Git::Repository::Tutorial(3pm) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | Git::Repository::Tutorial(3pm) |
Git::Repository::Tutorial - Control git from Perl using Git::Repository
use Git::Repository; # do cool stuff with Git, using the following advice
A Git::Repository object represents an actual Git repository, against which you can run commands.
If your script is expected to run against a repository in the current directory (like most Git commands), let Git::Repository handle the magic:
$r = Git::Repository->new();
If the repository has a working copy (work tree):
$r = Git::Repository->new( work_tree => $dir );
In this case, the git dir is computed as the output of "git rev-parse --git-dir", and the the work tree is normalized using "git rev-parse --show-cdup". To force the use of a different work tree, set the "GIT_WORK_TREE" environment variable in the option hash.
If the repository is a bare repository, or you prefer to provide the location of the .git directory:
$r = Git::Repository->new( git_dir => $gitdir );
If the work tree and the git directory are in unrelated locations, you can also provide both:
$r = Git::Repository->new( work_tree => $dir, git_dir => $gitdir );
The constructor also accepts an option hash. The various options are detailed in the manual page for Git::Repository::Command.
Git commands can be run against an existing Git::Repository object, or against the class itself (in which case, git will try to deduce its context from the current directory and the environment).
The pattern for running commands is always the same:
$r->run( $command => @arguments, \%options );
The $command and @arguments are identical to those you'd pass to the "git" command-line tool. The options hash contains options, as described in the manual page for Git::Repository::Command.
Sometime, you'll need to create the Git repository from scratch:
# git version 1.6.5 and above Git::Repository->run( init => $dir ); $r = Git::Repository->new( work_tree => $dir );
Any git older than 1.6.5 requires the command to be run in the work tree, so we use the "cwd" option:
# git version 1.5.0.rc1 and above Git::Repository->run( init => { cwd => $dir } ); $r = Git::Repository->new( work_tree => $dir ); # older git versions Git::Repository->run( 'init-db' => { cwd => $dir } ); $r = Git::Repository->new( work_tree => $dir );
Note that the old "create()" method is obsolete (as of Git::Repository 1.18, from April 16, 2011) and has been removed (as of Git::Repository 1.301, January 21, 2013).
Cloning works the same way:
Git::Repository->run( clone => $url => $dir ); $r = Git::Repository->new( work_tree => $dir );
When you don't really care about the output of the command, just call it:
$r->run( add => '.' ); $r->run( commit => '-m', 'my commit message' );
In case of an error or warning, Git::Repository will "croak()" or "carp()" appropriately.
It's common to work out the proper string of Git commands needed to achieve your goal in the shell, before actually turning them into calls to "Git::Repository->run".
Some options might require quoting, to properly get the arguments to Git through the shell:
# shell $ git log --since='Fri Jul 26 19:34:15 2013 +0200' --grep='report ticket'
Such quoting is of course not needed with Git::Repository:
$since = 'Fri Jul 26 19:34:15 2013 +0200'; $grep = 'report ticket'; my $cmd = $r->command( log => "--since=$since", "--grep=$grep" );
For the same reasons as above (individual arguments to "run" or "command" are turned into individual "argv" elements for git, whitespace included), some command-line usages of git need to be slightly reformatted to make them suitable for "run()".
For example, these two commands have the same effect when run from the shell:
shell> git checkout -b sometopic shell> git checkout -bsometopic
In the first case, git receives three arguments in "argv": "checkout", "-b" and "sometopic". In the second case, it receives two arguments: "checkout" and "-bsometopic", and then git recognizes the beginning of the -b option and splits "sometopic" out of the second argument.
So, in a call such as:
$command = $repo->run( checkout => "-b$branch_name", { quiet => 0 } );
If $branch_name contains an initial space character, the call will be equivalent the following shell command:
shell> git checkout -b\ sometopic
and git will receive two arguments: "checkout" and "-b sometopic", from which it will split out " sometopic" (note the initial space).
The space after -b must be removed, as otherwise the code attempts to create a branch called " sometopic", which git rejects.
Some Git porcelain commands provide additional information on "STDERR". One typical example is "git checkout":
$ git checkout mybranch Switched to branch 'mybranch'
The "run()" method of Git::Repository treats all output on "STDERR" as a warning. Therefore, the following code:
$r->run( checkout => 'mybranch' );
will output a warning like this one:
Switched to branch 'mybranch' at myscript.pl line 10.
In such a case, you can use the "quiet" option to silence the warning for a single command:
$r->run( checkout => 'mybranch', { quiet => 1 } );
To silence all warnings, you can pass the "quiet" option during the creation of the original repository object:
my $r = Git::Repository->new( { quiet => 1 } );
This is not recommended, as it might hide important information from you.
