Ben Kurtovic deb9d52cfc | преди 13 години | |
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.gitignore | преди 13 години | |
LICENSE | преди 13 години | |
README.md | преди 13 години |
gitup (the git-repo-updater)
gitup is a tool designed to pull to a large number of git repositories at once. It is smart enough to ignore projects with dirty working directories, and provides a great way to get everything up-to-date for those short periods of internet access between long periods of none.
gitup works on both OS X and Linux. You should have the latest version of git and at least Python 2.7 installed.
First:
git clone git://github.com/earwig/git-repo-updater.git
cd git-repo-updater
Then, to install for everyone:
sudo python setup.py install
...or for just yourself (make sure you have ~/.local/bin
in your PATH):
python setup.py install --user
Finally, simply delete the git-repo-updater
directory, and you’re done!
There are two ways to update projects: you can pass them as command arguments, or save them as “bookmarks”.
For example:
gitup ~/projects/foo ~/projects/bar ~/projects/baz
...will automatically pull to the foo
, bar
, and baz
git repositories if
their working directories are clean (to avoid merge conflicts). Additionally,
you can just type:
gitup ~/projects
...to automatically update all git repositories in that directory.
To add a bookmark (or bookmarks), either of these will work:
gitup --add ~/projects/foo ~/projects/bar ~/projects/baz
gitup --add ~/projects
Then, to update (pull to) all of your bookmarks, just run gitup without args:
gitup
Deleting a bookmark is as easy as adding one:
gitup --delete ~/projects
Want to view your current bookmarks? Simple:
gitup --list
You can mix and match bookmarks and command arguments:
gitup --add ~/projects/foo ~/projects/bar
gitup ~/projects/baz # update 'baz' only
gitup # update 'foo' and 'bar' only
gitup ~/projects/baz --update # update all three!
Want to update all git projects in your current directory?
gitup .
For a list of all command arguments and abbreviations:
gitup --help
Finally, all paths can be either absolute (e.g. /path/to/project) or relative (e.g. ../my/project).