I had to quickly switch git branches, so I ran git stash, but I had to run it again because one of my files needed editing.
So I've run git stash twice, and I'm ready to go back to editing my files. I ran git stash apply but I'm not convinced that all of the files I had stashed were unstashed. Is there anything I can do? Any way to check?
When I run git stash show, I just see the last of my two git stashes.
Is there anyway to show all git stashes?
3 Answers
You can get a list of all stashes with
git stash list which will show you something like
stash@{0}: WIP on dev: 1f6f8bb Commit message A stash@{1}: WIP on master: 50cf63b Commit message B If you made two stashes, then just call git stash pop twice. As opposed to git stash apply, pop applies and removes the latest stash.
You can also reference a specific stash, e.g.
git stash show stash@{1} or
git stash apply stash@{1} 2I came across this situation, I did two stashes and git stash pop just unstashed last stash. So I did
git stash list git stash pop stash@{1} This unstashed my first stash and I could see all my changes back!
You asked a few different questions in post, and other respondents gave good answers to some of them. The one that seems most important but hasn't been answered is this:
>>I'm not convinced that all of the files I had stashed were unstashed. Is there anything I can do? Any way to check?
Compare stash to local tree
I think what you want to do is compare the stash to your local working tree. You can put the -p switch on the stash command and you're good:
git stash show -p If there's a particular one you're after, just use its git stash name or id from the stash list:
git stash show -p stash@{3} Maybe use the diff?
If you're really interested in pushing your git skills, you could always go for a diff. To see the difference between what's in the stash and whats checked into the HEAD on the master branch the following diff could be used:
git diff stash@ master Another neat command to show you changes for elements in the stash history that might come in handy is --stat:
git stash list --stat But I think the simple answer is the right answer. Just use the -p switch and you'll likely see if the stash you shelved has been popped back.
git stash show -p stash@{3}