9

It would be very handy for me to see the file size of untracked files. And maybe the old/new size of changed files.

Is it possible to configure git in a way to show it?

Martin Thoma
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4 Answers4

10
git status --porcelain | awk '{print $2}' | xargs ls -hs | sort -h
  1. The git status --porcelain will show the file changed.
$ git status
?? IMG_20160813_205506_AO_HDR.jpg
?? IMG_20160813_205539_AO_HDR.jpg
?? IMG_20160813_211139_HDR.jpg
?? IMG_20160814_143649_HDR.jpg
  1. awk '{print $2}' will extract the content after ??
  2. Finally, the ls -hs will show the size of each file in a human readable format. and the sort -h will sort them by size.

Sample Output:

$ git status --porcelain | awk '{print $2}' | xargs ls -hs | sort -h
136 IMG_20160813_205506_AO_HDR.jpg
384 IMG_20160813_205539_AO_HDR.jpg
784 IMG_20160813_211139_HDR.jpg
5667898 IMG_20160814_143649_HDR.jpg
Riaz Rizvi
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ramwin
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5

No, you cannot make git status do that.

You may not need to make git status do that, because you can write your own command that does that instead. Use:

git -C "$(git rev-parse --show-cdup)" ls-files --other --exclude-standard

to obtain the file list. You can then use whatever command you like to view statistics about those files. You may want to run this command immediately after git status and have git status suppress its own listing with --untracked-files=no. For instance:

alias st='git status -uno;
  git -C "$(git rev-parse --show-cdup)" ls-files --others --exclude-standard -z | 
  xargs -0 ls -lR'

Here I've used -z as well since the command I am using, xargs -0 ls -l, can handle that, and expressed this as a shell alias rather than a Git alias.

There is a flaw here. While git status with -uall will enumerate all the untracked files within a directory, git ls-files --others won't: it behaves like a default git status, summarizing such files by printing only the containing directory name. The ls -l here will show the files within the directory; to stop that, use ls -ld instead, but of course you won't see any file sizes.

(To get modified files, use git ls-files -m rather than --others.)

torek
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5

Try to add the following codes into your .bashrc or .zshrc. And then use gst to get a pretty format output with file size information

alias gst="git_status_size"
git_status_size(){
    git status --porcelain | awk '{print $2}' | xargs ls -hl | sort -r -h | awk '{print $5 "\t" $9}'
}

Output:

$ gst
287MB   video.mp4
53B     README.md
33B     222.txt
18B     333.txt
6B      111.txt
Patrick J. Holt
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  • This script is not optimized if you have deleted files or if you are not running the command form the root of your repository. I have edited this to solve both the problems : https://stackoverflow.com/a/70792144/6224662 – fireball.1 Jan 20 '22 at 19:13
1

All the above answers use git status --porcelain, which returns file paths from the root of the repository.

Using git status -s would be preferred if we want relative file paths. I have written the below command to show only files that exist (deleted file can't exist) and can be used anywhere.

git status -s | grep -v D.* | awk '{print $2}' | xargs ls -hl | sort -r -h | awk '{print $5 "\t" $9}'

You can also add the following to your .bashrc file to use as an alias.

alias gst="git_status_size"
git_status_size(){
        git status -s | grep -v D.* | awk '{print $2}' | xargs ls -hl | sort -r -h | awk '{print $5 "\t" $9}'
}

Sample Output

7.8K    nnp_replication_attempt_1/scaling.data
7.8K    enhanced_sampling_1/scaling.data
5.3K    nvt_transfer_H_template.lmp
5.3K    ../replication_attempt_1/nvt_stretch_bond.lmp
719     enhanced_sampling_1/z1-ada.sh
fireball.1
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