summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/examples/general.c
blob: d7a58479c3b64331e9a73c0407fc7ba2cdb0b375 (plain)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
394
395
396
397
398
399
400
401
402
403
404
405
406
407
408
409
410
411
412
413
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
431
432
433
434
435
436
437
438
439
440
441
442
443
444
445
446
447
448
449
450
451
452
453
454
455
456
457
458
459
460
461
462
463
464
465
466
467
468
469
470
471
472
473
474
475
476
477
478
479
480
481
482
483
484
485
486
487
488
489
490
491
492
493
494
495
496
497
498
499
500
501
502
503
504
505
506
507
508
509
510
511
512
513
514
// [**libgit2**][lg] is a portable, pure C implementation of the Git core
// methods provided as a re-entrant linkable library with a solid API,
// allowing you to write native speed custom Git applications in any
// language which supports C bindings.
//
// This file is an example of using that API in a real, compilable C file.
// As the API is updated, this file will be updated to demonstrate the new
// functionality.
//
// If you're trying to write something in C using [libgit2][lg], you should
// also check out the generated [API documentation][ap]. We try to link to
// the relevant sections of the API docs in each section in this file.
//
// **libgit2** (for the most part) only implements the core plumbing
// functions, not really the higher level porcelain stuff. For a primer on
// Git Internals that you will need to know to work with Git at this level,
// check out [Chapter 9][pg] of the Pro Git book.
//
// [lg]: http://libgit2.github.com
// [ap]: http://libgit2.github.com/libgit2
// [pg]: http://progit.org/book/ch9-0.html

// ### Includes

// Including the `git2.h` header will include all the other libgit2 headers
// that you need.  It should be the only thing you need to include in order
// to compile properly and get all the libgit2 API.
#include <git2.h>
#include <stdio.h>

// Almost all libgit2 functions return 0 on success or negative on error.
// This is not production quality error checking, but should be sufficient
// as an example.
static void check_error(int error_code, const char *action)
{
	if (!error_code)
		return;

	const git_error *error = giterr_last();

	printf("Error %d %s - %s\n", error_code, action,
		   (error && error->message) ? error->message : "???");

	exit(1);
}

int main (int argc, char** argv)
{
  // ### Opening the Repository

  // There are a couple of methods for opening a repository, this being the
  // simplest.  There are also [methods][me] for specifying the index file
  // and work tree locations, here we assume they are in the normal places.
	//
	// (Try running this program against tests-clar/resources/testrepo.git.)
  //
  // [me]: http://libgit2.github.com/libgit2/#HEAD/group/repository
  int error;
  const char *repo_path = (argc > 1) ? argv[1] : "/opt/libgit2-test/.git";
  git_repository *repo;

  error = git_repository_open(&repo, repo_path);
  check_error(error, "opening repository");

  // ### SHA-1 Value Conversions

  // For our first example, we will convert a 40 character hex value to the
  // 20 byte raw SHA1 value.
  printf("*Hex to Raw*\n");
  char hex[] = "4a202b346bb0fb0db7eff3cffeb3c70babbd2045";

  // The `git_oid` is the structure that keeps the SHA value. We will use
  // this throughout the example for storing the value of the current SHA
  // key we're working with.
  git_oid oid;
  git_oid_fromstr(&oid, hex);

  // Once we've converted the string into the oid value, we can get the raw
  // value of the SHA by accessing `oid.id`

  // Next we will convert the 20 byte raw SHA1 value to a human readable 40
  // char hex value.
  printf("\n*Raw to Hex*\n");
  char out[41];
  out[40] = '\0';

  // If you have a oid, you can easily get the hex value of the SHA as well.
  git_oid_fmt(out, &oid);
  printf("SHA hex string: %s\n", out);

  // ### Working with the Object Database

  // **libgit2** provides [direct access][odb] to the object database.  The
  // object database is where the actual objects are stored in Git. For
  // working with raw objects, we'll need to get this structure from the
  // repository.
  //
  // [odb]: http://libgit2.github.com/libgit2/#HEAD/group/odb
  git_odb *odb;
  git_repository_odb(&odb, repo);

