, 2013 at 1:48
  • 11
    This isn't very robust compared to other approaches, in particular because it assumes that there is a .git subdirectory, which is not necessarily the case. See the --separate-git-dir flag in the git init man page.
    – jub0bs
    Commented Dec 29, 2014 at 17:44
  • 28
    +1 because sometimes you don't want git executable installed (e.g. in your Dockerfile)
    – wim
    Commented Apr 7, 2015 at 2:59
63

There's always git describe as well. By default it gives you --

john@eleanor:/dev/shm/mpd/ncmpc/pkg (master)$ git describe --always
release-0.19-11-g7a68a75
4
  • 19
    Git describe returns the first TAG reachable from a commit. How does this help me get the SHA?
    – Sardaukar
    Commented Sep 9, 2011 at 13:45
  • 49
    I like git describe --long --dirty --abbrev=10 --tags it will give me something like 7.2.0.Final-447-g65bf4ef2d4 which is 447 commits after the 7.2.0.Final tag and the first 10 digest of the global SHA-1 at the current HEAD are "65bf4ef2d4". This is very good for version strings. With --long it will always add the count (-0-) and the hash, even if the tag happens to match exactly.
    – eckes
    Commented Apr 9, 2013 at 1:46
  • 20
    If no tags exist then git describe --always will "show uniquely abbreviated commit object as fallback" Commented Sep 18, 2014 at 16:57
  • 3
    I use git describe --tags --first-parent --abbrev=11 --long --dirty --always. The --always option means it provides a result (hash) even if there are no tags. The --first-parent means it doesn't get confused by merge commits and only follows items on the current branch. Note also that --dirty will append -dirty to the result if the current branch has uncommitted changes.
    – ingyhere
    Commented Jan 31, 2020 at 7:05
42

Use git rev-list --max-count=1 HEAD

1
  • 4
    git-rev-list is about generating list of commit objects; it is git-rev-parse to translate object name (e.g. HEAD) into SHA-1 Commented Jun 4, 2009 at 14:13
35

If you need to store the hash in a variable during a script, you can use

last_commit=$(git rev-parse HEAD);

Or, if you only want the first 10 characters (like github.com does)

last_commit=$(git rev-parse --short=10 HEAD);
1
  • Thanks. I was able to use this in a build script: now=$(date -u "+%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S") && last_commit=$(git rev-parse HEAD) && echo "{\"commit\": \"$last_commit\", \"build_time\": \"$now\"}" > version.json
    – Ryan
    Commented Nov 29, 2022 at 18:42
25

If you want the super-hacky way to do it:

cat .git/`cat .git/HEAD | cut -d \  -f 2`

Basically, git stores the location of HEAD in .git/HEAD, in the form ref: {path from .git}. This command reads that out, slices off the "ref: ", and reads out whatever file it pointed to.

This, of course, will fail in detached-head mode, as HEAD won't be "ref:...", but the hash itself - but you know, I don't think you expect that much smarts in your bash one-liners. If you don't think semicolons are cheating, though...

HASH="ref: HEAD"; while [[ $HASH == ref\:* ]]; do HASH="$(cat ".git/$(echo $HASH | cut -d \  -f 2)")"; done; echo $HASH
4
  • 3
    no need to install git, I like it. (my docker build image does not have git)
    – Helin Wang
    Commented Feb 15, 2016 at 20:18
  • also useful because you can run this easily from outside the git repo
    – samaspin
    Commented Jun 22, 2016 at 16:30
  • 2
    I formalized this to a script for my local machine. Then, I thought, hey: the implementation I made are simple enough that it illustrates how to solve an unrelated problem (parsing arguments in raw POSIX shell scripts without external programs), but complex enough to provide a little variation and to exploit most of the features of sh. Half an hour of documentation comments later, and here's a Gist of it: gist.github.com/Fordi/29b8d6d1ef1662b306bfc2bd99151b07
    – Fordi
    Commented Jun 29, 2016 at 14:41
  • 1
    Looking at it, I made a more extensive version for detecting Git and SVN, and grabbing the git hash/svn revision. Not a clean string this time, but easily command-line parsed, and usable as a version tag: gist.github.com/Fordi/8f1828efd820181f24302b292670b14e
    – Fordi
    Commented Jun 29, 2016 at 15:21
23

I needed something a little more different: display the full sha1 of the commit, but append an asterisk to the end if the working directory is not clean. Unless I wanted to use multiple commands, none of the options in the previous answers work.

