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3.6 KiB
3.6 KiB
GitStats
GitStats is a git repository statistics generator. It browses the repository and outputs html page with statistics.
Examples
Installation
Existing ruby/gem environment
$ gem install git_stats
debian stretch (9.*)
# apt-get install ruby ruby-nokogiri ruby-nokogiri-diff ruby-nokogumbo
# gem install git_stats
Ubuntu
$ sudo apt-get install ruby ruby-dev
$ sudo gem install git_stats
Usage
Generator
Print help
$ git_stats
Commands:
git_stats generate # Generates the statistics of a repository
git_stats help [COMMAND] # Describe available commands or one specific command
Print help of the generate command
$ git_stats help generate
Usage:
git_stats generate
Options:
p, [--path=PATH] # Path to repository from which statistics should be generated.
# Default: .
o, [--out-path=OUT_PATH] # Output path where statistics should be written.
# Default: ./git_stats
l, [--language=LANGUAGE] # Language of written statistics.
# Default: en
f, [--first-commit-sha=FIRST_COMMIT_SHA] # Commit from where statistics should start.
t, [--last-commit-sha=LAST_COMMIT_SHA] # Commit where statistics should stop.
# Default: HEAD
s, [--silent], [--no-silent] # Silent mode. Don't output anything.
d, [--tree=TREE] # Tree where statistics should be generated.
# Default: .
c, [--comment-string=COMMENT_STRING] # The string which is used for comments.
# Default: //
Generates the statistics of a repository
Start generator with default settings
$ git_stats generate
git rev-list --pretty=format:'%h|%at|%ai|%aE' HEAD | grep -v commit
git shortlog -se HEAD
...
Start generator with some parameters in long and short form.
$ git_stats generate -o stats --langugage de
git rev-list --pretty=format:'%h|%at|%ai|%aE' HEAD | grep -v commit
git shortlog -se HEAD
...
API usage example
> repo = GitStats::GitData::Repo.new(path: '.', first_commit_sha: 'abcd1234', last_commit_sha: 'HEAD')
> repo.authors
=> [...]
> repo.commits
=> [...]
> commit.files
=> [...]
Contributing
- Fork it
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Added some feature'
) - Make sure to add tests for it. This is important so I don't break it in a future version unintentionally.
- Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create new Pull Request