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Git::Wrapper

Perl wrapper for git(7) command line interface

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NAME

Git::Wrapper - Wrap git(7) command-line interface

VERSION

version 0.032

SYNOPSIS

my $git = Git::Wrapper->new('/var/foo');

$git->commit(...)
print $_->message for $git->log;

# specify which git binary to use
my $git = Git::Wrapper->new({
  dir        => '/var/foo ,
  git_binary => '/path/to/git/bin/git' ,
});

DESCRIPTION

Git::Wrapper provides an API for git(7) that uses Perl data structures for argument passing, instead of CLI-style --options as Git does.

METHOD INVOCATION

Except as documented, every git subcommand is available as a method on a Git::Wrapper object. Replace any hyphens in the git command with underscores (for example, 'git init-db' would become $git-init_db>).

Method Arguments

Methods accept a combination of hashrefs and scalars, which is used to build the command used to invoke git. Arguments passed in hashrefs will be automatically parsed into option pairs, but the ordering of these in the resulting shell command is not guaranteed (with the exception of options with a leading '-'; see below). Options that are passed as plain scalars will retain their order. Some examples may help clarify. This code:

$git->commit({ message => "stuff" , all => 1 });

may produce this shell command:

git commit --all --message="stuff"

This code, however:

$git->commit(qw/ --message "stuff" / , { all => 1 });

will always produce this shell command:

git commit --message "stuff" --all

In most cases, this exact control over argument ordering is not needed and simply passing all options as part of a hashref, and all other options as additional list arguments, will be sufficient. In some cases, however, the ordering of options to particular git sub-commands is significant, resulting in the need for this level of control.

N.b. Options that are given with a leading '-' (with the exception of special options noted below) are applied as arguments to the git command itself; options without a leading '-' are applied as arguments to the sub-command. For example:

$git->command({ -foo => 1 , bar => 2 });

invokes the command line

git --foo=1 command --bar=2

N.b. Because of the way arguments are parsed, should you need to pass an explicit '0' value to an option (for example, to have the same effect as --abrrev=0 on the command line), you should pass it with a leading space, like so:

$git->describe({ abbrev => ' 0' };

To pass content via STDIN, use the -STDIN option:

$git->hash_object({ stdin => 1, -STDIN => 'content to hash' });

Output is available as an array of lines, each chomped.

@sha1s_and_titles = $git->rev_list({ all => 1, pretty => 'oneline' });

Passing stringify-able objects as arguments

Objects may be passed in the place of scalars, assuming those objects overload stringification in such a way as to produce a useful value. However, relying on this stringification is discouraged and likely to be officially deprecated in a subsequent release. Instead, if you have an object that stringifies to a meaningful value (e.g., a Path::Class object), you should stringify it yourself before passing it to Git::Wrapper methods.

Error handling

If a git command exits nonzero, a Git::Wrapper::Exception object will be thrown (via die()). These objects have three useful methods:

These exception objects stringify to the error message.

METHODS

new

my $git = Git::Wrapper->new($dir);
my $git = Git::Wrapper->new({ dir => $dir , git_binary => '/path/to/git' });

# To force the git binary location
my $git = Git::Wrapper->new($dir, 'git_binary' => '/usr/local/bin/git');

git

print $git->git; # /path/to/git/binary/being/used

dir

print $git->dir; # /var/foo

version

my $version = $git->version; # 1.6.1.4.8.15.16.23.42

branch

my @branches = $git->branch;

This command intentionally disables ANSI color highlighting in the output. If you want ANSI color highlighting, you'll need to bypass via the RUN() method (see below).

log

my @logs = $git->log;

Instead of giving back an arrayref of lines, the log method returns a list of Git::Wrapper::Log objects. They have four methods:

has_git_in_path

This method returns a true or false value indicating if there is a 'git' binary in the current $PATH.

supports_status_porcelain

supports_log_no_abbrev_commit

supports_log_raw_dates

supports_hash_object_filters

These methods return a true or false value (1 or 0) indicating whether the git binary being used has support for these options. (The '--porcelain' option on 'git status', the '--no-abbrev-commit' and '--date=raw' options on 'git log', and the '--no-filters' option on 'git hash-object' respectively.)

These are primarily for use in this distribution's test suite, but may also be useful when writing code using Git::Wrapper that might be run with different versions of the underlying git binary.

status

When running with an underlying git binary that returns false for the "supports_status_porcelain" method, this method will act like any other wrapped command: it will return output as an array of chomped lines.

