a rust interface for github
- implement async interface when hyper adopts it
The goal and motivation behind these are not to intentionally make breaking changes, but rather to adopt evolving community standards
Add the following to your Cargo.toml
filter
[dependencies]
hubcaps = "0.3"
Basic usage requires a user-defined user agent string (because github requires this),
a hyper::Client
instance, and a flavor of hubcaps::Credentials
for authorization.
For user authenticated requests you'll typically want to use hubcaps::Credentials::Token
with a personal access token. For requests that permit anonymous access, you can substitute hubcaps::Credentials::Token
with hubcaps::Credentials::None
Note: hyper 0.10 no longer includes a tls implementation by default. you will need to provide one to your choosing
extern crate hyper;
extern crate hubcaps;
extern crate hyper_native_tls;
use hyper::Client;
use hyper::net::HttpsConnector;
use hyper_native_tls::NativeTlsClient;
use hubcaps::{Credentials, Github};
fn main() {
let github = Github::new(
"my-cool-user-agent/0.1.0",
// tls configured hyper client
Client::with_connector(
HttpsConnector::new(
NativeTlsClient::new().unwrap()
)
),
Credentials::Token("personal-access-token")
);
}
Github instances define functions for accessing api services that map closely to their url structure.
As a convention, api methods that expect arguments are represented as functions that accept a struct representing those arguments with an optional builder interface for convenience of construction.
See examples directory for some getting started examples
Typically the reference point of most github services is a repository
let repo = github.repo("user", "repo");
With a repo instance on hand, you can access a number of sub services, like labels
, deployments
, pulls
, issues
, and releases
. Each of this are named functions exported from the repo interface.
See examples directory for examples
Branches is a service for listing repository branches
let branches = repo.branches();
Labels is a service for tagging resources like issues and pulls with names which you can later group and filter on.
use hubcaps::labels::LabelOptions;
let labels = repo.labels();
// create new labels
println!(
"{:?}", labels.create(
&LabelOptions::new(
"rustic", "ccc"
)
).unwrap()
);
// list labels
for l in labels.list().unwrap() {
println!("{:?}", l)
}
// delete labels
labels.delete("rustic").unwrap();
Deployments is a service for orchestrating deployments of applications sourced from github repositories
let deployments = repo.deployments();
See examples directory for examples
Pulls is a service for issuing code change requests against a repository
let pulls = repo.pulls();
See examples directory for examples
Issues is a service for tracking bugs for a repository
let issues = repo.issues();
See examples directory for examples
Releases is a service for tracking changes for a stable releases of a versioned library or application
let releases = repo.releases();
Gists is a service for micro repositories
let gists = github.gists();
See examples directory for examples
Gists is a service for managing repository hooks
let hooks = repo.hooks();
See examples directory for examples
Search provides a raw string query search for indexed data. Currently only search for issues is supported
let search_issues = github.search().issues();
Teams is a service for listing repository and organization teams
let teams = repo.teams();
See examples directory for examples
Doug Tangren (softprops) 2015-2017