Library for using Git in Ruby.
The ruby-git Community Edition is a fork of the awesome but incomplete and unmaintained ruby-git gem.
The aim of this fork is to accept people's pull requests, then allow to accept other pull requests, and so on.
With this principle, when I'll not be available next time, this repository will not be abandoned, and people can still rely on it. I want to be sure this little piece of love, that is this library, will never stop growing, even when I'll be on something else.
BTW there will be NO stupid bots closing your PRs ! (Who the hell is the stupid guy who invented this absurd concept ... 🤦)
If this kind of ways is working fine, that would be great to creation an organisation to group those Community Editions all together.
Anyway, it's a new concept I'd like to try ! 😉
Git public hosting of the project source code is at:
http://github.com/zedtux/ruby-git-ce
You can install Ruby/Git like this:
$ sudo gem install git-ce
Git::Base - The object returned from a Git.open
or Git.clone
.
Most major actions are called from this object.
Git::Object - The base object for your tree, blob and commit objects,
returned from @git.gtree
or @git.object
calls. the Git::AbstractObject
will have most of the calls in common for all those objects.
Git::Diff - returns from a @git.diff
command. It is an Enumerable that
returns Git::Diff:DiffFile
objects from which you can get per file patches and
insertion/deletion statistics. You can also get total statistics from the
Git::Diff object directly.
Git::Status - returns from a @git.status
command. It is an Enumerable
that returns Git:Status::StatusFile
objects for each object in git, which
includes files in the working directory, in the index and in the repository.
Similar to running 'git status' on the command line to determine untracked and
changed files.
Git::Branches - Enumerable object that holds Git::Branch objects
.
You can call .local or .remote on it to filter to just your local or remote
branches.
Git::Remote- A reference to a remote repository that is tracked by this repository.
Git::Log - An Enumerable object that references all the
Git::Object::Commit
objects that encompass your log query, which can be
constructed through methods on the Git::Log object
,
like:
@git.log(20).object("some_file").since("2 weeks ago").between('v2.6', 'v2.7').each { |commit| [block] }
Here are a bunch of examples of how to use the Ruby/Git package.
Ruby < 1.9 will require rubygems to be loaded.
require 'rubygems'
Require the 'git' gem.
require 'git'
Git env config
Git.configure do |config|
# If you want to use a custom git binary
config.binary_path = '/git/bin/path'
# If you need to use a custom SSH script
config.git_ssh = '/path/to/ssh/script'
end
Here are the operations that need read permission only.
g = Git.open(working_dir, :log => Logger.new(STDOUT))
g.index
g.index.readable?
g.index.writable?
g.repo
g.dir
g.log # returns array of Git::Commit objects
g.log.since('2 weeks ago')
g.log.between('v2.5', 'v2.6')
g.log.each {|l| puts l.sha }
g.gblob('v2.5:Makefile').log.since('2 weeks ago')
g.object('HEAD^').to_s # git show / git rev-parse
g.object('HEAD^').contents
g.object('v2.5:Makefile').size
g.object('v2.5:Makefile').sha
g.gtree(treeish)
g.gblob(treeish)
g.gcommit(treeish)
commit = g.gcommit('1cc8667014381')
commit.gtree
commit.parent.sha
commit.parents.size
commit.author.name
commit.author.email
commit.author.date.strftime("%m-%d-%y")
commit.committer.name
commit.date.strftime("%m-%d-%y")
commit.message
tree = g.gtree("HEAD^{tree}")
tree.blobs
tree.subtrees
tree.children # blobs and subtrees
g.revparse('v2.5:Makefile')
g.branches # returns Git::Branch objects
g.branches.local
g.branches.remote
g.branches[:master].gcommit
g.branches['origin/master'].gcommit
g.grep('hello') # implies HEAD
g.blob('v2.5:Makefile').grep('hello')
g.tag('v2.5').grep('hello', 'docs/')
g.describe()
g.describe('0djf2aa')
g.describe('HEAD', {:all => true, :tags => true})
g.diff(commit1, commit2).size
g.diff(commit1, commit2).stats
g.diff(commit1, commit2).name_status
g.gtree('v2.5').diff('v2.6').insertions
g.diff('gitsearch1', 'v2.5').path('lib/')
g.diff('gitsearch1', @git.gtree('v2.5'))
g.diff('gitsearch1', 'v2.5').path('docs/').patch
g.gtree('v2.5').diff('v2.6').patch
g.gtree('v2.5').diff('v2.6').each do |file_diff|
puts file_diff.path
puts file_diff.patch
puts file_diff.blob(:src).contents
end
g.config('user.name') # returns 'Scott Chacon'
g.config # returns whole config hash
g.tags # returns array of Git::Tag objects
g.show()
g.show('HEAD')
g.show('v2.8', 'README.md')