  // #### Raw Object Reading

  printf("\n*Raw Object Read*\n");
  git_odb_object *obj;
  git_otype otype;
  const unsigned char *data;
  const char *str_type;

  // We can read raw objects directly from the object database if we have
  // the oid (SHA) of the object.  This allows us to access objects without
  // knowing thier type and inspect the raw bytes unparsed.
  error = git_odb_read(&obj, odb, &oid);
  check_error(error, "finding object in repository");

  // A raw object only has three properties - the type (commit, blob, tree
  // or tag), the size of the raw data and the raw, unparsed data itself.
  // For a commit or tag, that raw data is human readable plain ASCII
  // text. For a blob it is just file contents, so it could be text or
  // binary data. For a tree it is a special binary format, so it's unlikely
  // to be hugely helpful as a raw object.
  data = (const unsigned char *)git_odb_object_data(obj);
  otype = git_odb_object_type(obj);

  // We provide methods to convert from the object type which is an enum, to
  // a string representation of that value (and vice-versa).
  str_type = git_object_type2string(otype);
  printf("object length and type: %d, %s\n",
      (int)git_odb_object_size(obj),
      str_type);

  // For proper memory management, close the object when you are done with
  // it or it will leak memory.
  git_odb_object_free(obj);

  // #### Raw Object Writing

  printf("\n*Raw Object Write*\n");

  // You can also write raw object data to Git. This is pretty cool because
  // it gives you direct access to the key/value properties of Git.  Here
  // we'll write a new blob object that just contains a simple string.
  // Notice that we have to specify the object type as the `git_otype` enum.
  git_odb_write(&oid, odb, "test data", sizeof("test data") - 1, GIT_OBJ_BLOB);

  // Now that we've written the object, we can check out what SHA1 was
  // generated when the object was written to our database.
  git_oid_fmt(out, &oid);
  printf("Written Object: %s\n", out);

  // ### Object Parsing

  // libgit2 has methods to parse every object type in Git so you don't have
  // to work directly with the raw data. This is much faster and simpler
  // than trying to deal with the raw data yourself.

  // #### Commit Parsing

  // [Parsing commit objects][pco] is simple and gives you access to all the
  // data in the commit - the author (name, email, datetime), committer
  // (same), tree, message, encoding and parent(s).
  //
  // [pco]: http://libgit2.github.com/libgit2/#HEAD/group/commit

  printf("\n*Commit Parsing*\n");

  git_commit *commit;
  git_oid_fromstr(&oid, "8496071c1b46c854b31185ea97743be6a8774479");

  error = git_commit_lookup(&commit, repo, &oid);
  check_error(error, "looking up commit");

  const git_signature *author, *cmtter;
  const char *message;
  time_t ctime;
  unsigned int parents, p;

  // Each of the properties of the commit object are accessible via methods,
  // including commonly needed variations, such as `git_commit_time` which
  // returns the author time and `git_commit_message` which gives you the
  // commit message (as a NUL-terminated string).
  message  = git_commit_message(commit);
  author   = git_commit_author(commit);
  cmtter   = git_commit_committer(commit);
  ctime    = git_commit_time(commit);

  // The author and committer methods return [git_signature] structures,
  // which give you name, email and `when`, which is a `git_time` structure,
  // giving you a timestamp and timezone offset.
  printf("Author: %s (%s)\n", author->name, author->email);

  // Commits can have zero or more parents. The first (root) commit will
  // have no parents, most commits will have one (i.e. the commit it was
  // based on) and merge commits will have two or more.  Commits can
  // technically have any number, though it's rare to have more than two.
  parents  = git_commit_parentcount(commit);
  for (p = 0;p < parents;p++) {
    git_commit *parent;
    git_commit_parent(&parent, commit, p);
    git_oid_fmt(out, git_commit_id(parent));
    printf("Parent: %s\n", out);
    git_commit_free(parent);
  }

