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@coreyhaines
Created February 16, 2011 19:04
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Bash script to generate churn counts in git repo
churn number and file name
git log --all -M -C --name-only | grep -E '^(app|lib)/' | sort | uniq -c | sort | awk 'BEGIN {print "count,file"} {print $1 "," $2}'
churn number and file name w/ limiting to last n commits
git log --all -n 5000 -M -C --name-only | grep -E '^spec/models' | sort | uniq -c | sort | awk 'BEGIN {print "count,file"} {print $1 "," $2}'
graph of churn number and frequency
git log --all -M -C --name-only | grep -E '^(app|lib)/' | sort | uniq -c | sort | awk '{print $1}' | uniq -c | sort | awk 'BEGIN { print "frequency,churn_count"} { print $1,$2}'
@coreyhaines
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Next up is to iterate over date ranges, so I can draw graphs over time of our codebase

@garybernhardt
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I approve.

But, I'm not convinced of the utility of graphs over time. I've generated many of them over the years and can't remember making a change informed by them. I think they're driven by my insecurity about my work.

However, I am convinced of the utility of insight into summarized repository state. I'd use this as a utility to ask "where do I need to focus my thinking?", not "where did I fail to focus in the past?"

If you scriptify it, I recommend passing $* to the initial git log. That way I can say git_churn --since='1 month ago' to see how I'm doing right now, which is what I care about.

@coreyhaines
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Gary,

I think the graphs over time would be more of an interest from an archeological perspective, rather than changing my current habits.

Thanks for the tip on passing $* to it. I'll do that when I build a script. Or, I could just make a function to put in my bash_profile, no? Maybe I'll ping you to help me.

@garybernhardt
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Yeah, it'd be fine as a function. A script makes it slightly more reusable for others since they just drop the file any where on their $PATH.

@coreyhaines
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True about making it more reusable. I could put it into my dotfiles repo.

@coreyhaines
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Or, you could, and I can just copy it. HAHA!

@garybernhardt
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Done. https://github.com/garybernhardt/dotfiles/blob/master/bin/git-churn

I removed your grep for 'app|lib'. You can just pass directories straight to git log to log them. This script should work exactly like yours did.

@coreyhaines
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Awesome, Gary! Thanks!

@danmayer
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This might need some more work, haven't done anything with it for awhile, but this tracks files, classes, and methods for a ruby project

https://github.com/danmayer/churn

@huebnerdaniel
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Great, this helped me a lot. Thanks!

@Xodarap
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Xodarap commented Mar 9, 2017

If you add -n to the final sort it will sort numerically instead of alphabetically

@fuhrmanator
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If you remove -all it allows specifying an SHA1 in the log as churn up to that SHA1.

@fuhrmanator
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I just found https://github.com/AnAppAMonth/git-churn, which is a python solution giving a more detailed interpretation of churn (additions, subtractions).

@flacle
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flacle commented Nov 2, 2020

Solutions that I've found online looked at changes to files irrespective whether these are new changes or edits to existing lines of code. Hence I made this solution: https://github.com/flacle/truegitcodechurn/

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