Get current changeset id on workspace for TFS

Your answer is on a MSDN blog by Buck Hodges: How to determine the latest changeset in your workspace

from the root (top) of your workspace, in cmd perform:

tf history . /r /noprompt /stopafter:1 /version:W

If you want to use PowerShell (see also; equivalent to answer of @kroonwijk):

  1. enable tfs snapin (once, if not already)

    add-pssnapin Microsoft.TeamFoundation.PowerShell

  2. use tfs cmdlet to get current changeset id

    Get-TfsItemHistory <PATH_TO_PROJECT> -Recurse -Stopafter 1 -Version W


Run a Visual Studio CMD (in my case, for VS2015 is called: "Developer Command Promp for VS2015") and then get into your project folder and execute the following command:

tf history . /r /noprompt /stopafter:1 /version:W

The common answer to use tf.exe history . /r directly does work, but it can be horribly slow. In our case it takes 10-15 seconds. I now use a two stage check, first checking the revision of some arbitrary files (I'm using the files in the root folder).

With powershell:

$tfexepath = "C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio\2017\Enterprise\Common7\IDE\CommonExtensions\Microsoft\TeamFoundation\Team Explorer\tf.exe"
$localpath = "C:\some\tfs\directory"
    
$result = & $tfexepath history $localpath /noprompt /stopafter:1 /version:W 
"$result" -match "\d+" | out-null
$id = $matches[0]

Then search from the root using the /r flag, but limit the search to start from the revision found above:

$result2 = & $tfexepath history $localpath /r /noprompt /stopafter:1 /version:$id~W        
"$result2" -match "\d+" | out-null
$id2 =  $matches[0]

#result:
Write-Host $id2 

For our code base, this brings down the total time from 10-15 to 1.4-1.5 seconds.

As far as I understand there are no drawbacks or limitations, but I suppose it could be slower in a tiny repository. - I'd be glad to know.

Tags:

Tfs