Here is the one liner that does:
git describe --always --abbrev=0 --match "NOT A TAG" --dirty="*"
Result: f5366ccb21588c0d7a5f7d9fa1d3f85e9f9d1ffe*

Explanation: describes (using annotated tags) the current commit, but only with tags containing "NOT A TAG". Since tags cannot have spaces, this never matches a tag and since we want to show a result --always, the command falls back displaying the full (--abbrev=0) sha1 of the commit and it appends an asterisk if the working directory is --dirty.

If you don't want to append the asterisk, this works like all the other commands in the previous answers:
git describe --always --abbrev=0 --match "NOT A TAG"
Result: f5366ccb21588c0d7a5f7d9fa1d3f85e9f9d1ffe

3
  • Thanks, just stumbling over it and it spares me the one or other echo for that :)
    – hakre
    Commented Feb 23, 2018 at 20:43
  • 2
    It works for me without the --match "NOT A TAG". Tested in git 2.18.0 as well as 2.7.4. Is there any situation where this argument is needed?
    – Thomas
    Commented Aug 7, 2018 at 7:24
  • 2
    @Thomas it won't work if you have an annotated tag anywhere in the history of the current commit. The fake tag makes sure that the describe command does not use a tag to describe the commit,
    – Rado
    Commented Aug 8, 2018 at 5:44
22

Perhaps you want an alias so you don't have to remember all the nifty details. After doing one of the below steps, you will be able to simply type:

$ git lastcommit
49c03fc679ab11534e1b4b35687b1225c365c630

Following up on the accepted answer, here are two ways to set this up:

  1. Teach git the explicit way by editing the global config (my original answer):
# open the git config editor
$ git config --global --edit
# in the alias section, add
...
[alias]
  lastcommit = rev-parse HEAD
...
  1. Or if you like a shortcut to teach git a shortcut, as recently commented by Adrien:

    $ git config --global alias.lastcommit "rev-parse HEAD"

From here on, use git lastcommit to show the last commit's hash.

0
20

git rev-parse HEAD does the trick.

If you need to store it to checkout back later than saving actual branch if any may be preferable:

cat .git/HEAD

Example output:

ref: refs/heads/master

Parse it:

cat .git/HEAD | sed "s/^.\+ \(.\+\)$/\1/g"

If you have Windows then you may consider using wsl.exe:

wsl cat .git/HEAD | wsl sed "s/^.\+ \(.\+\)$/\1/g"

Output:

refs/heads/master

This value may be used to git checkout later but it becomes pointing to its SHA. To make it to point to the actual current branch by its name do:

wsl cat .git/HEAD | wsl sed "s/^.\+ \(.\+\)$/\1/g" | wsl sed "s/^refs\///g"  | wsl sed "s/^heads\///g"

Output:

master
17

The most succinct way I know:

git show --pretty=%h 

If you want a specific number of digits of the hash you can add:

--abbrev=n
3
  • 16
    While this technically works, git show is what's known as a porcelain command (i.e. user-facing), and so should not be used in scripts because its output is subject to change. The answer above (git rev-parse --short HEAD) should be used instead.
    – jm3
    Commented Mar 15, 2014 at 23:45
  • 5
    @jm3 that's backwards. "Porcelain" commands have stable outputs that are intended for scripts. Search git help show for porcelain.
    – John Tyree
    Commented Jul 6, 2015 at 21:32
  • 4
    @JohnTyree This is a confusing subject, but jm3 was right: porcelain commands are not meant to be parsed, but rather to be human-readable. In case you need to use a porcelain command in a script and you want to have a stable format, there's sometimes (for example with git status, push and blame) an option that does just that. Unfortunately, that option is called --porcelain, which is why this is confusing. You can find the details in this great answer by VonC Commented Jan 14, 2019 at 17:20
12

Here is one-liner in Bash shell using direct read from git files:

(head=($(<.git/HEAD)); cat .git/${head[1]})

You need to run above command in your git root folder.

This method can be useful when you've repository files, but git command has been not installed.

If won't work, check in .git/refs/heads folder what kind of heads do you have present.

9
git show-ref --head --hash head

If you're going for speed though, the approach mentioned by Deestan

cat .git/refs/heads/<branch-name>

is significantly faster than any other method listed here so far.

