Manpages - Git.3pm
Table of Contents
NAME
Git - Perl interface to the Git version control system
SYNOPSIS
use Git; my $version = Git::command_oneline(version); git_cmd_try { Git::command_noisy(update-server-info) } %s failed w/ code %d; my $repo = Git->repository (Directory => /srv/git/cogito.git); my @revs = $repo->command(rev-list, –since=last monday, –all); my ($fh, $c) = $repo->command_output_pipe(rev-list, –since=last monday, –all); my $lastrev = <$fh>; chomp $lastrev; $repo->command_close_pipe($fh, $c); my $lastrev = $repo->command_oneline( [ rev-list, –all ], STDERR => 0 ); my $sha1 = $repo->hash_and_insert_object(file.txt); my $tempfile = tempfile(); my $size = $repo->cat_blob($sha1, $tempfile);
DESCRIPTION
This module provides Perl scripts easy way to interface the Git version control system. The modules have an easy and well-tested way to call arbitrary Git commands; in the future, the interface will also provide specialized methods for doing easily operations which are not totally trivial to do over the generic command interface.
While some commands can be executed outside of any context (e.g. ’version’ or ’init’), most operations require a repository context, which in practice means getting an instance of the Git object using the repository() constructor. (In the future, we will also get a new_repository() constructor.) All commands called as methods of the object are then executed in the context of the repository.
Part of the repository state is also information about path to the
attached working copy (unless you work with a bare repository). You can
also navigate inside of the working copy using the wc_chdir() method.
(Note that the repository object is self-contained and will not change
working directory of your process.)
TODO: In the future, we might also do
my $remoterepo = $repo->remote_repository (Name > cogito, Branch =>
master); $remoterepo || Git->remote_repository
(http://git.or.cz/cogito.git/); my @refs = $remoterepo->refs();
Currently, the module merely wraps calls to external Git tools. In the future, it will provide a much faster way to interact with Git by linking directly to libgit. This should be completely opaque to the user, though (performance increase notwithstanding).
CONSTRUCTORS
- repository ( OPTIONS )
- repository ( DIRECTORY )
- repository ()
Construct a new repository object. OPTIONS are passed in a hash like
fashion, using key and value pairs. Possible options are: Repository -
Path to the Git repository. WorkingCopy - Path to the associated
working copy; not strictly required as many commands will happily crunch
on a bare repository. WorkingSubdir - Subdirectory in the working copy
to work inside. Just left undefined if you do not want to limit the
scope of operations. Directory - Path to the Git working directory in
its usual setup. The .git directory is searched in the directory and
all the parent directories; if found, WorkingCopy is set to the
directory containing it and Repository to the .git directory itself.
If no .git directory was found, the Directory is assumed to be a
bare repository, Repository is set to point at it and WorkingCopy is
left undefined. If the $GIT_DIR environment variable is set, things
behave as expected as well. You should not use both Directory and
either of Repository and WorkingCopy - the results of that are
undefined. Alternatively, a directory path may be passed as a single
scalar argument to the constructor; it is equivalent to setting only the
Directory option field. Calling the constructor with no options
whatsoever is equivalent to calling it with Directory => .. In
general, if you are building a standard porcelain command, simply doing
Git->repository() should do the right thing and setup the object to
reflect exactly where the user is right now.
METHODS
- command ( COMMAND [, ARGUMENTS… ] )
- command ( [ COMMAND, ARGUMENTS… ], { Opt => Val … } )
Execute the given Git COMMAND (specify it without the ’git-’ prefix),
optionally with the specified extra ARGUMENTS. The second more
elaborate form can be used if you want to further adjust the command
execution. Currently, only one option is supported: STDERR - How to
deal with the command’s error output. By default (undef) it is
delivered to the caller’s STDERR. A false value (0 or ’’) will cause
it to be thrown away. If you want to process it, you can get it in a
filehandle you specify, but you must be extremely careful; if the error
output is not very short and you want to read it in the same process as
where you called command(), you are set up for a nice deadlock! The
method can be called without any instance or on a specified Git
repository (in that case the command will be run in the repository
context). In scalar context, it returns all the command output in a
single string (verbatim). In array context, it returns an array
containing lines printed to the command’s stdout (without trailing
newlines). In both cases, the command’s stdin and stderr are the same as
the caller’s.