# returns a hash containing the available references of the repo.
Git.ls_remote('https://github.com/zedtux/ruby-git-ce.git')
Git.ls_remote('/path/to/local/repo')
Git.ls_remote() # same as Git.ls_remote('.')
And here are the operations that will need to write to your git repository.
g = Git.init
Git.init('project')
Git.init('/home/schacon/proj',
{ :repository => '/opt/git/proj.git',
:index => '/tmp/index'} )
g = Git.clone(URI, NAME, :path => '/tmp/checkout')
g.config('user.name', 'Scott Chacon')
g.config('user.email', 'email@email.com')
g.add # git add -- "."
g.add(:all=>true) # git add --all -- "."
g.add('file_path') # git add -- "file_path"
g.add(['file_path_1', 'file_path_2']) # git add -- "file_path_1" "file_path_2"
g.remove() # git rm -f -- "."
g.remove('file.txt') # git rm -f -- "file.txt"
g.remove(['file.txt', 'file2.txt']) # git rm -f -- "file.txt" "file2.txt"
g.remove('file.txt', :recursive => true) # git rm -f -r -- "file.txt"
g.remove('file.txt', :cached => true) # git rm -f --cached -- "file.txt"
g.commit('message')
g.commit_all('message')
g = Git.clone(repo, 'myrepo')
g.chdir do
new_file('test-file', 'blahblahblah')
g.status.changed.each do |file|
puts file.blob(:index).contents
end
end
g.reset # defaults to HEAD
g.reset_hard(Git::Commit)
g.branch('new_branch') # creates new or fetches existing
g.branch('new_branch').checkout
g.branch('new_branch').delete
g.branch('existing_branch').checkout
g.branch('master').contains?('existing_branch')
g.checkout('new_branch')
g.checkout(g.branch('new_branch'))
g.branch(name).merge(branch2)
g.branch(branch2).merge # merges HEAD with branch2
g.branch(name).in_branch(message) { # add files } # auto-commits
g.merge('new_branch')
g.merge('origin/remote_branch')
g.merge(g.branch('master'))
g.merge([branch1, branch2])
r = g.add_remote(name, uri) # Git::Remote
r = g.add_remote(name, Git::Base) # Git::Remote
g.remotes # array of Git::Remotes
g.remote(name).fetch
g.remote(name).remove
g.remote(name).merge
g.remote(name).merge(branch)
g.fetch
g.fetch(g.remotes.first)
g.fetch('origin', {:ref => 'some/ref/head'} )
g.pull
g.pull(Git::Repo, Git::Branch) # fetch and a merge
g.add_tag('tag_name') # returns Git::Tag
g.add_tag('tag_name', 'object_reference')
g.add_tag('tag_name', 'object_reference', {:options => 'here'})
g.add_tag('tag_name', {:options => 'here'})
Options:
:a | :annotate
:d
:f
:m | :message
:s
g.delete_tag('tag_name')
g.repack
g.push
g.push(g.remote('name'))
Some examples of more low-level index and tree operations
g.with_temp_index do
g.read_tree(tree3) # calls self.index.read_tree
g.read_tree(tree1, :prefix => 'hi/')
c = g.commit_tree('message')
# or #
t = g.write_tree
c = g.commit_tree(t, :message => 'message', :parents => [sha1, sha2])
g.branch('branch_name').update_ref(c)
g.update_ref(branch, c)
g.with_temp_working do # new blank working directory
g.checkout
g.checkout(another_index)
g.commit # commits to temp_index
end
end
g.set_index('/path/to/index')
g.with_index(path) do
# calls set_index, then switches back after
end
g.with_working(dir) do
# calls set_working, then switches back after
end
g.with_temp_working(dir) do
g.checkout_index(:prefix => dir, :path_limiter => path)
# do file work
g.commit # commits to index
end
licensed under MIT License Copyright (c) 2008 Scott Chacon. See LICENSE for further details.