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A highly extensible script that allows to save configurations for easier, more meaningful, faster and safer comitting and pushing.

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A script that allows to save configurations for easier, more meaningful, faster and safer comitting and pushing.

git-god allows to set suites of scripts running before every push i.e. preventing pushes that break test cases. It also provides utilities to configure pulling and pushing to/from branches, commit messages that are clearer and faster, and gives shortcuts for frequently used git commands.

Install

Make sure you have Ruby installed. If you don't, follow the instructions go to https://www.ruby-lang.org/en/documentation/installation/.

In order to install git-god, execute the "install" script in the repo.

If you'd rather do it manually, add the following line to the bottom of your ~/.bashrc file:

export PATH=$PATH:<path-to-repo>

If you wish to feel even more like a god, add the following line too:

alias g='gg'

Extensibility - adding your own commands, super easy!.

git-god is a tool that can be extended really easily. In order to add your own commands, you need to create a subclass of the BaseCommand class (in lib/), defining the execute() method. Then, put your file in the custom/ directory, and git-god will load it automatically each time it runs. As simple as that.

For an example of how to implement such commands see the "gg ig " command in the custom/ directory, which allows the user to add files to their .gitignore file. Other examples have also been added under the custom/ directory.

Features

The following are the features currently supported by git-god.

Commit the current message and push.

gg c "message"  # commits formatting with the configuration
gg c "message" -cl 189 200 -ct gorosgobe
# commits: "message. Closes #189, #200. Contributors: @gorosgobe."
gg p
gg cp "message" # commits same as first command but also pushes to 
                # configuration branch or master. See gg p below

Make a long commit, with information per file.

gg lc
--Long commit mode--

Files changed: 
gg

Enter the commit message associated with each file:
gg: Added template message
Additional flags: -ct gorosgobe

gg: Added template message

Contributors: @gorosgobe.      # Commits the last three lines.

Shows the current configuration.

gg status
gg s

Shows the commitable message without committing it.

$ gg l gorosgobe
$ gg sc "message -cl 189 200 -ct billgates
[gorosgobe] message. Closes #189, #200. Contributors: @billgates.    # output, not committed

Specifies that git should always add all files.

gg a

Acts as a logging feature. All commits are preceded by the arguments supplied after the flag in square brackets.

gg l gorosgobe billgates
gg c "new commit" # commits: "[gorosgobe][billgates] new commit"

Delimiters can also be specified directly.

gg l gorosgobe -del="|" billgates
gg c "new commit" # commits: "|gorosgobe||billgates| new commit"

Removes the configuration file. Alternatively, it can remove any previously configured flags, such as l or pc.

gg r       # deletes the entire configuration
gg r l pc  # deletes configurations of l and pc flags
gg r i     # deletes all issues

Adds the origin attribute to the push command.

gg pc -o=master    # sets up the configuration
gg p                # git push origin master
gg pc -o=my-branch
gg p              # git push origin my-branch

Pushes to configuration branch by default. If it does not exist, pushes to master. If pushing to another branch, give as argument.

gg p                    # pushes to master
gg pc -o=my-branch
gg p                    # pushes to my-branch
gg p any-other-branch   # pushes to any-other-branch
gg p                    # still pushes to my-branch

Saves a script/command in configuration. These will run before pushing anything, when executing commands such as "gg cp", "gg c" or "gg prcp". If any of such scripts/commands reports a non-zero exit code, nothing will be pushed. Note that aliases will not work when running these scripts/commands and that script names given to the command must be relative to the root directory of the git repository. gg r scr removes all scripts from the configuration file

gg scr ls -a             # same as gg script ls -a
gg scr gg gs             # note that in case we have an alias such as g='gg',
                         # we would still need to do "g scr gg gs" 
gg scr ./dir1/hello 35   # executing the script in <root-git-repo>/dir1 of 
                         # name hello with argument 35

# if we now call "gg p" for example, the three scripts above will be called in that order.
# if all of them succeed, gg will push to master.

Pulls from configuration branch by default. If it does not exist, pulls from master. If pulling to another branch, give as argument.

gg pl                   # pulls from master
gg plc -o=my-branch     # sets pull origin branch to be my-branch
gg pl                   # pulls from my-branch
gg pl any-other-branch  # pulls from any-other-branch
gg pl                   # still pulls from my-branch

Adds issue name to commit messages.

gg l gorosgobe
gg i -name="bugFix3" -alias=b3  # equivalent to gg i -n="bugFix3" -a=b3
gg c "commit message"           # commits: "[gorosgobe]#bugFix3 commit message"
gg i                            # sets current issue to be none
gg c "commit message"           # commits: "[gorosgobe] commit message"
gg i -b3
gg c "commit message 2"         # commits: "[gorosgobe]#bugFix3 commit message 2"

Opens the configuration file in vim.

gg op

Gives the url of the repo.

gg u   # equivalent of "git remote get-url origin"

Clones a repo.

gg cn <repo-url>   # equivalent of "git clone <repo-url>"

Fetches all.

gg fa                # equivalent of "git fetch --all"

Creates a new branch.

gg nb <branch-name>  # equivalent of "git checkout -b <branch-name>"

Checkout to a branch.

gg ch <branch-name>  # equivalent of "git checkout <branch-name>"

Deletes a branch.

gg d <branch-name>   # equivalent of "git branch -d <branch-name>"

Lists branches and current branch.

gg b                 # equivalent of "git branch"
gg ba                # equivalent of "git branch -a"

Shows the current git repository status.

gg gs                # equivalent of "git status"

Merges branch to current branch.

gg m <branch-name>   # equivalent of "git merge <branch-name>"

Prints current branch.

gg cb                # equivalent of "git rev-parse --abbrev-ref HEAD"

Prints root of git repository.

gg ro                # equivalent of "git rev-parse --show-toplevel"

Adds a file to the .gitignore file. If the .gitignore file does not exist, creates a new one.

gg ig <file-name>

... and more!

This is not a comprehensive list of commands. If you wanna know more about all the capabilities of git-god, clone it and run

gg h

which will print out all commands with their respective explanation supported by your version of git-god.

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A highly extensible script that allows to save configurations for easier, more meaningful, faster and safer comitting and pushing.

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