hub is a command line tool that wraps git
in order to extend it with extra
features and commands that make working with GitHub easier.
$ hub clone rtomayko/tilt
# expands to:
$ git clone git://github.com/rtomayko/tilt.git
hub is best aliased as git
, so you can type $ git <command>
in the shell and
get all the usual hub
features. See "Aliasing" below.
Dependencies:
- git 1.7.3 or newer
hub
can be installed through Homebrew on macOS:
$ brew install hub
$ hub version
git version 1.7.6
hub version 2.2.3
If you want to get access to new hub
features earlier and help with its
development by reporting bugs, you can install the prerelease version:
$ brew install --devel hub
hub
can be installed through Chocolatey or
Scoop on Windows:
> choco install hub
# or:
> scoop install hub
On Fedora you can install hub
through DNF:
$ sudo dnf install hub
$ hub version
git version 2.9.3
hub version 2.2.9
hub
can be easily installed as an executable. Download the latest
compiled binaries and put it anywhere
in your executable path.
To install hub from source:
$ git clone https://github.com/github/hub.git
$ cd hub
$ make install prefix=/usr/local
Prerequisites for compilation are:
make
- Go 1.8+
- Ruby 1.9+ with Bundler - for generating man pages
If you don't have make
, Ruby, or want to skip man pages (for example, if you
are on Windows), you can build only the hub
binary:
$ ./script/build
You can now move bin/hub
to somewhere in your PATH.
Finally, if you've done Go development before and your $GOPATH/bin
directory
is already in your PATH, this is an alternative installation method that fetches
hub into your GOPATH and builds it automatically:
$ go get github.com/github/hub
Using hub feels best when it's aliased as git
. This is not dangerous; your
normal git commands will all work. hub merely adds some sugar.
hub alias
displays instructions for the current shell. With the -s
flag, it
outputs a script suitable for eval
.
You should place this command in your .bash_profile
or other startup script:
eval "$(hub alias -s)"
If you're using PowerShell, you can set an alias for hub
by placing the
following in your PowerShell profile (usually
~/Documents/WindowsPowerShell/Microsoft.PowerShell_profile.ps1
):
Set-Alias git hub
A simple way to do this is to run the following from the PowerShell prompt:
Add-Content $PROFILE "`nSet-Alias git hub"
Note: You'll need to restart your PowerShell console in order for the changes to be picked up.
If your PowerShell profile doesn't exist, you can create it by running the following:
New-Item -Type file -Force $PROFILE
hub repository contains tab-completion scripts for bash, zsh and fish. These scripts complement existing completion scripts that ship with git.