Every repository with this icon (
Every repository with this icon (
tree 6e297d487bcf70abb5a3b1e56b1686c9b98bb866
parent 15879e86954d89d97eb9437f4d1f2751b6677ff1
| name | age | message | |
|---|---|---|---|
| |
LICENSE | Tue Mar 04 14:03:20 -0800 2008 | [eventualbuddha] |
| |
README.textile | Wed Apr 16 13:27:14 -0700 2008 | [eventualbuddha] |
| |
Rakefile | Tue Mar 04 13:49:54 -0800 2008 | [eventualbuddha] |
| |
git.rake | Wed Apr 30 09:47:02 -0700 2008 | [granth] |
| |
gitconfig.sample | Tue Mar 04 13:49:54 -0800 2008 | [eventualbuddha] |
Sake-Git
Here are a few Sake tasks to make developing with Git easier (and some corresponding Git aliases to make invoking them easier). Install them with:
$ rake install
Or, if you don’t want to actually download this stuff, just use Sake:
$ sake -i "http://github.com/eventualbuddha/sake-git/tree/master/git.rake?raw=true"
Common Commands
$ sake git:update
Updates your current git repository, autodetecting whether you have a regular ol’ git project or a
git-svn project. I recommend aliasing it git up.
$ sake git:push
Commits any changes in your current branch not yet pushed upstream and ports ‘em over to master. I use git ci for this one.
$ sake git:open [NAME=mynewbranch]
Creates a new branch off master. Think of this as opening an issue, or a new path of development. I use git open for this one, allowing you to call it like so:
$ git open mynewbranch
You can even call it without the branch name and it’ll ask you for it:
$ git open * Name your branch: mynewbranch
$ sake git:close [NAME=mynewbranch]
This is open’s brother, and should be used when you finish something and have already moved it to
master or upstream. If you haven’t yet, don’t worry – this won’t eat your data. Like open, this one I alias to git close.
Credits
Thanks to Coda Hale and everyone else at Wesabe for trying these out when I first wrote them and contributing tasks of their own, and to the Rubinius folks for giving me the idea in the first place.