  // Don't forget to close the object to prevent memory leaks. You will have
  // to do this for all the objects you open and parse.
  git_commit_free(commit);

  // #### Writing Commits

  // libgit2 provides a couple of methods to create commit objects easily as
  // well. There are four different create signatures, we'll just show one
  // of them here.  You can read about the other ones in the [commit API
  // docs][cd].
  //
  // [cd]: http://libgit2.github.com/libgit2/#HEAD/group/commit

  printf("\n*Commit Writing*\n");
  git_oid tree_id, parent_id, commit_id;
  git_tree *tree;
  git_commit *parent;

  // Creating signatures for an authoring identity and time is simple.  You
  // will need to do this to specify who created a commit and when.  Default
  // values for the name and email should be found in the `user.name` and
  // `user.email` configuration options.  See the `config` section of this
  // example file to see how to access config values.
  git_signature_new((git_signature **)&author,
      "Scott Chacon", "schacon@gmail.com", 123456789, 60);
  git_signature_new((git_signature **)&cmtter,
      "Scott A Chacon", "scott@github.com", 987654321, 90);

  // Commit objects need a tree to point to and optionally one or more
  // parents.  Here we're creating oid objects to create the commit with,
  // but you can also use
  git_oid_fromstr(&tree_id, "f60079018b664e4e79329a7ef9559c8d9e0378d1");
  git_tree_lookup(&tree, repo, &tree_id);
  git_oid_fromstr(&parent_id, "5b5b025afb0b4c913b4c338a42934a3863bf3644");
  git_commit_lookup(&parent, repo, &parent_id);

  // Here we actually create the commit object with a single call with all
  // the values we need to create the commit.  The SHA key is written to the
  // `commit_id` variable here.
  git_commit_create_v(
    &commit_id, /* out id */
    repo,
    NULL, /* do not update the HEAD */
    author,
    cmtter,
    NULL, /* use default message encoding */
    "example commit",
    tree,
    1, parent);

  // Now we can take a look at the commit SHA we've generated.
  git_oid_fmt(out, &commit_id);
  printf("New Commit: %s\n", out);

  // #### Tag Parsing

  // You can parse and create tags with the [tag management API][tm], which
  // functions very similarly to the commit lookup, parsing and creation
  // methods, since the objects themselves are very similar.
  //
  // [tm]: http://libgit2.github.com/libgit2/#HEAD/group/tag
  printf("\n*Tag Parsing*\n");
  git_tag *tag;
  const char *tmessage, *tname;
  git_otype ttype;

  // We create an oid for the tag object if we know the SHA and look it up
  // the same way that we would a commit (or any other object).
  git_oid_fromstr(&oid, "b25fa35b38051e4ae45d4222e795f9df2e43f1d1");

  error = git_tag_lookup(&tag, repo, &oid);
  check_error(error, "looking up tag");

  // Now that we have the tag object, we can extract the information it
  // generally contains: the target (usually a commit object), the type of
  // the target object (usually 'commit'), the name ('v1.0'), the tagger (a
  // git_signature - name, email, timestamp), and the tag message.
  git_tag_target((git_object **)&commit, tag);
  tname = git_tag_name(tag);		// "test"
  ttype = git_tag_target_type(tag);	// GIT_OBJ_COMMIT (otype enum)
  tmessage = git_tag_message(tag);	// "tag message\n"
  printf("Tag Message: %s\n", tmessage);

  git_commit_free(commit);

  // #### Tree Parsing

  // [Tree parsing][tp] is a bit different than the other objects, in that
  // we have a subtype which is the tree entry.  This is not an actual
  // object type in Git, but a useful structure for parsing and traversing
  // tree entries.
  //
  // [tp]: http://libgit2.github.com/libgit2/#HEAD/group/tree
  printf("\n*Tree Parsing*\n");

  const git_tree_entry *entry;
  git_object *objt;

