A Python package to generate git timesheets from commit history, specifically filtering for commits by a particular author.
This tool analyzes git commit history across multiple repositories and:
- Filters commits by author name/email
- Estimates time spent on each commit (in 15-minute increments)
- Adjusts time based on commit message keywords
- Groups work by day and week
- Formats output as a readable timesheet
- Python 3.8+
- pytz library
- click library
# Create and activate a virtual environment
python -m venv .venv
source .venv/bin/activate # On Windows: .venv\Scripts\activate
# Install the package
pip install git-timesheet# Clone the repository
git clone https://github.com/mcgarrah/git-timesheet.git
cd git-timesheet
# Create and activate a virtual environment
python -m venv .venv
source .venv/bin/activate # On Windows: .venv\Scripts\activate
# Install in development mode
pip install -e .The tool supports configuration files to set default values. It looks for configuration files in the following locations (in order of precedence):
.ggtsrcin the current directoryggts.iniin the current directory.ggtsrcin the user's home directoryggts.iniin the user's.configdirectoryconfig.iniin the user's.config/git-timesheetdirectory
You can create a configuration file using the ggts init command, or manually create one with the following format:
[defaults]
# Author pattern to filter commits
author = michael mcgarrah
# Default timezone for dates
timezone = US/Eastern
# Minutes between commits to consider them part of the same work session
session_timeout = 60Command-line arguments always override values from configuration files.
# Generate a timesheet (default command)
ggts [OPTIONS]
# or explicitly
ggts generate [OPTIONS]
# Initialize configuration
ggts --init
# or
ggts init--base-dir PATH: Base directory containing git repositories (default: current directory)--since DATE: Show commits more recent than a specific date (e.g., "2 weeks ago")--until DATE: Show commits older than a specific date--repos REPO: Specific repository names to include (can be used multiple times)--output FORMAT: Output format (text, csv, markdown, or md, default: text)--author PATTERN: Filter commits by author (default from config or "mcgarrah")--timezone TIMEZONE: Timezone for dates (default from config or "UTC")--output-file PATH: Write output to file instead of stdout--session-timeout MINUTES: Minutes between commits to consider them part of the same work session (default from config or 60)
# Using default command
ggts --since="2 weeks ago"
# or explicitly
ggts generate --since="2 weeks ago"ggts generate --repos food_service_nutrition --repos food-intelligence-app --since="1 month ago"ggts generate --since="2023-01-01" --until="2023-01-31"ggts generate --author="michael mcgarrah" --since="2 weeks ago"ggts generate --since="1 month ago" --timezone="US/Eastern"ggts generate --since="1 month ago" --output=csv --output-file=timesheet.csvggts generate --since="1 month ago" --output=markdown --output-file=timesheet.md# Using the dedicated command
ggts init
# or using the flag
ggts --initPlain text output organized by weeks and days, showing detailed commit information with timezone abbreviations.
Comma-separated values format suitable for importing into spreadsheet applications like Excel or Google Sheets. Includes timezone information for each entry.
Pretty markdown format with tables organized by week, suitable for viewing in markdown readers or converting to HTML. Includes time ranges and timezone abbreviations for each task to better understand work sessions.
- Base time: 15 minutes per commit
- Bug fixes/issues: +15 minutes
- New features/implementations: +30 minutes
- Refactoring/improvements: +15 minutes
- Commits close together (within 60 minutes by default) are considered part of the same work session
The tool supports various timezone formats:
- IANA timezone names (e.g., "America/New_York")
- Common US timezone aliases (e.g., "US/Eastern")
- Short timezone abbreviations (e.g., "EST", "EDT")
- Prefixed short timezone abbreviations (e.g., "US/EST")
# Clone the repository
git clone https://github.com/mcgarrah/git-timesheet.git
cd git-timesheet
# Create and activate a virtual environment
python -m venv .venv
source .venv/bin/activate # On Windows: .venv\Scripts\activate
# Install development dependencies
pip install -e ".[dev]"The project includes a comprehensive test suite using pytest. To run the tests:
# Run all tests
pytest
# Run with coverage report
pytest --cov=git_timesheet
# Run a specific test file
pytest tests/test_timezone.py-
Unit Tests: Test individual functions in isolation
test_timezone.py: Tests for timezone conversion and abbreviationtest_git_operations.py: Tests for git repository detection and log retrievaltest_formatting.py: Tests for output formatting functions
-
Integration Tests: Test the entire workflow
test_integration.py: End-to-end tests using temporary git repositories
pip install -e ".[docs]"
cd docs
make htmlContributions are welcome! Please feel free to submit a Pull Request.
This project is licensed under the MIT License - see the LICENSE file for details.