- command_oneline ( COMMAND [, ARGUMENTS… ] )
- command_oneline ( [ COMMAND, ARGUMENTS… ], { Opt => Val … } )
Execute the given COMMAND in the same way as command() does but
always return a scalar string containing the first line of the command’s
standard output.
- command_output_pipe ( COMMAND [, ARGUMENTS… ] )
- (no term)
- command_output_pipe ( [ COMMAND, ARGUMENTS… ], { Opt => Val … } ) ::
Execute the given COMMAND in the same way as command() does but
return a pipe filehandle from which the command output can be read. The
function can return ($pipe, $ctx) in array context. See
command_close_pipe() for details.
- command_input_pipe ( COMMAND [, ARGUMENTS… ] )
- (no term)
- command_input_pipe ( [ COMMAND, ARGUMENTS… ], { Opt => Val … } ) ::
Execute the given COMMAND in the same way as command_output_pipe()
does but return an input pipe filehandle instead; the command output is
not captured. The function can return ($pipe, $ctx) in array context.
See command_close_pipe() for details.
- command_close_pipe ( PIPE [, CTX ] )
- Close the
PIPEas returned fromcommand_*_pipe(), checking whether the command finished successfully. The optionalCTXargument is required if you want to see the command name in the error message, and it is the second value returned bycommand_*_pipe()when called in array context. The call idiom is: my ($fh, $ctx) = $r->command_output_pipe(status); while (<$fh>) { … } $r->command_close_pipe($fh, $ctx); Note that you should not rely on whatever actually is inCTX; currently it is simply the command name but in future the context might have more complicated structure. - command_bidi_pipe ( COMMAND [, ARGUMENTS… ] )
- Execute the given
COMMANDin the same way as command_output_pipe() does but return both an input pipe filehandle and an output pipe filehandle. The function will return($pid, $pipe_in, $pipe_out, $ctx). Seecommand_close_bidi_pipe()for details. - command_close_bidi_pipe ( PID, PIPE_IN, PIPE_OUT [, CTX] )
- Close
the
PIPE_INandPIPE_OUTas returned fromcommand_bidi_pipe(), checking whether the command finished successfully. The optionalCTXargument is required if you want to see the command name in the error message, and it is the fourth value returned bycommand_bidi_pipe(). The call idiom is: my ($pid, $in, $out, $ctx) = $r->command_bidi_pipe(cat-file –batch-check); print $out “000000000\n”; while (<$in>) { … } $r->command_close_bidi_pipe($pid, $in, $out, $ctx); Note that you should not rely on whatever actually is inCTX; currently it is simply the command name but in future the context might have more complicated structure.PIPE_INandPIPE_OUTmay beundefif they have been closed prior to calling this function. This may be useful in a query-response type of commands where caller first writes a query and later reads response, eg: my ($pid, $in, $out, $ctx) = $r->command_bidi_pipe(cat-file –batch-check); print $out “000000000\n”; close $out; while (<$in>) { … } $r->command_close_bidi_pipe($pid, $in, undef, $ctx); This idiom may prevent potential dead locks caused by data sent to the output pipe not being flushed and thus not reaching the executed command. - command_noisy ( COMMAND [, ARGUMENTS… ] )
- Execute the given
COMMANDin the same way as command() does but do not capture the command output - the standard output is not redirected and goes to the standard output of the caller application. While the method is called command_noisy(), you might want to as well use it for the most silent Git commands which you know will never pollute your stdout but you want to avoid the overhead of the pipe setup when calling them. The function returns only after the command has finished running. - version ()
- Return the Git version in use.