  // Create the oid and lookup the tree object just like the other objects.
  git_oid_fromstr(&oid, "2a741c18ac5ff082a7caaec6e74db3075a1906b5");
  git_tree_lookup(&tree, repo, &oid);

  // Getting the count of entries in the tree so you can iterate over them
  // if you want to.
  size_t cnt = git_tree_entrycount(tree); // 3
  printf("tree entries: %d\n", (int)cnt);

  entry = git_tree_entry_byindex(tree, 0);
  printf("Entry name: %s\n", git_tree_entry_name(entry)); // "hello.c"

  // You can also access tree entries by name if you know the name of the
  // entry you're looking for.
  entry = git_tree_entry_byname(tree, "README");
  git_tree_entry_name(entry); // "hello.c"

  // Once you have the entry object, you can access the content or subtree
  // (or commit, in the case of submodules) that it points to.  You can also
  // get the mode if you want.
  git_tree_entry_to_object(&objt, repo, entry); // blob

  // Remember to close the looked-up object once you are done using it
  git_object_free(objt);

  // #### Blob Parsing

  // The last object type is the simplest and requires the least parsing
  // help. Blobs are just file contents and can contain anything, there is
  // no structure to it. The main advantage to using the [simple blob
  // api][ba] is that when you're creating blobs you don't have to calculate
  // the size of the content.  There is also a helper for reading a file
  // from disk and writing it to the db and getting the oid back so you
  // don't have to do all those steps yourself.
  //
  // [ba]: http://libgit2.github.com/libgit2/#HEAD/group/blob

  printf("\n*Blob Parsing*\n");
  git_blob *blob;

  git_oid_fromstr(&oid, "1385f264afb75a56a5bec74243be9b367ba4ca08");
  git_blob_lookup(&blob, repo, &oid);

  // You can access a buffer with the raw contents of the blob directly.
  // Note that this buffer may not be contain ASCII data for certain blobs
  // (e.g. binary files): do not consider the buffer a NULL-terminated
  // string, and use the `git_blob_rawsize` attribute to find out its exact
  // size in bytes
  printf("Blob Size: %ld\n", (long)git_blob_rawsize(blob)); // 8
  git_blob_rawcontent(blob); // "content"

  // ### Revwalking

  // The libgit2 [revision walking api][rw] provides methods to traverse the
  // directed graph created by the parent pointers of the commit objects.
  // Since all commits point back to the commit that came directly before
  // them, you can walk this parentage as a graph and find all the commits
  // that were ancestors of (reachable from) a given starting point.  This
  // can allow you to create `git log` type functionality.
  //
  // [rw]: http://libgit2.github.com/libgit2/#HEAD/group/revwalk

  printf("\n*Revwalking*\n");
  git_revwalk *walk;
  git_commit *wcommit;

  git_oid_fromstr(&oid, "5b5b025afb0b4c913b4c338a42934a3863bf3644");

  // To use the revwalker, create a new walker, tell it how you want to sort
  // the output and then push one or more starting points onto the walker.
  // If you want to emulate the output of `git log` you would push the SHA
  // of the commit that HEAD points to into the walker and then start
  // traversing them.  You can also 'hide' commits that you want to stop at
  // or not see any of their ancestors.  So if you want to emulate `git log
  // branch1..branch2`, you would push the oid of `branch2` and hide the oid
  // of `branch1`.
  git_revwalk_new(&walk, repo);
  git_revwalk_sorting(walk, GIT_SORT_TOPOLOGICAL | GIT_SORT_REVERSE);
  git_revwalk_push(walk, &oid);

  const git_signature *cauth;
  const char *cmsg;

