If you want to find all commits where the commit message contains a given word, use
$ git log --grep=word
If you want to find all commits where “word” was added or removed in the file contents (to be more exact: where the number of occurrences of “word” changed), i.e., search the commit contents, use a so-called ‘pickaxe’ search with
$ git log -Sword
In modern Git there is also
$ git log -Gword
to look for differences whose added or removed line matches “word” (also commit contents).
A few things to note:
-Gby default accepts a regex, while-Saccepts a string, but it can be modified to accept regexes using the--pickaxe-regex.-Sfinds commits where the number of occurrences of “word” changed, while-Gfinds commits where “word” appears in the diff.- This means that
-S<regex> --pickaxe-regexand-G<regex>do not do exactly the same thing.
The git diff documentation has a nice explanation of the difference:
To illustrate the difference between
-S<regex> --pickaxe-regexand-G<regex>, consider a commit with the following diff in the same file:+ return frotz(nitfol, two->ptr, 1, 0); ... - hit = frotz(nitfol, mf2.ptr, 1, 0);While
git log -G"frotz\(nitfol"will show this commit,git log -S"frotz\(nitfol" --pickaxe-regexwill not (because the number of occurrences of that string did not change).
This will show the commits containing the search terms, but if you want to see the actual changes in those commits instead you can use --patch:
$ git log -G"searchTerm" --patch
This can then be piped to grep to isolate the output just to display commit diff lines with that search term. A common use-case is to display diff lines with that search term in commits since and including a given commit – 3b5ab0f2a1 in this example – like so:
$ git log 3b5ab0f2a1^.. -G"searchTerm" --patch | grep searchTerm