- trixie 1:2.47.3-0+deb13u1
- testing 1:2.51.0-1
- unstable 1:2.53.0-1
- experimental 1:2.53.0+next.20260227-1
| GIT-PATCH-ID(1) | Git Manual | GIT-PATCH-ID(1) |
NAME¶
git-patch-id - Compute unique IDs for patches
SYNOPSIS¶
git patch-id [--stable | --unstable | --verbatim]
DESCRIPTION¶
Read patches from standard input and compute the patch IDs.
A "patch ID" is nothing but a sum of SHA-1 of the file diffs associated with a patch, with line numbers ignored. As such, it’s "reasonably stable", but at the same time also reasonably unique, i.e., two patches that have the same "patch ID" are almost guaranteed to be the same thing.
The main usecase for this command is to look for likely duplicate commits.
When dealing with git diff-tree --patch output, it takes advantage of the fact that the patch is prefixed with the object name of the commit, and outputs two 40-byte hexadecimal strings. The first string is the patch ID, and the second string is the commit ID. This can be used to make a mapping from patch ID to commit ID for a set or range of commits.
OPTIONS¶
--verbatim
This is the default if patchid.verbatim is true.
--stable
This is the default if patchid.stable is set to true.
--unstable
This is the default.
EXAMPLES¶
git-cherry(1) shows what commits from a branch have patch ID equivalent commits in some upstream branch. But it only tells you whether such a commit exists or not. What if you wanted to know the relevant commits in the upstream? We can use this command to make a mapping between your branch and the upstream branch:
#!/bin/sh upstream="$1" branch="$2" test -z "$branch" && branch=HEAD limit="$3" if test -n "$limit" then
tail_opts="$limit".."$upstream" else
since=$(git log --format=%aI "$upstream".."$branch" | tail -1)
tail_opts=--since="$since"' '"$upstream" fi for_branch=$(mktemp) for_upstream=$(mktemp) git rev-list --no-merges "$upstream".."$branch" |
git diff-tree --patch --stdin |
git patch-id --stable | sort >"$for_branch" git rev-list --no-merges $tail_opts |
git diff-tree --patch --stdin |
git patch-id --stable | sort >"$for_upstream" join -a1 "$for_branch" "$for_upstream" | cut -d' ' -f2,3 rm "$for_branch" rm "$for_upstream"
Now the first column shows the commit from your branch and the second column shows the patch ID equivalent commit, if it exists.
SEE ALSO¶
GIT¶
Part of the git(1) suite
| 03/01/2026 | Git 2.53.0.697.g625c4f |