Tool for managing repository services from your git CLI tool


Keywords
git, bitbucket, cli, cli-utilities, gist, gitea, github, gitlab, gogs, issue, pull-request, pypi, python, python3, snippet, utility
License
GPL-2.0
Install
pip install git-repo==1.10.3

Documentation

Git-Repo: git services CLI utility

Usage

main commands

Control your remote git hosting services from the git commandline. The usage is very simple (full usage list in the sources). To clone a new project, out of GitHub, just issue:

% git hub clone guyzmo/git-repo

But that works also with a project from GitLab, Bitbucket, your own GitLab or Gogs:

% git lab clone guyzmo/git-repo
% git bb clone guyzmo/git-repo
% git myprecious clone guyzmo/git-repo
% git gg clone guyzmo/git-repo

If you want to choose the default branch to clone:

% git lab clone guyzmo/git-repo master

Though sometimes, as you're starting a new project, you want to create a new repository to push to:

% git hub create guyzmo/git-repo

actually the namespace is facultative, as per default you can (and want to) only create new repositories within your own account.

You might also want to add an existing remote ref to your workspace, and that can be easily done with:

% git lab add guyzmo/git-repo

Which will add https://gitlab.com/guyzmo/git-repo as the gitlab remote!

Also, you can fork a repository using:

% git hub fork neovim/neovim

and of course, you can delete it using:

% git bb delete guyzmo/git-repo

Also, you can open the repository's page, using the open command:

% git lab open guyzmo/git-repo
Successfully fetched branch `2` of `guyzmo/git-repo` into `request-2`!

Requests for merges (aka Pull Requests aka Merge Requests)

Once you're all set with your repository, you can check requests to merge (aka Pull Requests on github) using the request command:

% git hub request guyzmo/git-repo list
List of open requests to merge:
id     title                                                           URL
2     prefer gitrepo.<target>.token > privatekey, docs                https://api.github.com/repos/guyzmo/git-repo/issues/2

And fetch it locally to check and/or amend it before merging:

% git hub request guyzmo/git-repo fetch 2

Or you can create a request by doing a:

% git hub request create guyzmo/git-repo myfeature master -t 'My neat feature' -m 'So much to say about that feature…'

You can create the request also by simply calling:

% git hub request create

That command has a bit of automagic, it will:

  1. lookup the namespace and project of the current branch (or at least on the github remote, if called with hub), and take this as the source of the request ;
  2. for the target of the request it will lookup and take:
  • the parent if current project has a parent
  • or itself, if does not ;
  1. it will take the currently loaded branch for the source
  2. and the default one for the target
  3. call the service to ask for a request to merge from source onto target.

Gists or snippets

Finally, another extra feature you can play with is the gist handling:

% git hub gist list
id                                                              title
https://gist.github.com/4a0dd9177524b2b125e9166640666737        This is a test gist

Then you can list files within it:

% git hub gist list a7ce4fddba7744ddf335
language         size  name
Python           1048  unicode_combined.py
% git hub -v gist list https://gist.github.com/4a0dd9177524b2b125e9166640666737
language         size  name
Markdown         16    README.md
Text             14    LICENSE
reStructuredText 17    README.rst

to output it locally, you can use the fetch command (and specify the file if there's more than one):

% git hub gist fetch https://gist.github.com/a7ce4fddba7744ddf335 > mygist.py
% git hub gist fetch 4a0dd9177524b2b125e9166640666737 LICENSE > LICENSE_from_gist

but for more thorough modifications or consulting, you can as well clone it:

% git hub gist clone 4a0dd9177524b2b125e9166640666737
Pulling from github |████████████████████████████████|
Successfully cloned `4a0dd9177524b2b125e9166640666737` into `./4a0dd9177524b2b125e9166640666737`!

And when you're done you just get rid of it:

% git hub gist -f delete 4a0dd9177524b2b125e9166640666737
Successfully deleted gist!

Nota Bene: Thanks to git CLI flexibility, by installing git-repo you directly have access to the tool using git-repo hub … or git repo hub …. For the git hub … call, you have to set up aliases, see below how to configure that.

Remotes

Traditionally, origin is being used as the remote name for the code hosted on a service, but because of the nature of git-repo there is no single origin but it encourages to use multiple ones, and also leave you in control of wherever origin points to.

This is why when you clone from a service or create a new repo on a service, it's using a special remote that carries the name of the service:

% git hub clone foo/bar; cd bar
% git status -sb | head -1
## master...github/master
            ^^^^^^
% git lab create bar
% git push gitlab master

And as a bonus, each time it's adding a new remote, it's updating the all remote, so that you can push your code to all your remote repositories in one command:

% git push all master

Another special remote is the upstream. When you do a fork of a project, current special remote with a service name will be renamed as upstream and the newly forked project is now the one with the service name:

% git lab clone foo/bar; cd bar
% git remote
all
gitlab
% git lab fork
% git remote
all
gitlab
upstream

Finally, if you want to link other existing projects, you can, the add command is there for that:

% git bb add foo/bar
% # if the name is identical to current project, you don't need to add a name
% git hub add
% git gg add foo/bar gitea --alone

Use the --alone switch if you don't want to add that project in the all special remote.