When running with an underlying git binary that returns true for the "supports_status_porcelain" method, this method instead returns an instance of Git::Wrapper::Statuses:

my $statuses = $git->status;

Git::Wrapper:Statuses has two public methods. First, is_dirty:

my $dirty_flag = $statuses->is_dirty;

which returns a true/false value depending on whether the repository has any uncommitted changes.

Second, get:

my @status = $statuses->get($group)

which returns an array of Git::Wrapper::Status objects, one per file changed.

There are four status groups, each of which may contain zero or more changes.

Note that a single file can occur in more than one group. Eg, a modified file that has been added to the index will appear in the 'indexed' list. If it is subsequently further modified it will additionally appear in the 'changed' group.

A Git::Wrapper::Status object has three methods you can call:

my $from = $status->from;

The file path of the changed file, relative to the repo root. For renames, this is the original path.

my $to = $status->to;

Renames returns the new path/name for the path. In all other cases returns an empty string.

my $mode = $status->mode;

Indicates what has changed about the file.

Within each group (except 'conflict') a file can be in one of a number of modes, although some modes only occur in some groups (eg, 'added' never appears in the 'unknown' group).

All files in the 'unknown' group will have a mode of 'unknown' (which is redundant but at least consistent).

The 'conflict' group instead has the following modes.

See git-status man page for more details.

Example

my $git = Git::Wrapper->new('/path/to/git/repo');
my $statuses = $git->status;
for my $type (qw<indexed changed unknown conflict>) {
    my @states = $statuses->get($type)
        or next;
    print "Files in state $type\n";
    for (@states) {
        print '  ', $_->mode, ' ', $_->from;
        print ' renamed to ', $_->to
            if $_->mode eq 'renamed';
        print "\n";
    }
}

RUN

This method bypasses the output rearranging performed by some of the wrapped methods described above (i.e., log, status, etc.). This can be useful in various situations, such as when you want to produce a particular log output format that isn't compatible with the way Git::Wrapper constructs Git::Wrapper::Log, or when you want raw git status output that isn't parsed into a Git::Wrapper::Status object.

This method should be called with an initial string argument of the git subcommand you want to run, followed by a hashref containing options and their values, and then a list of any other arguments.

Example

my $git = Git::Wrapper->new( '/path/to/git/repo' );

# the 'log' method returns Git::Wrapper::Log objects
my @log_objects = $git->log();

# while 'RUN('log')' returns an array of chomped lines
my @log_lines = $git->RUN('log');

ERR

After a command has been run, this method will return anything that was sent to STDERR, in the form of an array of chomped lines. This information will be cleared as soon as a new command is executed. This method should *NOT* be used as a success/failure check, as git will sometimes produce output on STDERR when a command is successful.

OUT

After a command has been run, this method will return anything that was sent to STDOUT, in the form of an array of chomped lines. It is identical to what is returned from the method call that runs the command, and is provided simply for symmetry with the ERR method. This method should *NOT* be used as a success/failure check, as git will frequently not have any output with a successful command.

COMPATIBILITY

On Win32 Git::Wrapper is incompatible with msysGit installations earlier than Git-1.7.1-preview20100612 due to a bug involving the return value of a git command in cmd/git.cmd. If you use the msysGit version distributed with GitExtensions or an earlier version of msysGit, tests will fail during installation of this module. You can get the latest version of msysGit on the Google Code project page: http://code.google.com/p/msysgit/downloads

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES

Git::Wrapper normally uses the first 'git' binary in your path. The original override provided to change this was by setting the GIT_WRAPPER_GIT environment variable. Now that object creation accepts an override, you are encouraged to instead pass the binary location (git_binary) to new on object creation.

SEE ALSO

VCI::VCS::Git is the git implementation for VCI, a generic interface to version-control systems.

Other Perl Git Wrappers is a list of other Git interfaces in Perl. If Git::Wrapper doesn't scratch your itch, possibly one of the modules listed there will.

Git itself is at http://git.or.cz.

REPORTING BUGS & OTHER WAYS TO CONTRIBUTE

The code for this module is maintained on GitHub, at https://github.com/genehack/Git-Wrapper. If you have a patch, feel free to fork the repository and submit a pull request. If you find a bug, please open an issue on the project at GitHub. (We also watch the http://rt.cpan.org queue for Git::Wrapper, so feel free to use that bug reporting system if you prefer)

AUTHORS

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

This software is copyright (c) 2014 by Hans Dieter Pearcey.

This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.