- exec_path ()
- Return path to the Git sub-command executables (the
same as
git --exec-path). Useful mostly only internally. - html_path ()
- Return path to the Git html documentation (the same as
git --html-path). Useful mostly only internally. - get_tz_offset ( TIME )
- Return the time zone offset from GMT in the form +/-HHMM where HH is the number of hours from GMT and MM is the number of minutes. This is the equivalent of what strftime(%z, …) would provide on a GNU platform. If TIME is not supplied, the current local time is used.
- get_record ( FILEHANDLE, INPUT_RECORD_SEPARATOR )
- Read one record from FILEHANDLE delimited by INPUT_RECORD_SEPARATOR, removing any trailing INPUT_RECORD_SEPARATOR.
- prompt ( PROMPT , ISPASSWORD )
- Query user
PROMPTand return answer from user. Honours GIT_ASKPASS and SSH_ASKPASS environment variables for querying the user. If no *_ASKPASS variable is set or an error occurred, the terminal is tried as a fallback. IfISPASSWORDis set and true, the terminal disables echo. - repo_path ()
- Return path to the git repository. Must be called on a repository instance.
- wc_path ()
- Return path to the working copy. Must be called on a repository instance.
- wc_subdir ()
- Return path to the subdirectory inside of a working copy. Must be called on a repository instance.
- wc_chdir ( SUBDIR )
- Change the working copy subdirectory to work
within. The
SUBDIRis relative to the working copy root directory (not the current subdirectory). Must be called on a repository instance attached to a working copy and the directory must exist. - config ( VARIABLE )
- Retrieve the configuration
VARIABLEin the same manner asconfigdoes. In scalar context requires the variable to be set only one time (exception is thrown otherwise), in array context returns allows the variable to be set multiple times and returns all the values. - config_bool ( VARIABLE )
- Retrieve the bool configuration
VARIABLE. The return value is usable as a boolean in perl (andundefif it’s not defined, of course). - config_path ( VARIABLE )
- Retrieve the path configuration
VARIABLE. The return value is an expanded path orundefif it’s not defined. - config_int ( VARIABLE )
- Retrieve the integer configuration
VARIABLE. The return value is simple decimal number. An optional value suffix of ’k’, ’m’, or ’g’ in the config file will cause the value to be multiplied by 1024, 1048576 (1024^2), or 1073741824 (1024^3) prior to output. It would returnundefif configuration variable is not defined. - config_regexp ( RE )
- Retrieve the list of configuration key names
matching the regular expression
RE. The return value is a list of strings matching this regex. - get_colorbool ( NAME )
- Finds if color should be used for NAMEd operation from the configuration, and returns boolean (true for use color, false for do not use color).
- get_color ( SLOT, COLOR )
- Finds color for SLOT from the configuration, while defaulting to COLOR, and returns the ANSI color escape sequence: print $repo->get_color(“color.interactive.prompt”, “underline blue white”); print “some text”; print $repo->get_color(“”, “normal”);
- remote_refs ( REPOSITORY [, GROUPS [, REFGLOBS ] ] )
- This function
returns a hashref of refs stored in a given remote repository. The
hash is in the format
refname =\hash>. For tags, therefnameentry contains the tag object while arefname^{}entry gives the tagged objects.REPOSITORYhas the same meaning as the appropriategit-ls-remoteargument; either a URL or a remote name (if called on a repository instance).GROUPSis an optional arrayref that can contain ’tags’ to return all the tags and/or ’heads’ to return all the heads.REFGLOBis an optional array of strings containing a shell-like glob to further limit the refs returned in the hash; the meaning is again the same as the appropriategit-ls-remoteargument. This function may or may not be called on a repository instance. In the former case, remote names as defined in the repository are recognized as repository specifiers. - ident ( TYPE | IDENTSTR )
- ident_person ( TYPE | IDENTSTR | IDENTARRAY )
This suite of functions retrieves and parses ident information, as
stored in the commit and tag objects or produced by var GIT_type_IDENT
(thus TYPE can be either author or committer; case is
insignificant). The ident method retrieves the ident information from
