What's the simplest way to list conflicted files in Git?

GitGit MergeGit Merge-Conflict

Git Problem Overview


I just need a plain list of conflicted files.

Is there anything simpler than:

git ls-files -u  | cut -f 2 | sort -u

or:

git ls-files -u  | awk '{print $4}' | sort | uniq

I guess I could set up a handy alias for that, however was wondering how pros do it. I'd use it to write shell loops e.g. to auto-resolve conflict, etc. Maybe replace that loop by plugging into mergetool.cmd?

Git Solutions


Solution 1 - Git

Use git diff, with name-only to show only the names, and diff-filter=U to only include 'Unmerged' files.

git diff --name-only --diff-filter=U

Solution 2 - Git

git diff --check

will show the list of files containing conflict markers including line numbers.

For example:

> git diff --check
index-localhost.html:85: leftover conflict marker
index-localhost.html:87: leftover conflict marker
index-localhost.html:89: leftover conflict marker
index.html:85: leftover conflict marker
index.html:87: leftover conflict marker
index.html:89: leftover conflict marker

source : https://ardalis.com/detect-git-conflict-markers

Solution 3 - Git

Trying to answer my question:

No, there doesn't seem to be any simpler way than the one in the question, out of box.

After typing that in too many times, just pasted the shorter one into an executable file named 'git-conflicts', made accessible to git, now I can just: git conflicts to get the list I wanted.

Update: as Richard suggests, you can set up an git alias, as alternative to the executable

git config --global alias.conflicts '!git ls-files -u | cut -f 2 | sort -u'

An advantage of using the executable over the alias is that you can share that script with team members (in a bin dir part of the repo).

Solution 4 - Git

Here is a fool-proof way:

grep -H -r "<<<<<<< HEAD" /path/to/project/dir

Solution 5 - Git

git status displays "both modified" next to files that have conflicts instead of "modified" or "new file", etc

Solution 6 - Git

git status --short | grep "^UU "

Solution 7 - Git

This works for me:

git grep '<<<<<<< HEAD'

or

git grep '<<<<<<< HEAD' | less -N

Solution 8 - Git

you may hit git ls-files -u on your command line it lists down files with conflicts

Solution 9 - Git

If you attempt to commit, and if there are conflicts, then git will give you the list of the currently unresolved conflicts... but not as a plain list. This is usually what you want when working interactively because the list gets shorter as you fix the conflicts.

Solution 10 - Git

I would also suggest the following command if you are working on a local git repository or in a directory in which patch -p1 --merge < ... was applied.

grep -rnw . -e '^<<<<<<<$'

Solution 11 - Git

Maybe this has been added to Git, but the files that have yet to be resolved are listed in the status message (git status) like this:

#
# Unmerged paths:
#   (use "git add/rm <file>..." as appropriate to mark resolution)
#
#	both modified:      syssw/target/libs/makefile
#

Note that this is the Unmerged paths section.

Solution 12 - Git

I've always just used git status.

can add awk at the end to get just the file names

git status -s | grep ^U | awk '{print $2}'

Solution 13 - Git

Assuming you know where your git root directory, ${GIT_ROOT}, is, you can do,

 cat ${GIT_ROOT}/.git/MERGE_MSG | sed '1,/Conflicts/d'

Solution 14 - Git

My 2 cents here (even when there are a lot of cool/working responses)

I created this alias in my .gitconfig

[alias]
 ...
 conflicts = !git diff --name-only --diff-filter=U | grep -oE '[^/ ]+$'

which is going to show me just the names of the files with conflicts... not their whole path :)

Solution 15 - Git

slight variation of Charles Bailey's answer that gives more information:

git diff --name-only --diff-filter=U | xargs git status

Solution 16 - Git

Here's what I use to a list modified files suitable for command line substitution in bash

git diff --numstat -b -w | grep ^[1-9] | cut -f 3

To edit the list use $(cmd) substitution.

vi $(git diff --numstat -b -w | grep ^[1-9] | cut -f 3)

Doesn't work if the file names have spaces. I tried to use sed to escape or quote the spaces and the output list looked right, but the $() substitution still did not behave as desired.

Solution 17 - Git

Utility git wizard https://github.com/makelinux/git-wizard counts separately unresolved conflicted changes (collisions) and unmerged files. Conflicts must be resolved manually or with mergetool. Resolved unmerged changes can me added and committed usually with git rebase --continue.

Solution 18 - Git

The answer by Jones Agyemang is probably sufficient for most use cases and was a great starting point for my solution. For scripting in Git Bent, the git wrapper library I made, I needed something a bit more robust. I'm posting the prototype I've written which is not yet totally script-friendly

Notes
  • The linked answer checks for <<<<<<< HEAD which doesn't work for merge conflicts from using git stash apply which has <<<<<<< Updated Upstream
  • My solution confirms the presence of ======= & >>>>>>>
  • The linked answer is surely more performant, as it doesn't have to do as much
  • My solution does NOT provide line numbers

You need the str_split_line function from below.

# Root git directory
dir="$(git rev-parse --show-toplevel)"
# Put the grep output into an array (see below)
str_split_line "$(grep -r "^<<<<<<< " "${dir})" files
bn="$(basename "${dir}")"
for i in "${files[@]}"; do 
    # Remove the matched string, so we're left with the file name  
    file="$(sed -e "s/:<<<<<<< .*//" <<< "${i}")"

    # Remove the path, keep the project dir's name  
    fileShort="${file#"${dir}"}"
    fileShort="${bn}${fileShort}"

    # Confirm merge divider & closer are present
    c1=$(grep -c "^=======" "${file}")
    c2=$(grep -c "^>>>>>>> " "${file}")
    if [[ c1 -gt 0 && c2 -gt 0 ]]; then
        echo "${fileShort} has a merge conflict"
    fi
done
Output
projectdir/file-name
projectdir/subdir/file-name
Split strings by line function

You can just copy the block of code if you don't want this as a separate function

function str_split_line(){
# for IFS, see https://stackoverflow.com/questions/16831429/when-setting-ifs-to-split-on-newlines-why-is-it-necessary-to-include-a-backspac
IFS="
"
    declare -n lines=$2
    while read line; do
        lines+=("${line}")
    done <<< "${1}"
}

Solution 19 - Git

For me the accepted answer didn't work. To prevent from capturing

warning: LF will be replaced by CRLF in []. The file will have its original line endings in your working directory

In Powershell I used this instead:

git ls-files -u| ForEach{($_.Split("`t"))|Select-Object -Last 1}| get-unique

Solution 20 - Git

As highlighted in other answer(s) we can simply use command git status and then look for files listed under Unmerged paths:

Attributions

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