I’m using git bisect to find a failure inducing commit. However, a lot of the commits in the range are definately irrelevant (because they are commits to the documentation or to unit tests). I’d like to make git bisect automatically skip commits which affect files in certain directories. Is this possible somehow?
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You have several options here:
Ignoring specific commits
git bisectcontains functionality of skipping commits. You can specify commits, tags, ranges you don’t want to test withJust do this before you
git bisect run, and it should skip what you specified.Specifying folders with broken sources
You can also cut down commits
bisecttests by specifying what folders it should look for problems in. This is done at the beginning ofbisectprocess by supplying additional arguments togit bisect start(quote from standard manual):Bisect will only consider commits that touch the folders specified.
If you want to automatically gather commits that touch certain files or folders, you may use
git logfor that. For example, the following command will give you commit names that modify files in certain folders:And you can supply the result to
git bisect skipwith use of shell capabilities: