/rugged

ruby bindings to libgit2

Primary LanguageCMIT LicenseMIT

Rugged

libgit2 bindings in Ruby

Rugged is a library for accessing libgit2 in Ruby. It gives you the speed and portability of libgit2 with the beauty of the Ruby language.

libgit2

libgit2 is a pure C implementation of the Git core methods. It's designed to be fast and portable. For more information about libgit2, check out libgit2's website or browse the libgit2 organization on GitHub.

Install

Rugged is a self-contained gem. You can install it by running:

$ gem install rugged

You need to have CMake installed on your system to be able to build the included version of libgit2. If you want to build Rugged with HTTPS and SSH support, check out the list of optional libgit2 dependencies.

If you're using bundler and want to bundle libgit2 with Rugged, you can use the :submodules option:

gem 'rugged', git: 'git://github.com/libgit2/rugged.git', branch: 'development', submodules: true

To load Rugged, you'll usually want to add something like this:

require 'rugged'

Usage

Rugged gives you access to the many parts of a Git repository. You can read and write objects, walk a tree, access the staging area, and lots more. Let's look at each area individually.

Repositories

Instantiation

The repository is naturally central to Git. Rugged has a Repository class that you can instantiate with a path to open an existing repository :

repo = Rugged::Repository.new('path/to/my/repository')
# => #<Rugged::Repository:2228536260 {path: "path/to/my/repository/.git/"}>

You can create a new repository with init_at. Add a second parameter :bare to make a bare repository:

Rugged::Repository.init_at('.', :bare)

You can also let Rugged discover the path to the .git directory if you give it a subdirectory.

Rugged::Repository.discover("/Users/me/projects/repo/lib/subdir/")
# => "/Users/me/projects/repo/.git/"

Once your Repository instantiated (in the following examples, as repo), you can access or modify it.

Accessing a Repository

# Does the given SHA1 exist in this repository?
repo.exists?('07b44cbda23b726e5d54e2ef383495922c024202')
# => true

# Boolean repository state values:
repo.bare?
# => false
repo.empty?
# => true
repo.head_orphan?
# => false
repo.head_detached?
# => false

# Path accessors
repo.path
# => "path/to/my/repository/.git/"
repo.workdir
# => "path/to/my/repository/"

# The HEAD of the repository.
ref = repo.head
# => #<Rugged::Reference:2228467240 {name: "refs/heads/master", target: "07b44cbda23b726e5d54e2ef383495922c024202"}>

# From the returned ref, you can also access the `name` and `target`:
ref.name
# => "refs/heads/master"
ref.target
# => "07b44cbda23b726e5d54e2ef383495922c024202"

# Reading an object
object = repo.read('a0ae5566e3c8a3bddffab21022056f0b5e03ef07')
# => #<Rugged::OdbObject:0x109a64780>
object.len
# => 237
object.data
# => "tree 76f23f186076fc291742816721ea8c3e95567241\nparent 8e3c5c52b8f29da0adc7e8be8a037cbeaea6de6b\nauthor Vicent Mart\303\255 <tanoku@gmail.com> 1333859005 +0200\ncommitter Vicent Mart\303\255 <tanoku@gmail.com> 1333859005 +0200\n\nAdd `Repository#blob_at`\n"
object.type
# => :commit

Writing to a Repository

There's a few ways to write to a repository. To write directly from your instantiated repository object:

sha = repo.write(content, type)

You can also use the Commit object directly to craft a commit; this is a bit more high-level, so it may be preferable:

oid = repo.write("This is a blob.", :blob)
index = Rugged::Index.new
index.add(:path => "README.md", :oid => oid, :mode => 0100644)

options = {}
options[:tree] = index.write_tree(repo)

options[:author] = { :email => "testuser@github.com", :name => 'Test Author', :time => Time.now }
options[:committer] = { :email => "testuser@github.com", :name => 'Test Author', :time => Time.now }
options[:message] ||= "Making a commit via Rugged!"
options[:parents] = repo.empty? ? [] : [ repo.head.target ].compact
options[:update_ref] = 'HEAD'

Rugged::Commit.create(repo, options)

Objects

Object is the main object class - it shouldn't be created directly, but all of these methods should be useful in their derived classes.

obj = repo.lookup(sha)
obj.oid  # object sha
obj.type # One of :commit, :tree, :blob or :tag

robj = obj.read_raw
str  = robj.data
int  = robj.len

There are four base object types in Git: blobs, commits, tags, and trees. Each of these object types have a corresponding class within Rugged.

