git-last-modified - EXPERIMENTAL: Show when files were last
modified
git last-modified [--recursive] [--show-trees] [--max-depth=<depth>] [-z]
[<revision-range>] [[--] <pathspec>...]
Shows which commit last modified each of the relevant files and
subdirectories. A commit renaming a path, or changing it’s mode is
also taken into account.
THIS COMMAND IS EXPERIMENTAL. THE BEHAVIOR MAY CHANGE.
-r, --recursive
Recursively traverse into all subtrees. By default, the
command only shows tree entries matching the <pathspec>. With
this option, it descends into subtrees and displays all entries within them.
Equivalent to --max-depth=-1.
-t, --show-trees
Show tree entries even when recursing into them.
--max-depth=<depth>
For each pathspec given on the command line, traverse at
most <depth> levels into subtrees. A negative value means no
limit. The default is 0, which shows all paths matching the pathspec without
descending into subtrees.
-z
Terminate each line with a NUL character rather
than a newline.
<revision-range>
Only traverse commits in the specified revision range.
When no <revision-range> is specified, it defaults to HEAD
(i.e. the whole history leading to the current commit). For a complete list of
ways to spell <revision-range>, see the Specifying Ranges
section of gitrevisions(7).
[--] <pathspec>...
Show the commit that last modified each path matching
<pathspec>. If no <pathspec> is given, all files and
subdirectories are included. See gitglossary(7) for details on pathspec
syntax.
The output is in the format:
If a path contains any special characters, the path is C-style
quoted. To avoid quoting, pass option -z to terminate each line with
a NUL.
git-blame(1), git-log(1).