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Full Discussion: Recent History
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Recent History Post 302569232 by bobby1015 on Sunday 30th of October 2011 10:25:06 AM
Old 10-30-2011
Recent History

Could some let me know the command used to view the commands that I have entered 2 days ago. I am able to perform a command fc -l but its yielding me only last 10 recent events. I need to know the history of the commands that i have entered 2 days ago. Is there anyway that I can get the information that I am requesting for ?

Thanks
 

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GIT-REFLOG(1)							    Git Manual							     GIT-REFLOG(1)

NAME
git-reflog - Manage reflog information SYNOPSIS
git reflog <subcommand> <options> DESCRIPTION
The command takes various subcommands, and different options depending on the subcommand: git reflog expire [--dry-run] [--stale-fix] [--verbose] [--expire=<time>] [--expire-unreachable=<time>] [--all] <refs>... git reflog delete ref@{specifier}... git reflog [show] [log-options] [<ref>] Reflog is a mechanism to record when the tip of branches are updated. This command is to manage the information recorded in it. The subcommand "expire" is used to prune older reflog entries. Entries older than expire time, or entries older than expire-unreachable time and not reachable from the current tip, are removed from the reflog. This is typically not used directly by the end users -- instead, see git-gc(1). The subcommand "show" (which is also the default, in the absence of any subcommands) will take all the normal log options, and show the log of the reference provided in the command-line (or HEAD, by default). The reflog will cover all recent actions (HEAD reflog records branch switching as well). It is an alias for git log -g --abbrev-commit --pretty=oneline; see git-log(1). The reflog is useful in various Git commands, to specify the old value of a reference. For example, HEAD@{2} means "where HEAD used to be two moves ago", master@{one.week.ago} means "where master used to point to one week ago", and so on. See gitrevisions(7) for more details. To delete single entries from the reflog, use the subcommand "delete" and specify the exact entry (e.g. "git reflog delete master@{2}"). OPTIONS
--stale-fix This revamps the logic -- the definition of "broken commit" becomes: a commit that is not reachable from any of the refs and there is a missing object among the commit, tree, or blob objects reachable from it that is not reachable from any of the refs. This computation involves traversing all the reachable objects, i.e. it has the same cost as git prune. Fortunately, once this is run, we should not have to ever worry about missing objects, because the current prune and pack-objects know about reflogs and protect objects referred by them. --expire=<time> Entries older than this time are pruned. Without the option it is taken from configuration gc.reflogExpire, which in turn defaults to 90 days. --expire-unreachable=<time> Entries older than this time and not reachable from the current tip of the branch are pruned. Without the option it is taken from configuration gc.reflogExpireUnreachable, which in turn defaults to 30 days. --all Instead of listing <refs> explicitly, prune all refs. --updateref Update the ref with the sha1 of the top reflog entry (i.e. <ref>@{0}) after expiring or deleting. --rewrite While expiring or deleting, adjust each reflog entry to ensure that the old sha1 field points to the new sha1 field of the previous entry. --verbose Print extra information on screen. GIT
Part of the git(1) suite Git 1.8.3.1 06/10/2014 GIT-REFLOG(1)
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