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Asked: May 10, 20262026-05-10T18:31:25+00:00 2026-05-10T18:31:25+00:00

Is it even possible? Basically, there’s a remote repository from which I pull using

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Is it even possible?

Basically, there’s a remote repository from which I pull using just:

git pull 

Now, I’d like to preview what this pull would change (a diff) without touching anything on my side. The reason is that thing I’m pulling might not be ‘good’ and I want someone else to fix it before making my repository ‘dirty’.

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  1. 2026-05-10T18:31:26+00:00Added an answer on May 10, 2026 at 6:31 pm

    After doing a git fetch, do a git log HEAD..origin/master to show the log entries between your last common commit and the origin’s master branch. To show the diffs, use either git log -p HEAD..origin/master to show each patch, or git diff HEAD...origin/master (three dots not two) to show a single diff.

    There normally isn’t any need to undo a fetch, because doing a fetch only updates the remote branches and none of your branches. If you’re not prepared to do a pull and merge in all the remote commits, you can use git cherry-pick to accept only the specific remote commits you want. Later, when you’re ready to get everything, a git pull will merge in the rest of the commits.

    Update: I’m not entirely sure why you want to avoid the use of git fetch. All git fetch does is update your local copy of the remote branches. This local copy doesn’t have anything to do with any of your branches, and it doesn’t have anything to do with uncommitted local changes. I have heard of people who run git fetch in a cron job because it’s so safe. (I wouldn’t normally recommend doing that, though.)

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