And of course the above commands is just sugar around regular git commands, so the above can also be done with:

% git remote add gitbucket https://gitbucket.local:8080/foo/bar
% # the command to append the URL to the all remote, --alone skips this step
% git remote set-url --add all https://gitbucket.local:8080/foo/bar

And to remove a remote, just do:

% git remote remove github

Installation

You can get the tool using pypi (use pip3 if you have both Python2 and Python3 installed):

% pip install git-repo

or by getting the sources and running:

% python3 setup.py install

Configuration

To configure git-repo you simply have to call the following command:

% git repo config

and a wizard will run you through getting the authentication token for the service, add the command alias or the name of the remote. Though, configuring custom services is still not handled by the wizard…

But if you prefer manual configuration you'll have to tweak your ~/.gitconfig. For each service you've got an account on, you have to make a section in the gitconfig:

[gitrepo "gitlab"]
    token = YourVerySecretKey

[gitrepo "github"]
    token = YourOtherVerySecretKey

[gitrepo "bitbucket"]
    username = ford.prefect
    token = YourOtherSecretKey

[gitrepo "gogs"]
    fqdn = UrlOfYourGogs
    token = YourVerySecretKey

Here, we're setting the basics: just the private token. You'll notice that for bitbucket the private token is your username and password seperated by a column. That's because bitbucket does not offer throw away private tokens for tools (I might implement BB's OAuth at some point).

You also have the ability to set up an alias:

[gitrepo "bitbucket"]
    alias = bit
    username = ford.prefect
    token = YourOtherSecretKey

that will change the command you use for a name you'll prefer to handle actions for the service you use:

% git-repo bit clone guyzmo/git-repo

Also, you can setup your own GitLab self-hosted server, using that configuration:

[gitrepo "myprecious"]
    type = gitlab
    token = YourSuperPrivateKey
    fqdn = gitlab.example.org
    # Set this only if you use a self-signed certificate and experience problems
    insecure = true

Finally, to make it really cool, you can make a few aliases in your gitconfig:

[alias]
    hub = repo hub
    lab = repo lab
    bb = repo bb
    perso = repo perso

So you can run the tool as a git subcommand:

git hub clone guyzmo/git-repo

For those who like to keep all dotfiles in a git repository, it'd be horrendous to store tokens that offer access to your social accounts in a repository… And I'm not even talking about those who want to share your dotfiles. But don't worry, once it's all configured, you can fire up your favorite editor and move all the [gitrepo …] sections into a new file, like ~/.gitconfig-repos.

Your can run the following command to do this automagically:

python -m git_repo.extract_config

if you want to use another path, you can change the defaults:

python -m git_repo.extract_config ~/.gitconfig-repos ~/.gitconfig

Development

For development, start a virtualenv and from within install the devel requirements:

% virtualenv var
% var/bin/pip install -r requirements-test.txt

and then you'll have the executable in bin:

% var/bin/git-repo --help

and to run the tests:

% var/bin/py.test --cov=git_repo --cov-report term-missing --capture=sys tests

N.B.: Buildout is no longer supported for development

Verbose running

You can repeat the -v argument several times to increase the level of verbosity of git-repo. The more arguments you give, the more details you'll have.

  • -v will set the debugging level to DEBUG, giving some execution info ;
  • -vv will print out all the git commands that are being executed ;
  • -vvv will give more verbose insight on the git layer ;
  • -vvvv will output all the HTTP exchanges with the different APIs ;
  • -vvvvv will printout how were parsed the arguments.
Testing

To run the tests:

% bin/py.test

You can use the following options for py.test to help you debug when tests fail:

  • -v will show more details upon errors
  • -x will stop upon the first failure
  • --pdb will launch the debugger where an exception has been launched

The tests use recordings of exchanged HTTP data, so that we don't need real credentials and a real connection, when testing the API on minor changes. Those recordings are called cassettes, thanks to the betamax framework being in use in the test suites.

When running existing tests, based on the provided cassettes, you don't need any setting. Also, if you've got a configuration in ~/.gitconfig, the tests will use them. Anyway, you can use environment variables for those settings (environment variables will have precedence over the configuration settings):

To use your own credentials, you can setup the following environment variables:

  • GITHUB_NAMESPACE (which defaults to not_configured) is the name of the account to use on GitHub
  • GITLAB_NAMESPACE (which defaults to not_configured) is the name of the account to use on GitLab
  • BITBUCKET_NAMESPACE (which defaults to not_configured) is the name of the account to use on Bitbucket
  • GOGS_NAMESPACE (which defaults to not_configured) is the name of the account to use on Gogs
  • PRIVATE_KEY_GITHUB your private token you've setup on GitHub for your account
  • PRIVATE_KEY_GITLAB your private token you've setup on GitLab for your account
  • PRIVATE_KEY_BITBUCKET your private token you've setup on Bitbucket for your account
  • PRIVATE_KEY_GOGS your private token you've setup on Gogs for your account

TODO

  • make a git-repo fork action
  • make it possible to choose method (SSH or HTTPS)
  • handle default branches properly
  • make a nice way to push to all remotes at once
  • refactor the code into multiple modules
  • add regression tests (and actually find a smart way to implement them…)
  • add travis build
  • show a nice progress bar, while it's fetching (cf #15)
  • add support for handling gists (cf #12, cf #13)
  • add support for handling pull requests (cf #10, #11)
  • add application token support for bitbucket (cf #14)
  • add support for gogs (cf #18)
  • add support for gitbucket (cf #142)
  • add support for managing SSH keys (cf #22)
  • add support for issues (cf #104)
  • add support for gerrit (cf #19)
  • do what's needed to make a nice documentation #146
  • for more features, write an issue or, even better, a PR!

Contributors

The project and original idea has been brought and is maintained by:

With code contributions coming from:

License

Copyright ©2016,2017 Bernard `Guyzmo` Pratz <guyzmo+git-repo+pub@m0g.net>

This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License
as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2
of the License, or (at your option) any later version.

This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
GNU General Public License for more details.

You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA  02110-1301, USA.

See the LICENSE file for the full license.