  // Now that we have the starting point pushed onto the walker, we start
  // asking for ancestors. It will return them in the sorting order we asked
  // for as commit oids.  We can then lookup and parse the commited pointed
  // at by the returned OID; note that this operation is specially fast
  // since the raw contents of the commit object will be cached in memory
  while ((git_revwalk_next(&oid, walk)) == 0) {
    error = git_commit_lookup(&wcommit, repo, &oid);
	check_error(error, "looking up commit during revwalk");

    cmsg  = git_commit_message(wcommit);
    cauth = git_commit_author(wcommit);
    printf("%s (%s)\n", cmsg, cauth->email);

    git_commit_free(wcommit);
  }

  // Like the other objects, be sure to free the revwalker when you're done
  // to prevent memory leaks.  Also, make sure that the repository being
  // walked it not deallocated while the walk is in progress, or it will
  // result in undefined behavior
  git_revwalk_free(walk);

  // ### Index File Manipulation

  // The [index file API][gi] allows you to read, traverse, update and write
  // the Git index file (sometimes thought of as the staging area).
  //
  // [gi]: http://libgit2.github.com/libgit2/#HEAD/group/index

  printf("\n*Index Walking*\n");

  git_index *index;
  unsigned int i, ecount;

  // You can either open the index from the standard location in an open
  // repository, as we're doing here, or you can open and manipulate any
  // index file with `git_index_open_bare()`. The index for the repository
  // will be located and loaded from disk.
  git_repository_index(&index, repo);

  // For each entry in the index, you can get a bunch of information
  // including the SHA (oid), path and mode which map to the tree objects
  // that are written out.  It also has filesystem properties to help
  // determine what to inspect for changes (ctime, mtime, dev, ino, uid,
  // gid, file_size and flags) All these properties are exported publicly in
  // the `git_index_entry` struct
  ecount = git_index_entrycount(index);
  for (i = 0; i < ecount; ++i) {
    const git_index_entry *e = git_index_get_byindex(index, i);

    printf("path: %s\n", e->path);
    printf("mtime: %d\n", (int)e->mtime.seconds);
    printf("fs: %d\n", (int)e->file_size);
  }

  git_index_free(index);

  // ### References

  // The [reference API][ref] allows you to list, resolve, create and update
  // references such as branches, tags and remote references (everything in
  // the .git/refs directory).
  //
  // [ref]: http://libgit2.github.com/libgit2/#HEAD/group/reference

  printf("\n*Reference Listing*\n");

  // Here we will implement something like `git for-each-ref` simply listing
  // out all available references and the object SHA they resolve to.
  git_strarray ref_list;
  git_reference_list(&ref_list, repo);

  const char *refname;
  git_reference *ref;

  // Now that we have the list of reference names, we can lookup each ref
  // one at a time and resolve them to the SHA, then print both values out.
  for (i = 0; i < ref_list.count; ++i) {
    refname = ref_list.strings[i];
    git_reference_lookup(&ref, repo, refname);

    switch (git_reference_type(ref)) {
    case GIT_REF_OID:
      git_oid_fmt(out, git_reference_target(ref));
      printf("%s [%s]\n", refname, out);
      break;

    case GIT_REF_SYMBOLIC:
      printf("%s => %s\n", refname, git_reference_symbolic_target(ref));
      break;
    default:
      fprintf(stderr, "Unexpected reference type\n");
      exit(1);
    }
  }

  git_strarray_free(&ref_list);

  // ### Config Files

  // The [config API][config] allows you to list and updatee config values
  // in any of the accessible config file locations (system, global, local).
  //
  // [config]: http://libgit2.github.com/libgit2/#HEAD/group/config

  printf("\n*Config Listing*\n");

  const char *email;
  int32_t j;

  git_config *cfg;

  // Open a config object so we can read global values from it.
  char config_path[256];
  sprintf(config_path, "%s/config", repo_path);
  check_error(git_config_open_ondisk(&cfg, config_path), "opening config");

  git_config_get_int32(&j, cfg, "help.autocorrect");
  printf("Autocorrect: %d\n", j);

  git_config_get_string(&email, cfg, "user.email");
  printf("Email: %s\n", email);

  // Finally, when you're done with the repository, you can free it as well.
  git_repository_free(repo);

  return 0;
}