The "run()" command doesn't capture "STDERR": it only warns (or dies) if something was printed on it. To be able to actually capture error output, "command()" must be used.
my $cmd = $r->command( @cmd ); my @errput = $cmd->stderr->getlines(); $cmd->close;
"run()" also captures all output at once, which can lead to unnecessary memory consumption when capturing the output of some really verbose commands.
my $cmd = $r->command( log => '--pretty=oneline', '--all' ); my $log = $cmd->stdout; while (<$log>) { ...; } $cmd->close;
Of course, as soon as one starts reading and writing to an external process' communication handles, a risk of blocking exists. Caveat emptor.
Use the "input" option:
my $commit = $r->run( 'commit-tree', $tree, '-p', $parent, { input => $message } );
Use the "env" option:
$r->run( 'commit', '-m', 'log message', { env => { GIT_COMMITTER_NAME => 'Git::Repository', GIT_COMMITTER_EMAIL => 'book@cpan.org', }, }, );
Note that Git::Repository::Command does small changes to the environment a command before running it. Specifically, it:
The easiest way to preserve en environment variable is to pass it with the "env" option, for example:
$r->run( qw( config --get-colorbool githooks.color true ), { env => { TERM => $ENV{TERM} } } );
See Git::Repository::Command and System::Command for other available options.
Git has three levels of configuration files that can change the output of porcelain commands: system ($(prefix)/etc/gitconfig), global ($HOME/.gitconfig and $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/git/config) and local (.git/config inside the repository).
To ensure the system and global configuration files will be ignored and won't interfere with the expected output of your Git commands, you can add the following keys to the "env" option:
GIT_CONFIG_NOSYSTEM => 1, XDG_CONFIG_HOME => undef, HOME => undef,
Since version 1.7.9, Git translates its most common interface messages into the user's language if translations are available and the locale is appropriately set.
This means that naively parsing the output "porcelain" commands might fail if the program is unexpectedly run under an unexpected locale.
The easiest way to ensure your Git commands will be run in a "locale-safe" environment, is to set the "LC_ALL" environment variable to "C".
The brutal way:
$ENV{LC_ALL} = 'C';
The temporary way:
local $ENV{LC_ALL} = 'C';
The subtle way (restricted to the commands run on a given Git::Repository instance):
my $r = Git::Repository->new( { env => { LC_ALL => 'C' } } );
The stealthiest way (restricted to a single command):
$r->run( ..., { env => { LC_ALL => 'C' } } );
By default, Git::Repository::Command will "chdir()" to the root of the work tree before launching the requested Git command.
This means that no matter where your program "chdir()" to, commands on the Git::Repository instance will by default be run from the root of the work tree. So, commands such as "add" need to use the "full" path (relative to "GIT_WORK_TREE") of the files to be added.
The "cwd" option can be used to define where Git::Repository::Command will "chdir()" to. To instruct Git::Repository::Command to not "chdir()" (and therefore run the Git command from the current working directory), set the option to "undef":
# run from cwd for this command only $r->run( ..., { cwd => undef } ); # always run git from cwd my $r = Git::Repository->new( { cwd => undef } );
By default, "Git::Repository->run( ... )" dies if the Git command exited with a status code of 128 (fatal error) or 129 (usage message).
Some commands will throw an error and exit with a status different from the previous two:
$r->run( checkout => 'does-not-exist' ); # exit status: 1
The above "run()" call does not die, and output the following warning:
error: pathspec 'does-not-exist' did not match any file(s) known to git.
The exit status (as given by "$? >> 8") is 1.
To force "run()" to die when the Git command exits with status 1, use the "fatal" option (added in version 1.304, May 25, 2013):
$r->run( checkout => 'does-not-exist', { fatal => 1 } );
By default, 128 and 129 remain in the list of fatal codes.
Here are a few examples:
# set the fatal codes for all call to run() on this object $r = Git::Repository->new( { fatal => [ 1 .. 255 ] } );
As usual, setting the option to the Git::Repository object will set it for all commands run for it:
# "!0" is a shortcut for 1 .. 255 $r = Git::Repository->new( { fatal => [ "!0" ] } );
Using negative codes will make these values non-fatal:
# the above call to new() makes all exit codes fatal # but 3 and 7 won't be fatal for this specific run $r->run( ..., { fatal => [ -3, -7 ] } );
When the list contains a single item, there is no need to use an array reference:
# same as [ "!0" ] $r = Git::Repository->new( { fatal => "!0" } ); # remove 17 from the list of fatal exit codes for this run only $r->run( ..., { fatal => -17 } );
See Git::Repository::Command for other available options.
