I presume this is a configuration error somewhere, but I can\'t figure out where. Regular git commands appear to work fine, but \"git diff\" does nothing. To be safe, I remove
Not in your case, but maybe because the file that you pass not exists
$ git difftool HEAD HEAD^ -- path/that-not-exists
nothing happen
It does nothing if your working directory is clean and there are no differences from the last update. Try editing a file and then run git diff again, and it should then show the diff.
If you are using it outside of a real repository or work-copy, its behaviour is identical to the GNU diff. So you need to inform the 2 directories or files to be compared. Example:
git diff old_dir new_dir
.
If there is any difference between them, the output will show you, as expected.
Note: starting git 1.8.5 or 1.9, Q4 2013:
When the user types "
git diff
" outside a working tree, thinking he is inside one, the current error message that is a single-liner:
usage: git diff --no-index <path> <path>
may not be sufficient to make him realize the mistake.
Add "
Not a git repository
" to the error message when we fell into the "--no-index
" mode without an explicit command line option to instruct us to do so.
See:
git diff --no-index
can act like a regular (non-git) diff
.Clarify documentation for "
diff --no-index
".
State that when not inside a repository,--no-index
is implied and two arguments are mandatory.Clarify error message from
diff-no-index
to inform user that CWD is not inside a repository and thus two arguments are mandatory.
To compare two paths outside a working tree:
usage: git diff --no-index <path> <path>
The default output for git diff
is the list of changes which have not been committed / added to the index. If there are no changes, then there is no output.
git diff [--options] [--] […]
This form is to view the changes you made relative to the index (staging area for the next commit). In other words, the differences are what you could tell git to further add to the index but you still haven't.
See the documentation for more details. In particular, scroll down to the examples, and read this section:
$ git diff # (1)
$ git diff --cached # (2)
$ git diff HEAD # (3)
Outside your workspace, as you guessed, git won't know what to diff, so you have to explicitly specify two paths to compare, hence the usage message.