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Home/ Questions/Q 8381399
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 9, 20262026-06-09T16:41:26+00:00 2026-06-09T16:41:26+00:00

I have a git-svn working copy and git log gives me no direct info

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I have a git-svn working copy and git log gives me no direct info about which SVN revision I’m on. I understand that once I rebase I should have all upstream logs converted into git log, but that still doesn’t seem to give a REVISION NUMBER to me and I’d have to do text mining to find out.

Is there a simple command that I’m missing?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-09T16:41:28+00:00Added an answer on June 9, 2026 at 4:41 pm

    It shows up at the bottom of each commit message. There’s a log line similar to this:

    git-svn-id: http://svn.example.com/trunk/whatever@12345 [git-svn remote hash]
    

    The 12345 is that commit’s SVN revision

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