git-hyper-blame(1) ================== NAME ---- git-hyper-blame - include::_git-hyper-blame_desc.helper.txt[] SYNOPSIS -------- [verse] 'git hyper-blame' [-i [-i ...]] [--ignore-file=] [--no-default-ignores] [] [--] DESCRIPTION ----------- `git hyper-blame` is like `git blame` but it can ignore or "look through" a given set of commits, to find the real culprit. This is useful if you have a commit that makes sweeping changes that are unlikely to be what you are looking for in a blame, such as mass reformatting or renaming. By adding these commits to the hyper-blame ignore list, `git hyper-blame` will look past these commits to find the previous commit that touched a given line. Follows the normal `blame` syntax: annotates `` with the revision that last modified each line. Optional `` specifies the revision of `` to start from. Automatically looks for a file called `.git-blame-ignore-revs` in the repository root directory. This file has the same syntax as the `--ignore-file` argument, and any commits mentioned in this file are added to the ignore list. OPTIONS ------- -i :: A revision to ignore. Can be specified as many times as needed. --ignore-file=:: A file containing a list of revisions to ignore. Can have comments beginning with `#`. --no-default-ignores:: Do not ignore commits from the `.git-blame-ignore-revs` file. EXAMPLE ------- Let's run `git blame` on a file: demo:1[] Notice that almost the entire file has been blamed on a formatting change? You aren't interested in the uppercasing of the file. You want to know who wrote/modified those lines in the first place. Just tell `hyper-blame` to ignore that commit: demo:2[] `hyper-blame` places a `*` next to any line where it has skipped over an ignored commit, so you know that the line in question has been changed (by an ignored commit) since the given person wrote it. CAVEATS ------- When a line skips over an ignored commit, a guess is made as to which commit previously modified that line, but it is not always clear where the line came from. If the ignored commit makes lots of changes in close proximity, in particular adding/removing/reordering lines, then the wrong authors may be blamed for nearby edits. For this reason, `hyper-blame` works best when the ignored commits are be limited to minor changes such as formatting and renaming, not refactoring or other more invasive changes. SEE ALSO -------- linkgit:git-blame[1] include::_footer.txt[] // vim: ft=asciidoc: