How to list all the files changed by a perforce change list

That's the describe command. To describe a particular changelist, you want p4 describe <changelist number>.

Update:

If you only want the file names, you can use the files command with the -F option to override the output format: p4 -Ztag -F "%depotFile%" files @=<changelist>

See http://www.perforce.com/blog/130826/fun-formatting for more information about the -F option.


Mike O'Connor's answer helped me too.

As for just getting a list of files changed, couldn't it just be as easy as this?

p4 describe -s {change number} | grep '^\.\.\.' | awk '{print $2}'

that's what I'm going to use.


user114245 gave the best answer, but only in a comment. I'm adding as an answer to give it more visibility, and to improve a little.

For change 12345, this is the closest you can get with just a p4 command

p4 files @=12345

which gives only this output

//depot/file1#3 - delete change 3 (text)
//depot/file2#3 - edit change 3 (text)
//depot/file5#1 - add change 3 (text)

If you want to remove the extraneous info about each file, you'll need to process that output through more tools on the command line. Assuming a standard unixy environment, you can use a single sed command like so

p4 files @=12345 | sed s/#.*//

to get the desired result

//depot/file1
//depot/file2
//depot/file5

The currently accepted answer by Mike is this

p4 describe 12345

which gives all of this extra detail in the output

Change 12345 by day@client1 on 2013/06/21 00:25:28

    Some example changes

Affected files ...

... //depot/file1#3 delete
... //depot/file2#3 edit
... //depot/file5#1 add

Differences ...

==== //depot/file2#3 (text) ====

1c1
< This is file 2
---
> This is file 2 - edited

That was improved on by Doug's answer which uses grep and awk to filter out the noise and just leave the files changed, but the command is quite long

p4 describe -s 12345 | grep '^\.\.\.' | awk '{print $2}'

I think the solution given here is neater.

Tags:

Perforce