Commit Objects

commit = repo.lookup('a0ae5566e3c8a3bddffab21022056f0b5e03ef07')
# => #<Rugged::Commit:2245304380>

commit.message
# => "Add `Repository#blob_at`\n"

commit.time
# => Sat Apr 07 21:23:25 -0700 2012

commit.author
# => {:email=>"tanoku@gmail.com", :name=>"Vicent Mart\303\255", :time=>Sun Apr 08 04:23:25 UTC 2012}

commit.tree
# => #<Rugged::Tree:2245269740>

commit.parents
# => [#<Rugged::Commit:2245264600 {message: "Merge pull request #47 from isaac/remotes\n\nAdd Rugged::Repository#remotes", tree: #<Rugged::Tree:2245264240 {oid: 6a2aee58a41fa007d07aa55565e2231f9b39b4a9}>]

You can also write new objects to the database this way:

author = {:email=>"tanoku@gmail.com", :time=>Time.now, :name=>"Vicent Mart\303\255"}

Rugged::Commit.create(r,
	:author => author,
	:message => "Hello world\n\n",
	:committer => author,
	:parents => ["2cb831a8aea28b2c1b9c63385585b864e4d3bad1"],
	:tree => some_tree,
	:update_ref => "HEAD") #=> "f148106ca58764adc93ad4e2d6b1d168422b9796"

Tag Objects

tag  = repo.lookup(tag_sha)

object = tag.target
sha    = tag.target.oid
str    = tag.target_type # :commit, :tag, :blob
str    = tag.name        # "v1.0"
str    = tag.message
person = tag.tagger

Tree Objects

tree = repo.lookup('779fbb1e17e666832773a9825875300ea736c2da')
# => #<Rugged::Tree:2245194360>

# number of tree entries
tree.count

tree[0]           # or...
tree.first        # or...
tree.get_entry(0)
# => {:type=>:blob, :oid=>"99e7edb53db9355f10c6f2dfaa5a183f205d93bf", :filemode=>33188, :name=>".gitignore"}

The tree object is an Enumerable, so you can also do stuff like this:

tree.each { |e| puts e[:oid] }
tree.sort { |a, b| a[:oid] <=> b[:oid] }.map { |e| e[:name] }.join(':')

And there are some Rugged-specific methods, too:

tree.each_tree { |entry| puts entry[:name] }  # list subdirs
tree.each_blob { |entry| puts entry[:name] }  # list only files

You can also write trees with the TreeBuilder:

oid = repo.write("This is a blob.", :blob)
builder = Rugged::Tree::Builder.new
builder << { :type => :blob, :name => "README.md", :oid => oid, :filemode => 0100644 }

options = {}
options[:tree] = builder.write(repo)

options[:author] = { :email => "testuser@github.com", :name => 'Test Author', :time => Time.now }
options[:committer] = { :email => "testuser@github.com", :name => 'Test Author', :time => Time.now }
options[:message] ||= "Making a commit via Rugged!"
options[:parents] = repo.empty? ? [] : [ repo.head.target ].compact
options[:update_ref] = 'HEAD'

Rugged::Commit.create(repo, options)

Commit Walker

Rugged::Walker is a class designed to help you traverse a set of commits over a repository.

