Git/Ruby Library
This provides bindings for working with git in complex interactions, including branching and merging, object inspection and manipulation, history, patch generation and more. You should be able to do most fundamental git operations with this library.
This module provides the basic functions to open a git reference to work with. You can open a working directory, open a bare repository, initialize a new repo or clone an existing remote repository.
Scott Chacon (schacon@gmail.com)
MIT License
The current gem version @return [String] the current gem version.
open a bare repository
this takes the path to a bare git repo it expects not to be able to use a working directory so you can't checkout stuff, commit things, etc. but you can do most read operations
# File lib/git.rb, line 82 def self.bare(git_dir, options = {}) Base.bare(git_dir, options) end
clones a remote repository
options
:bare => true (does a bare clone) :repository => '/path/to/alt_git_dir' :index => '/path/to/alt_index_file'
example
Git.clone('git://repo.or.cz/rubygit.git', 'clone.git', :bare => true)
# File lib/git.rb, line 96 def self.clone(repository, name, options = {}) Base.clone(repository, name, options) end
# File lib/git.rb, line 68 def self.config return Base.config end
# File lib/git.rb, line 64 def self.configure yield Base.config end
Export the current HEAD (or a branch, if options[:branch]
is
specified) into the name
directory, then remove all traces of
git from the directory.
See clone
for options. Does not obey the :remote
option, since the .git info will be deleted anyway; always uses the default
remote, 'origin.'
# File lib/git.rb, line 107 def self.export(repository, name, options = {}) options.delete(:remote) repo = clone(repository, name, {:depth => 1}.merge(options)) repo.checkout("origin/#{options[:branch]}") if options[:branch] Dir.chdir(repo.dir.to_s) { FileUtils.rm_r '.git' } end
Same as g.config, but forces it to be at the global level
g.config('user.name', 'Scott Chacon') # sets value g.config('user.email', 'email@email.com') # sets value g.config('user.name') # returns 'Scott Chacon' g.config # returns whole config hash
# File lib/git.rb, line 120 def self.global_config(name = nil, value = nil) lib = Git::Lib.new(nil, nil) if(name && value) # set value lib.global_config_set(name, value) elsif (name) # return value lib.global_config_get(name) else # return hash lib.global_config_list end end
initialize a new git repository, defaults to the current working directory
options
:repository => '/path/to/alt_git_dir' :index => '/path/to/alt_index_file'
# File lib/git.rb, line 139 def self.init(working_dir = '.', options = {}) Base.init(working_dir, options) end
returns a Hash containing information about the references of the target repository
@param [String|NilClass] location the target repository location or nil for '.' @return [{String=>Hash}] the available references of the target repo.
# File lib/git.rb, line 148 def self.ls_remote(location=nil) Git::Lib.new.ls_remote(location) end
open an existing git working directory
this will most likely be the most common way to create a git reference, referring to a working directory. if not provided in the options, the library will assume your git_dir and index are in the default place (.git/, .git/index)
options
:repository => '/path/to/alt_git_dir' :index => '/path/to/alt_index_file'
# File lib/git.rb, line 162 def self.open(working_dir, options = {}) Base.open(working_dir, options) end
g.config('user.name', 'Scott Chacon') # sets value g.config('user.email', 'email@email.com') # sets value g.config('user.name') # returns 'Scott Chacon' g.config # returns whole config hash
# File lib/git.rb, line 50 def config(name = nil, value = nil) lib = Git::Lib.new if(name && value) # set value lib.config_set(name, value) elsif (name) # return value lib.config_get(name) else # return hash lib.config_list end end
# File lib/git.rb, line 72 def global_config(name = nil, value = nil) self.class.global_config(name, value) end