Try this:
git branch --merged master
It does what it says on the tin (lists branches which have been merged into master
). You can also pull up the inverse with:
git branch --no-merged master
If you don't specify master
, e.g...
git branch --merged
then it will show you branches which have been merged into the current HEAD
(so if you're on master
, it's equivalent to the first command; if you're on foo
, it's equivalent to git branch --merged foo
).
You can also compare upstream branches by specifying the -r
flag and a ref to check against, which can be local or remote:
git branch -r --no-merged origin/master
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