git var and either returns it as a scalar string or as an array with
the fields parsed. Alternatively, it can take a prepared ident string
(e.g. from the commit object) and just parse it. ident_person returns
the person part of the ident - name and email; it can take the same
arguments as ident or the array returned by ident. The synopsis is
like: my ($name, $email, $time_tz) = ident(author); “$name <$email>” eq
ident_person(author); “$name <$email>” eq ident_person($name); $time_tz
=~ ^\d+ [+-]\d{4}$;
- hash_object ( TYPE, FILENAME )
- Compute the SHA1 object id of the
given
FILENAMEconsidering it is of theTYPEobject type (blob,commit,tree). The method can be called without any instance or on a specified Git repository, it makes zero difference. The function returns the SHA1 hash. - hash_and_insert_object ( FILENAME )
- Compute the SHA1 object id of
the given
FILENAMEand add the object to the object database. The function returns the SHA1 hash. - cat_blob ( SHA1, FILEHANDLE )
- Prints the contents of the blob
identified by
SHA1toFILEHANDLEand returns the number of bytes printed. - credential_read( FILEHANDLE )
- Reads credential key-value pairs from
FILEHANDLE. Reading stops at EOF or when an empty line is encountered. Each line must be of the formkey=valuewith a non-empty key. Function returns hash with all read values. Any white space (other than new-line character) is preserved. - credential_write( FILEHANDLE, CREDENTIAL_HASHREF )
- Writes
credential key-value pairs from hash referenced by
CREDENTIAL_HASHREFtoFILEHANDLE. Keys and values cannot contain new-lines or NUL bytes characters, and key cannot contain equal signs nor be empty (if they do Error::Simple is thrown). Any white space is preserved. If value for a key isundef, it will be skipped. Ifurlkey exists it will be written first. (All the other key-value pairs are written in sorted order but you should not depend on that). Once all lines are written, an empty line is printed. - credential( CREDENTIAL_HASHREF [, OPERATION ] )
- credential( CREDENTIAL_HASHREF, CODE )
Executes git credential for a given set of credentials and specified
operation. In both forms CREDENTIAL_HASHREF needs to be a reference to
a hash which stores credentials. Under certain conditions the hash can
change. In the first form, OPERATION can be fill, approve or
reject, and function will execute corresponding git credential
sub-command. If it’s omitted fill is assumed. In case of fill the
values stored in CREDENTIAL_HASHREF will be changed to the ones
returned by the git credential fill command. The usual usage would
look something like: my %cred = ( protocol > https, host =>
example.com, username => bob ); Git::credential \%cred; if
(try_to_authenticate($cred{username}, $cred{password})) {
Git::credential \%cred, approve; ... do more stuff ... } else {
Git::credential \%cred, reject; } In the second form, =CODE needs to be
a reference to a subroutine. The function will execute
git credential fill to fill the provided credential hash, then call
CODE with CREDENTIAL_HASHREF as the sole argument. If CODE’s
return value is defined, the function will execute git credential
approve (if return value yields true) or git credential reject (if
return value is false). If the return value is undef, nothing at all is
executed; this is useful, for example, if the credential could neither
be verified nor rejected due to an unrelated network error. The return
value is the same as what CODE returns. With this form, the usage
might look as follows: if (Git::credential { protocol => https, host =>
example.com, username => bob }, sub { my $cred = shift; return
!!try_to_authenticate($cred->{username}, $cred->{password}); }) { … do
more stuff … }
- temp_acquire ( NAME )
- Attempts to retrieve the temporary file
mapped to the string
NAME. If an associated temp file has not been created this session or was closed, it is created, cached, and set for autoflush and binmode. Internally locks the file mapped toNAME. This lock must be released withtemp_release()when the temp file is no longer needed. Subsequent attempts to retrieve temporary files mapped to the sameNAMEwhile still locked will cause an error. This locking mechanism provides a weak guarantee and is not threadsafe. It does provide some error checking to help prevent temp file refs writing over one another. In general, the :Handle returned should not be closed by consumers as it defeats the purpose of this caching mechanism. If you need to close the temp file handle, then you should use :Temp or another temp file faculty directly. If a handle is closed and then requested again, then a warning will issue. - temp_is_locked ( NAME )
