git-river
is a tool designed to make it easier to work with large
numbers of GitHub and GitLab projects and "forking" workflow that involve
pulling changes from "upstream" repositories and pushing to "downstream"
repositories.
git-river
will manage a "workspace" path you configure, cloning repositories
into that directory with a tree-style structure organised by domain, project
namespace, and project name.
$ tree ~/workspace
~/workspace
├── github.com
│ └── datto
│ └── git-river
└── gitlab.com
└── datto
└── git-river
git-river
requires Python 3.9 or above.
pip3 install git-river
Run git-river <subcommand>
. Git's builtin aliasing also allows you to
run git river
instead.
Before you can use git-river
you must configure a workspace path by running
git-river init PATH
or setting the GIT_RIVER_WORKSPACE
environment variable.
This should point to a directory git-river
can use to clone git repositories
into.
Several commands will attempt to discover various names, and usually have an option flag to override discovery.
- The "upstream" remote is the first of
upstream
ororigin
that exists. Override with--upstream
. - The "downstream" remote is the first of
downstream
that exists. Override with--downstream
. - The "mainline" branch is the first of
main
ormaster
that exists. Override with--mainline
.
-
git river clone URL...
clones a repository into the workspace path. -
git river config
manages the configuration file.git river config display
prints the loaded configuration as JSON. Credentials are redacted.git river config init
creates an initial config file.git river config workspace
prints the workspace path.
-
git river forge
manages repositories listed by GitHub and GitLab.git river forge
runs theclone
+archived
+configure
+remotes
subcommands.git river forge clone
clones repositories.git river forge configure
sets git config options.git river forge fetch
fetches each git remote.git river forge list
displays remote repositories that will be cloned.git river forge remotes
setsupstream
+downstream
ororigin
remotes.git river forge tidy
deletes branches merged into the mainline branch.git river forge archived
lists archived repositories that exist locally.
-
git river
also provides some "loose" subcommands that work on the repository in the current directory, mostly matching the features from theforge
subcommand.git river fetch
fetches all git remotes.git river merge
creates the merge result of allfeature/*
branches.git river tidy
deletes branches merged into the mainline branch.git river restart
rebases the current branch from the upstream remotes mainline branch.
Configuration is a JSON object read from ~/.config/git-river/config.json
. Run
git-river config init
to create an example configuration file.
path
- path to a directory to use as the "workspace".forges
- a map of forges.
Forges have the following options. Only type
is required - the default
configuration is to use the main public GitHub or GitLab domain without
authentication.
type
(required) - The type of the instance, eithergithub
orgitlab
.base_url
(optional) - Base url of the instance. Should not include a trailing slash.- Default for GitHub instances is
https://api.github.com
. - Default for GitLab instances is
https://gitlab.com
.
- Default for GitHub instances is
login_or_token
(optional, GitHub only) - Authentication token.private_token
(optional, GitLab only) - Authentication token.gitconfig
(default:{}
) - A key-value map of git config options to set on repositories.groups
(default:[]
) - Include repositories from specific groups.users
(default:[]
) - Include repositories from specific users.self
(default:true
) - Automatically include the authenticated user's repositories.
{
"workspace": "~/Development",
"forges": {
"gitlab": {
"type": "gitlab",
"base_url": "https://gitlab.com",
"private_token": "...",
"groups": [],
"users": [],
"self": true,
"gitconfig": {
"user.email": "[email protected]"
}
},
"github": {
"type": "github",
"login_or_token": "...",
"groups": [],
"users": [],
"gitconfig": {
"user.email": "[email protected]"
}
}
}
}
Poetry is used to develop, build, and package git-river. Poetry's
documentation describes how to install it on your OS. Once you've
installed it, create a virtual environment containing git-river and it's
dependencies with poetry install
.
You can then run the local version of the CLI with poetry run git-river
.
Code is formatted using black, run with poetry run black git_river
.
Types are checked using mypy, run with poetry run mypy git_river
.
Tests are written using pytest, run with poetry run pytest
.
# Download the project and install dependencies
git clone https://github.com/datto/git-river.git
cd git-river
poetry install
# Use the local version of the CLI
poetry run git-river ...
# Test, lint and format code
poetry run black git_river
poetry run mypy git_river
poetry run pytest
Licensed under the Mozilla Public License Version 2.0.
Copyright Datto, Inc.
Authored by Sam Clements.