How to get the name of the current git branch into a variable in a shell script? [duplicate] How to get the name of the current git branch into a variable in a shell script? [duplicate] git git

How to get the name of the current git branch into a variable in a shell script? [duplicate]


The * is expanded, what you can do is use sed instead of grep and get the name of the branch immediately:

branch=$(git branch | sed -n -e 's/^\* \(.*\)/\1/p')

And a version using git symbolic-ref, as suggested by Noufal Ibrahim

branch=$(git symbolic-ref HEAD | sed -e 's,.*/\(.*\),\1,')

To elaborate on the expansion, (as marco already did,) the expansion happens in the echo, when you do echo $test with $test containing * master then the * is expanded according to the normal expansion rules. To suppress this one would have to quote the variable, as shown by marco: echo "$test". Alternatively, if you get rid of the asterisk before you echo it, all will be fine, e.g. echo ${test:2} will just echo master. Alternatively you could assign it anew as you already proposed:

branch=${test:2}echo $branch

This will echo master, like you wanted.


Expanding on Noufal Ibrahim's answer, use the --short flag with git-symbolic-ref, no need to fuss with sed.

I've been using something like this in hooks and it works well:

#!/bin/bashbranch=$(git symbolic-ref --short HEAD)echoecho "**** Running post-commit hook from branch $branch"echo

That outputs "**** Running post-commit hook from branch master"

Note that git-symbolic-ref only works if you're in a repository. Luckily .git/HEAD, as a leftover from Git's early days, contains the same symbolic ref. If you want to get the active branch of several git repositories, without traversing directories, you could use a bash one-liner like this:

for repo in */.git; do branch=$(cat $repo/HEAD); echo ${repo%/.git} :  ${branch##*/}; done

Which outputs something like:

repo1 : master  repo2 : dev  repo3 : issue12

If you want to go further, the full ref contained in .git/HEAD is also a relative path to a file containing the SHA-1 hash of the branch's last commit.


I would use the git-symbolic-ref command in the git core. If you say git-symbolic-ref HEAD, you will get the name of the current branch.