NAME
Git::Repository::Tutorial - Control git from Perl using Git::Repository
VERSION
version 1.302
SYNOPSIS
use Git::Repository;
# do cool stuff with Git, using the following advice
HOW-TO
A Git::Repository object represents an actual Git repository, against which you can run commands.
Obtain a Git::Repository object from an existing repository
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 );
If the repository is a bare repository, or you prefer to provide the .git directory location:
$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.
Run any git 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.
Create a new repository
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 older git requires the command to be run in the work tree,
# so we use the cwd option
Git::Repository->run( init => { cwd => $dir } );
$r = Git::Repository->new( work_tree => $dir );
Note that the old create()
method is obsolete and has been removed.
Clone a repository
Cloning works the same way:
Git::Repository->run( clone => $url => $dir );
$r = Git::Repository->new( $dir );
Run a simple command
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.
Silence warnings for some Git commands
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.
Process normal and error output
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.
Provide input on standard input
Use the input
option:
my $commit = $r->run( 'commit-tree', $tree, '-p', $parent,
{ input => $message } );
Change the environment of a command
Use the env
option:
$r->run(
'commit', '-m', 'log message',
{ env => {
GIT_COMMITTER_NAME => 'Git::Repository',
GIT_COMMITTER_EMAIL => 'book@cpan.org',
},
},
);
See Git::Repository::Command for other available options.
Process the output of git log
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.
Process the output of git shortlog
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;
Wrap git in a sudo call
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
.
Use submodules
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.
Sort git versions
Basically, you need to recreate the cmp
operator for Git versions, using the private _version_gt()
method (which accepts two parameters):
@sorted_versions = sort {
Git::Repository::_version_gt( $a, $b )
|| -Git::Repository::_version_gt( $b, $a )
} @versions;
Add specialized methods to your Git::Repository objects
Have a look at Git::Repository::Plugin and Git::Repository::Plugin::Log, to learn how to add your own methods to Git::Repository.
AUTHOR
Philippe Bruhat (BooK) <book@cpan.org>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2013 by Philippe Bruhat (BooK).
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.