Git: discover which commits ever touched a range of lines

Since Git 1.8.4, git log has -L to view the evolution of a range of lines.

For example, suppose you look at git blame‘s output:

((aa27064...))[mlm@macbook:~/w/mlm/git]
$ git blame -L150,+11 -- git-web--browse.sh
a180055a git-web--browse.sh (Giuseppe Bilotta 2010-12-03 17:47:36 +0100 150)            die "The browser $browser is not
a180055a git-web--browse.sh (Giuseppe Bilotta 2010-12-03 17:47:36 +0100 151)    fi
5d6491c7 git-browse-help.sh (Christian Couder 2007-12-02 06:07:55 +0100 152) fi
5d6491c7 git-browse-help.sh (Christian Couder 2007-12-02 06:07:55 +0100 153) 
5d6491c7 git-browse-help.sh (Christian Couder 2007-12-02 06:07:55 +0100 154) case "$browser" in
81f42f11 git-web--browse.sh (Giuseppe Bilotta 2010-12-03 17:47:38 +0100 155) firefox|iceweasel|seamonkey|iceape)
5d6491c7 git-browse-help.sh (Christian Couder 2007-12-02 06:07:55 +0100 156)    # Check version because firefox < 2.0 do
5d6491c7 git-browse-help.sh (Christian Couder 2007-12-02 06:07:55 +0100 157)    vers=$(expr "$($browser_path -version)" 
5d6491c7 git-browse-help.sh (Christian Couder 2007-12-02 06:07:55 +0100 158)    NEWTAB='-new-tab'
5d6491c7 git-browse-help.sh (Christian Couder 2007-12-02 06:07:55 +0100 159)    test "$vers" -lt 2 && NEWTAB=''
a0685a4f git-web--browse.sh (Dmitry Potapov   2008-02-09 23:22:22 -0800 160)    "$browser_path" $NEWTAB "$@" &

And you want to know the history of what is now line 155.

Then:

((aa27064...))[mlm@macbook:~/w/mlm/git]
$ git log --topo-order --graph -u -L 155,155:git-web--browse.sh
* commit 81f42f11496b9117273939c98d270af273c8a463
| Author: Giuseppe Bilotta <[email protected]>
| Date:   Fri Dec 3 17:47:38 2010 +0100
| 
|     web--browse: support opera, seamonkey and elinks
|     
|     The list of supported browsers is also updated in the documentation.
|     
|     Signed-off-by: Giuseppe Bilotta <[email protected]>
|     Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <[email protected]>
| 
| diff --git a/git-web--browse.sh b/git-web--browse.sh
| --- a/git-web--browse.sh
| +++ b/git-web--browse.sh
| @@ -143,1 +143,1 @@
| -firefox|iceweasel)
| +firefox|iceweasel|seamonkey|iceape)
|  
* commit a180055a47c6793eaaba6289f623cff32644215b
| Author: Giuseppe Bilotta <[email protected]>
| Date:   Fri Dec 3 17:47:36 2010 +0100
| 
|     web--browse: coding style
|     
|     Retab and deindent choices in case statements.
|     
|     Signed-off-by: Giuseppe Bilotta <[email protected]>
|     Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <[email protected]>
| 
| diff --git a/git-web--browse.sh b/git-web--browse.sh
| --- a/git-web--browse.sh
| +++ b/git-web--browse.sh
| @@ -142,1 +142,1 @@
| -    firefox|iceweasel)
| +firefox|iceweasel)
|  
* commit 5884f1fe96b33d9666a78e660042b1e3e5f9f4d9
  Author: Christian Couder <[email protected]>
  Date:   Sat Feb 2 07:32:53 2008 +0100

      Rename 'git-help--browse.sh' to 'git-web--browse.sh'.

      Signed-off-by: Christian Couder <[email protected]>
      Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <[email protected]>

  diff --git a/git-web--browse.sh b/git-web--browse.sh
  --- /dev/null
  +++ b/git-web--browse.sh
  @@ -0,0 +127,1 @@
  +    firefox|iceweasel)

If you use this functionality frequently, you might find a git alias useful. To do that, put in your ~/.gitconfig:

[alias]
    # Follow evolution of certain lines in a file
    # arg1=file, arg2=first line, arg3=last line or blank for just the first line
    follow = "!sh -c 'git log --topo-order -u -L $2,${3:-$2}:"$1"'" -

And now you can just do git follow git-web--browse.sh 155.

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