public
Description: Python interface for talking to the github API
Clone URL: git://github.com/dustin/py-github.git
README.markdown

What’s on Github?

This is a library that implements github’s API in python.

Part of the reason I wrote this was to have a simple way to keep local clones of my projects. Included is githubsync.py which does that for any given user (within the limitations of the github API, which currently limits you to public projects).

Supported APIs

User

This code (which happens to be main in git.py)

import sys
u = GitHub().user(sys.argv[1])
print "User:  %s (%s)" % (u.login, u.name)
for repo in [u.repos[k] for k in sorted(u.repos.keys())]:
    print "- %s" % repo.name
    print "  %s" % repo.url
    print "  %s" % "git://github.com/%s/%s.git" % (u.login, repo.name)

Yields this result:

User:  dustin (Dustin Sallings)
- app-hider
  http://github.com/dustin/app-hider
  git://github.com/dustin/app-hider.git
- buildwatch
  http://github.com/dustin/buildwatch
  git://github.com/dustin/buildwatch.git
- cache_fu
  http://github.com/dustin/cache_fu
  git://github.com/dustin/cache_fu.git
- diggwatch
  http://github.com/dustin/diggwatch
  git://github.com/dustin/diggwatch.git
- environ
  http://github.com/dustin/environ
  git://github.com/dustin/environ.git

Search

Search for repos or descriptions matching the given search terms.

repos = GitHub().search('memcache')
for r in repos:
    print "%s has %d forks and %d watchers" % (
        r.name, r.forks, r.watchers)

Commits

Get the recent commits for a given repo.

commits = GitHub().commits('dustin', 'py-github')
for c in commits:
    print "%s: %s" % (c.id[:7], c.message.split('\n')[0])

Also, you may specify a particular branch:

commits = GitHub().commits('dustin', 'memcached', 'binary')
for c in commits:
    print "%s: %s" % (c.id[:7], c.message.split('\n')[0])

Commit

Fetch a specific commit and lots of details about it.

Note there is a lot of structured data in here this example doesn’t show. For example, modified files contain a full diff of each file, and every commit has a list of parent IDs (in the case of an octopus merge, there can be many). If you want more information, it’s quite likely there.

commit = GitHub().commit('gitmirror', 'git', 'c998ae9b')
print "%s made the change\n%s\nAffecting the following files:" % (
    commit.author.name, commit.message)
for c in commit.added: print "A", c.filename
for c in commit.removed: print "R", c.filename
for c in commit.modified: print "M", c.filename