When creating a tool that needs to process the output of git log, you should always define precisely the expected format using the --pretty option, and choose a format that is easy to parse.
Assuming git log will output the default format will eventually lead to problems, for example when the user's git configuration defines "format.pretty" to be something else than the default of "medium".
See also Git::Repository::Plugin::Log for adding to your Git::Repository objects a "log()" method that will parse the log output for you.
Understanding the various options for git log can make it very simple to obtain a lot of information.
For example:
# all tags reachable from $committish my @tags = map { s/^ \((.*)\)/$1/; ( map +( split /: / )[1], grep /^tag: /, split /, / ) } $_->run( qw( log --simplify-by-decoration --pretty=%d ), $committish );
git shortlog behaves differently when it detects it's not attached to a terminal. In that case, it just tries to read some git log output from its standard input.
So this oneliner will hang, because git shortlog is waiting for some data from the program connected to its standard input (the oneliner):
perl -MGit::Repository -le 'print scalar Git::Repository->run( shortlog => -5 )'
Whereas this one will "work" (as in "immediately return with no output"):
perl -MGit::Repository -le 'print scalar Git::Repository->run( shortlog => -5, { input => "" } )'
So, you need to give git shortlog some input (from git log):
perl -MGit::Repository -le 'print scalar Git::Repository->run( shortlog => { input => scalar Git::Repository->run( log => -5 ) } )'
If the log output is large, you'll probably be better off with something like the following:
use Git::Repository; # start both git commands my $log = Git::Repository->command('log')->stdout; my $cmd = Git::Repository->command( shortlog => -ens ); # feed one with the output of the other my $in = $cmd->stdin; print {$in} $_ while <$log>; close $in; # and do something with the output print $cmd->stdout->getlines;
If for a given repository you want to wrap all calls to git in a "sudo" call, you can use the "git" option with an array ref:
my $r = Git::Repository->new( { git => [qw( sudo -u nobody git )] } );
In this case, every call to git from $r will actually call "sudo -u nobody git".
Because Git::Repository automatically sets the "GIT_DIR" and "GIT_WORK_TREE" environment variables, some "submodule" sub-commands may fail. For example:
$r->run( submodule => add => $repository => 'sub' );
will give the following error:
error: pathspec 'sub' did not match any file(s) known to git.
To avoid this error, you should enforce the removal of the "GIT_WORK_TREE" variable from the environment in which the command is run:
$r->run( submodule => add => $repository => 'sub', { env => { GIT_WORK_TREE => undef } } );
Note that System::Command version 1.04 is required to be able to remove variables from the environment.
Since version 1.318, Git::Repository lets Git::Version::Compare handle all version comparisons.
Sorting version numbers is therefore as simple as:
use Git::Version::Compare qw( cmp_git ); @sort_verson = sort cmp_git @versions;
Have a look at Git::Repository::Plugin and Git::Repository::Plugin::Log, to learn how to add your own methods to Git::Repository.
Sometimes you need to process the output of a command by running a callback on each line of the output.
# code inspiration: # https://github.com/dolmen/github-keygen/blob/24c501072ba7d890810de3008434c1fe1f757286/release.pl#L178 my %tree; $r->run( 'ls-tree' => $commit, sub { my ($mode, $type, $object, $file) = split; $tree{$file} = [ $mode, $type, $object ]; } );
Note that the value returned by the callback will be returned as part of the "run()" output, instead of the original line.
Instead of creating a test repository using a series of file editions and commits, one can simply import data into the test repository using a bundle. Bundles are created with the "git bundle create" command (see the Git documentation for details).
First create a temporary repository with the help of Test::Git:
use Test::Git; my $r = test_repository();
then import the bundle data in your repository, and collect the references:
my @refs = $r->run( bundle => 'unbundle', $bundle_file );
and finally update the references:
for my $line (@refs) { my ( $sha1, $ref ) = split / /, $line; $r->run( 'update-ref', $ref => $sha1 ); }
Since Git version 1.6.5, it's also possible to clone directly from a bundle (this creates an "origin" remote pointing to the bundle file):
my $r = test_repository( clone => [ $bundle_file ] );
A bundle from a recipient repository's point of view is just like a regular remote repository. See the documentation of git bundle for details of what's possible (e.g. incremental bundles).
Philippe Bruhat (BooK) <book@cpan.org>
Copyright 2010-2016 Philippe Bruhat (BooK), all rights reserved.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
2023-03-22 | perl v5.36.0 |