- Returns true if the internal lock created
by a previous
temp_acquire()call withNAMEis still in effect. When temp_acquire is called on aNAME, it internally locks the temporary file mapped toNAME. That lock will not be released untiltemp_release()is called with either the originalNAMEor the :Handle that was returned from the original call to temp_acquire. Subsequent attempts to calltemp_acquire()with the sameNAMEwill fail unless there has been an interveningtemp_release()call for thatNAME(or its corresponding :Handle that was returned by the originaltemp_acquire()call). If true is returned bytemp_is_locked()for aNAME, an attempt totemp_acquire()the sameNAMEwill cause an error unlesstemp_releaseis first called on thatNAME(or its corresponding :Handle that was returned by the originaltemp_acquire()call). - temp_release ( NAME )
- temp_release ( FILEHANDLE )
Releases a lock acquired through temp_acquire(). Can be called either
with the NAME mapping used when acquiring the temp file or with the
FILEHANDLE referencing a locked temp file. Warns if an attempt is made
to release a file that is not locked. The temp file will be truncated
before being released. This can help to reduce disk I/O where the system
is smart enough to detect the truncation while data is in the output
buffers. Beware that after the temp file is released and truncated, any
operations on that file may fail miserably until it is re-acquired. All
contents are lost between each release and acquire mapped to the same
string.
- temp_reset ( FILEHANDLE )
- Truncates and resets the position of the
FILEHANDLE. - temp_path ( NAME )
- temp_path ( FILEHANDLE )
Returns the filename associated with the given tempfile.
- prefix_lines ( PREFIX, STRING [, STRING… ])
- Prefixes lines in
STRINGwithPREFIX. - unquote_path ( PATH )
- Unquote a quoted path containing c-escapes as returned by ls-files etc. when not using -z or when parsing the output of diff -u.
- get_comment_line_char ( )
- Gets the core.commentchar configuration value. The value falls-back to ’#’ if core.commentchar is set to ’auto’.
- comment_lines ( STRING [, STRING… ])
- Comments lines following core.commentchar configuration.
ERROR HANDLING
All functions are supposed to throw Perl exceptions in case of errors. See the Error module on how to catch those. Most exceptions are mere Error::Simple instances.
However, the command(), command_oneline() and command_noisy()
functions suite can throw Git::Error::Command exceptions as well:
those are thrown when the external command returns an error code and
contain the error code as well as access to the captured command’s
output. The exception class provides the usual stringify and value
(command’s exit code) methods and in addition also a cmd_output method
that returns either an array or a string with the captured command
output (depending on the original function call context;
command_noisy() returns undef) and $<cmdline> which returns the
command and its arguments (but without proper quoting).
Note that the command_*_pipe() functions cannot throw this exception
since it has no idea whether the command failed or not. You will only
find out at the time you close the pipe; if you want to have that
automated, use command_close_pipe(), which can throw the exception.
- git_cmd_try { CODE } ERRMSG
- This magical statement will
automatically catch any
Git::Error::Commandexceptions thrown byCODEand make your program die withERRMSGon its lips; the message will have%ssubstituted for the command line and%dfor the exit status. This statement is useful mostly for producing more user-friendly error messages. In case of no exception caught the statement returnsCODE’s return value. Note that this is the only auto-exported function.
COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2006 by Petr Baudis <pasky@suse.cz>.
This module is free software; it may be used, copied, modified and distributed under the terms of the GNU General Public Licence, either version 2, or (at your option) any later version.