Crates.io | confit |
lib.rs | confit |
version | 1.3.2 |
source | src |
created_at | 2021-07-13 22:44:08.775767 |
updated_at | 2021-09-01 17:30:51.618972 |
description | Making sure your work is properly preserved |
homepage | https://indiecc.com/~nyarly/confit |
repository | https://github.com/nyarly/confit |
max_upload_size | |
id | 422489 |
size | 246,365 |
Making sure your work is properly preserved (in git)!
For example:
⮀ confit
all files tracked: true
no unstaged changes: false
no uncommited changes: true
commit tracked by local ref: true
branch tracks remote: true
all commits merged from remote: true
all commits pushed to remote: true
current commit is tagged: false
tag is pushed: false
⮀ echo $?
18
The error code is computed by bitwise OR of various "families" of commit checking.
A quick summary of other features is in the command-line help text:
Confit 1.1.1
Judson <nyarly@gmail.com>
Generates reports about the state of version control for the current workspace.
Git status is collected, and then a series of checks are run on it to establish
that the contents of the workspace are stored, synchronized and recoverable.
The results of these checks are then formatted into a report via a selectable
template.
These reports help confirm that you've properly committed, pushed and tagged
your work. This can help smooth collaboration with other humans, as well as
reduce the problem surface when debugging automated tools, like continuous
integration systems.
USAGE:
confit [FLAGS] [OPTIONS]
FLAGS:
--debug outputs debug data
-h, --help Prints help information
-q, --quiet suppress normal state summary; scripts can rely on the status code
-V, --version Prints version information
OPTIONS:
-c, --checks <checks>... [possible values: commit, detached,
git_prompt, local, merge, push, push_tag, stage, tag, track_files, track_remote]
-f, --format <format> choose a format for output [default: summary]
[possible values: summary, statusline, debug]
EXAMPLES
> confit --checks git_prompt --format statusline
main|+3?2
In a fish_prompt.fish:
set -l statusline (confit -c git_prompt -f statusline)
test $status -lt 128; and echo -n "⭠ "$statusline
Two of the options to --checks are special: they select groups of checks:
'git_prompt' (suitable for a command line prompt function) and 'local', which
includes only those checks that don't require data collection from the git
remote, which can be useful e.g. to avoid authenticating, or network delays.
The checks performed on the workspace determine what data needs to be
collected. You can select which checks to perform with the --checks flag.
To aid machine use of this tool, its exit status is significant.
Anything over 127 indicates errors running git (for instance: not in a git
workspace), or rendering templates.
Statuses less than or equal to 127 are the bitwise OR of the "status group" of
any failing checks. Those groups are:
2: Local files uncommitted (unknown, only staged, etc.)
4: Commits unrecorded to the remote
8: Remote commits not pulled
16: Commit not tagged, or tag not pushed
Confit is designed to address a simple but very common problem: the question of whether one's work has been properly and completely commited to version control becomes moderately complicated in Git. This is enough of a problem that people make jokes about pushing your work before leaving the building in the event of a fire. More seriously, reproduceable continuous deployment relies on being able to recover the particular state of code that is represented by a deployed artifact.
Over time, many ad hoc solutions have been produced to address these needs, variously parsing different aspects of Git output, in order to print command line prompts, or manage releases, or prepare for code generation, etc, etc.
To my knowledge, no single tool answers the question "is this code complete and properly saved?" Thus, Confit was inspired.
Confit runs git
to establish the state of the current workspace.
It uses a Nom parser
to quickly interpret
the results,
and then templates out a report of
nine criteria it uses to define
a "well preserved" workspace.
Not all use cases require all the criteria;
two of them, notably,
require network access to check.
Therefore, confit
has a flag
to select which checks to run,
as well as two "group" tags:
local
which bundles checks that don't require network access,
and
git_prompt
which also excludes the tagging related checks.
Further,
confit
has flags to select formatting;
most notably, there is
summary
(which is the default format)
and
statusline
which is suitable for use
in shell prompts.
This package is licensed under the Indie Code Catalog Free License, with commercial use available for purchase.