1
  • 1
    show-ref seems to me to be the best option for scripting, since it's a plumbing command and thus guaranteed (or at least very likely) to remain stable in future releases: other answers use rev-parse, show, describe, or log, which are all porcelain commands. And in cases where speed is not of the essence, the note from the show-ref manpage applies: ‘Use of this utility is encouraged in favor of directly accessing files under the .git directory.’
    – Pont
    Commented Oct 8, 2018 at 18:21
7

in your home-dir in file ".gitconfig" add the following

[alias]
sha = rev-parse HEAD

then you will have an easier command to remember:

$ git sha
59fbfdbadb43ad0b6154c982c997041e9e53b600
7

On git bash, simply run $ git log -1

you will see, these lines following your command.

commit d25c95d88a5e8b7e15ba6c925a1631a5357095db .. (info about your head)

d25c95d88a5e8b7e15ba6c925a1631a5357095db, is your SHA for last commit.
5

Get the hash for the current commit, and see if git status is "clean" or "dirty"

I want to see 72361c8 or 72361c8-dirty for use in my build system version numbers injected into my program executables (as part of this MPLAB X IDE pre-build step). Here is how:

Quick summary

# get a short commit hash, and see whether `git status` is clean or dirty
test -z "$(git status --porcelain)" \
    && echo "$(git rev-parse --short HEAD)" \
    || echo "$(git rev-parse --short HEAD)-dirty"

Sample output when git status is clean (there are no uncommitted changes):

72361c8

Sample output when git status is dirty (there are any uncommitted changes):

  • Meaning: there are any uncommitted changes, whether they are unstaged changes to tracked files, staged (git added) changes to tracked files, or the addition of new files
72361c8-dirty

Details

Just like git status will show when a submodule is "clean" or "dirty" when using Git Submodules, I really want to see my short commit hash with the word -dirty after it if git status is dirty! I'm using this inside my build system as a version number in my software, so I can easily see exactly which software version I'm running at any moment!

So, I combined this answer (git rev-parse --short HEAD) by @Jakub Narębski, and this answer: (test -n "$(git status --porcelain)") by @benzado on their answer to "Checking for a dirty index or untracked files with Git", I was able to come up with my "1-line" solution above.

The && part only runs if the return code to the previous command (git status --porcelain) is 0, meaning "success" (clean in this case), and the || part only runs if the return code of the previous command (git status --porcelain) is any other error code, meaning "error" (dirty in this case).

Going further

See my bash/git_get_short_hash.sh file in my eRCaGuy_hello_world repo.

Wrap it in a git_get_short_hash Bash function:

# From my answer: https://stackoverflow.com/a/76856090/4561887
# Get a short commit hash, and see whether `git status` is clean or dirty.
# Example outputs:
# 1. Not in a git repo: `(not a git repo)`
# 2. In a repo which has a "dirty" `git status`: `72361c8-dirty`
#   - Note that "dirty" means there are pending uncommitted changes.
# 3. In a repo which has a "clean" `git status`: `72361c8`
git_get_short_hash() {
    # See: https://stackoverflow.com/a/16925062/4561887
    is_git_repo="$(git rev-parse --is-inside-work-tree 2>/dev/null)"

    if [ "$is_git_repo" != "true" ]; then
        echo "(not a git repo)"
        return $RETURN_CODE_SUCCESS
    fi

    # See my answer here: https://stackoverflow.com/a/76856090/4561887
    test -z "$(git status --porcelain)" \
        && echo "$(git rev-parse --short HEAD)" \
        || echo "$(git rev-parse --short HEAD)-dirty"
}

Even better, here's a whole program that you can run or source:

bash/git_get_short_hash.sh:

#!/usr/bin/env bash

# This file is part of eRCaGuy_hello_world: https://github.com/ElectricRCAircraftGuy/eRCaGuy_hello_world

RETURN_CODE_SUCCESS=0
RETURN_CODE_ERROR=1

# From my answer: https://stackoverflow.com/a/76856090/4561887
# Get a short commit hash, and see whether `git status` is clean or dirty.
# Example outputs:
# 1. Not in a git repo: `(not a git repo)`
# 2. In a repo which has a "dirty" `git status`: `72361c8-dirty`
#   - Note that "dirty" means there are pending uncommitted changes.
# 3. In a repo which has a "clean" `git status`: `72361c8`
git_get_short_hash() {
    # See: https://stackoverflow.com/a/16925062/4561887
    is_git_repo="$(git rev-parse --is-inside-work-tree 2>/dev/null)"

    if [ "$is_git_repo" != "true" ]; then
        echo "(not a git repo)"
        return $RETURN_CODE_SUCCESS
    fi