You first push head SHAs onto the walker, and then call next to get a list of the reachable commit objects one at a time. You can also hide() commits if you are not interested in anything beneath them (useful in situations like when you're running something like git log master ^origin/master).

walker = Rugged::Walker.new(repo)
walker.sorting(Rugged::SORT_TOPO | Rugged::SORT_REVERSE) # optional
walker.push(hex_sha_interesting)
walker.hide(hex_sha_uninteresting)
walker.each { |c| puts c.inspect }
walker.reset

Index ("staging") area

We can inspect and manipulate the Git Index as well. To work with the index inside an existing repository, instantiate it by using the Repository.index method instead of manually opening the Index by its path.

index = Rugged::Index.new(path)

# Re-read the index file from disk.
index.reload

# Count up index entries.
count = index.count

# The collection of index entries.
index.entries

# Iterating over index entries.
index.each { |i| puts i.inspect }

# Get a particular entry in the index.
index[path]

# Unstage.
index.remove(path)

# Stage. Also updates existing entry if there is one.
index.add(ientry)

# Stage. Create ientry from file in path, updates the index.
index.add(path)

Refs

You can access references through the Rugged::ReferenceCollection object returned by Repository#references.

ref = repo.references["refs/heads/master"]

sha = ref.target_id
str = ref.type   # :direct
str = ref.name   # "refs/heads/master"

You can also easily iterate over all references:

repo.references.each do |ref|
  puts ref.name
end

Or only over references that match the given pattern (glob):

repo.references.each("refs/tags/*") do |ref|
  puts ref.name
end

It is also easy to create, update, rename or delete a reference:

ref = repo.references.create("refs/heads/unit_test", some_commit_sha)

repo.references.update(ref, new_sha) # or...
repo.references.update("refs/heads/unit_test", new_sha)

repo.references.rename(ref, "refs/heads/blead") # or...
repo.references.rename("refs/heads/unit_test", "refs/heads/blead")

repo.references.delete(ref) # or...
repo.references.delete("refs/heads/unit_test") # or...

Finally, you can access the reflog for any branch:

ref = repo.references["refs/heads/master"]
entry = ref.log.first
sha   = entry[:id_old]
sha   = entry[:id_new]
str   = entry[:message]
prsn  = entry[:committer]

Branches

The Rugged::BranchCollection object returned by Repository#branches will help you with all of your branch-related needs.

Iterate over all branches:

repo.branches.each_name().sort
# => ["master", "origin/HEAD", "origin/master", "origin/packed"]

repo.branches.each_name(:local).sort
# => ["master"]

repo.branches.each_name(:remote).sort
# => ["origin/HEAD", "origin/master", "origin/packed"]

Look up branches and get attributes:

branch = repo.branches["master"]
branch.name # => 'master'
branch.canonical_name # => 'refs/heads/master'

Look up the id for the target of a branch:

repo.branches["master"].target_id
# => "36060c58702ed4c2a40832c51758d5344201d89a"

Creation and deletion:

branch = repo.branches.create("test_branch", "HEAD")

repo.branches.rename("test_branch", "new_branch") # or...
repo.branches.rename("refs/heads/test_branch", "new_branch") # or...
repo.branches.rename(ref, "new_branch") # or...

repo.branches.delete("test_branch") # or...
repo.branches.delete("refs/heads/test_branch") # or...
repo.branches.delete(ref) # or...

Config files

It's also easy to read and manipulate the Git config file data with Rugged.

# Read values
repo.config['core.bare']

# Set values
repo.config['user.name'] = true

# Delete values
repo.config.delete('user.name')

General methods

Rugged also includes a general library for handling basic Git operations. One of these is converting a raw sha (20 bytes) into a readable hex sha (40 characters).

Rugged.hex_to_raw('bfde59cdd0dfac1d892814f66a95641abd8a1faf')
# => "\277\336Y\315\320\337\254\035\211(\024\366j\225d\032\275\212\037\257"

Rugged.raw_to_hex("\277\336Y\315\320\337\254\035\211(\024\366j\225d\032\275\212\037\257")
=> "bfde59cdd0dfac1d892814f66a95641abd8a1faf"

Contributing

Fork libgit2/rugged on GitHub, make it awesomer (preferably in a branch named for the topic), send a pull request.

Development

Simply clone and install:

$ git clone https://github.com/libgit2/rugged.git
$ cd rugged
$ bundle install
$ rake compile
$ rake test

Support

We encourage you to use StackOverflow for any questions or concerns regarding Rugged. Please tag your questions with the rugged keyword.

For bug reports, please open a ticket on the GitHub issue tracker.

Authors

License

MIT. See LICENSE file.