    # See my answer here: https://stackoverflow.com/a/76856090/4561887
    test -z "$(git status --porcelain)" \
        && echo "$(git rev-parse --short HEAD)" \
        || echo "$(git rev-parse --short HEAD)-dirty"
}

main() {
    git_get_short_hash
}

# Determine if the script is being sourced or executed (run).
# See:
# 1. "eRCaGuy_hello_world/bash/if__name__==__main___check_if_sourced_or_executed_best.sh"
# 1. My answer: https://stackoverflow.com/a/70662116/4561887
if [ "${BASH_SOURCE[0]}" = "$0" ]; then
    # This script is being run.
    __name__="__main__"
else
    # This script is being sourced.
    __name__="__source__"
fi

# Only run `main` if this script is being **run**, NOT sourced (imported).
# - See my answer: https://stackoverflow.com/a/70662116/4561887
if [ "$__name__" = "__main__" ]; then
    main "$@"
fi

Sample run command and output when running it:

eRCaGuy_hello_world$ bash/git_get_short_hash.sh
fddb4ef-dirty

Sample run and output by sourcing it (see my answer here if you don't know what that means) and then running main or git_get_short_hash directly:

eRCaGuy_hello_world$ . bash/git_get_short_hash.sh
eRCaGuy_hello_world$ main
fddb4ef-dirty
eRCaGuy_hello_world$ git_get_short_hash
fddb4ef-dirty

For a Python version of the above program, see my file here: python/git_get_short_hash.py in my eRCaGuy_hello_world repo.

Example usage:

  • Use this function in another program of yours like this, for instance.
  • First, copy the git_get_short_hash.py script into another git project of yours.
  • Then, use it like this (assuming mylogfile exists):
import git_get_short_hash
import textwrap

# Alias the function to a shorter name
git_get_short_hash = git_get_short_hash.git_get_short_hash3

git_short_hash = git_get_short_hash()
program_info_str = textwrap.dedent(f"""\
    My other program details here...
    Program version: {git_short_hash}
""")
print(program_info_str)
mylogfile.write(program_info_str)

See also

  1. My answer here: Shell script to programmatically interpret the output of git status
1
  • 1
    Nice use of the git status --porcelain I described here. Upvoted.
    – VonC
    Commented Aug 8, 2023 at 5:51
4

Pretty print of main git repo, and sub-modules:

echo "Main GIT repo:"
echo $(git show -s --format=%H) '(main)'
echo "Sub-modules:"
git submodule status | awk '{print $1,$2}'

Example output:

3a032b0992d7786b00a8822bbcbf192326160cf9 (main)
7de695d58f427c0887b094271ba1ae77a439084f sub-module-1
58f427c0887b01ba1ae77a439084947de695d27f sub-module-2
d58f427c0887de6957b09439084f4271ba1ae77a sub-module-3
2

How I would do it in python (based on @kenorb's bash answer)

def get_git_sha():
    # Which branch are we on?
    branch = open(".git/HEAD", "r").read()

    # Parse output "ref: refs/heads/my_branch" -> my_branch
    branch = branch.strip().split("/")[-1]

    # What's the latest commit in this branch?
    return open(f".git/refs/heads/{branch}").read().strip()
2

Here is another direct-access implementation:

head="$(cat ".git/HEAD")"
while [ "$head" != "${head#ref: }" ]; do
  head="$(cat ".git/${head#ref: }")"
done

This also works over http which is useful for local package archives (I know: for public web sites it's not recommended to make the .git directory accessable):

head="$(curl -s "$baseurl/.git/HEAD")"
while [ "$head" != "${head#ref: }" ]; do
  head="$(curl -s "$baseurl/.git/${head#ref: }")"
done
1

Here is another way of doing it with :)

git log | grep -o '\w\{8,\}' | head -n 1
0

I wanted the newest commit on the origin/main branch so I use

git ls-remote origin | grep main$ | cut -f 1
0
echo "printing last commit id# for current branch:";

git reflog

Image to show actul results

1
  • 1
    Good to know, although not the answer specific to this exact question
    – Sohail Si
    Commented Jan 11, 2023 at 13:00

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