gitoxide
is an implementation of git
written in Rust for developing future-proof applications which strive for correctness and
performance while providing a pleasant and unsurprising developer experience.
gitoxide
provides the gix
and ein
binaries for use on the command-line to allow experimentation with key features
like fetch
and clone
, and to validate the usability and control of the API offered by the gix
crate.
gitoxide
aspires to be a production-grade server implementation and the ein
binary aspires to become the default way to interact with git repositories.
The command-line tools as well as the status of each crate is described in the crate status document.
For use in applications, look for the gix
crate,
which serves as entrypoint to the functionality provided by various lower-level plumbing crates like
gix-config
.
Can
gix
do what I need it to do?
The above can be hard to answer and this paragraph is here to help with feature discovery.
Look at crate-status.md
for a rather exhaustive document that contains
both implemented and planned features.
Further, the gix
crate documentation with the git2
search term helps to find all currently
known git2
equivalent method calls. Please note that this list is definitely not exhaustive yet, but might help if you are coming from git2
.
What follows is a high-level list of features and those which are planned:
- clone
- fetch
- blame
- push
- reset
- status
- blob-diff
- merge
- rebase
- commit
- worktree checkout and worktree stream
- reading and writing of objects
- reading and writing of refs
- reading and writing of
.git/index
- reading and writing of git configuration
- pathspecs
- revspecs
-
.gitignore
and.gitattributes
Follow linked crate name for detailed status. Please note that all crates follow semver as well as the stability guide.
-
Stability Tier 1
-
Stability Tier 2
Crates that seem feature complete and need to see some more use before they can be released as 1.0. Documentation is complete and was reviewed at least once.
These crates may be missing some features and thus are somewhat incomplete, but what's there is usable to some extent.
- usable (with rough but complete docs, possibly incomplete functionality)
- gix (β¬ entrypoint)
- gix-object
- gix-validate
- gix-url
- gix-packetline
- gix-packetline-blocking
- gix-transport
- gix-protocol
- gix-pack
- gix-odb
- gix-commitgraph
- gix-diff
- gix-traverse
- gix-features
- gix-credentials
- gix-sec
- gix-quote
- gix-discover
- gix-path
- gix-attributes
- gix-ignore
- gix-pathspec
- gix-index
- gix-revision
- gix-revwalk
- gix-command
- gix-prompt
- gix-refspec
- gix-fs
- gix-utils
- gix-hashtable
- gix-worktree
- gix-bitmap
- gix-negotiate
- gix-filter
- gix-worktree-stream
- gix-archive
- gix-submodule
- gix-status
- gix-worktree-state
gitoxide-core
- very early (possibly without any documentation and many rough edges)
- idea (just a name placeholder)
- Verify huge packs
- Explode a pack to disk
- Generate and verify large commit graphs
- Generate huge pack from a lot of loose objects
Our stability guide helps to judge how much churn can be expected when depending on crates in this workspace.
Using cargo binstall
, one is able to fetch binary releases. You can install it via cargo install cargo-binstall
, assuming
the rust toolchain is present.
Then install gitoxide with cargo binstall gitoxide
.
See the releases section for manual installation and various alternative builds that are slimmer or smaller, depending on your needs, for Linux, MacOS and Windows.
For Arch Linux you can download gitoxide
from community
repository:
pacman -S gitoxide
cargo
is the Rust package manager which can easily be obtained through rustup. With it, you can build your own binary
effortlessly and for your particular CPU for additional performance gains.
The minimum supported Rust version is documented in the CI configuration, the latest stable one will work as well.
There are various build configurations, all of them are documented here. The documentation should also be useful for packagers who need to tune external dependencies.
# A certain way to install `gitoxide` with just Rust and a C compiler installed.
# If there are problems with SSL certificates during clones, try to omit `--locked`.
cargo install gitoxide --locked --no-default-features --features max-pure
# The default installation, 'max', is the fastest, but also needs some libraries available to build successfully.
# Installing these is platform-dependent and thus can't be explained here.
cargo install gitoxide
# For smaller binaries and even faster build times that are traded for a less fancy CLI implementation, use `lean`
# or `lean-termion` respectively.
cargo install gitoxide --locked --no-default-features --features lean
The following installs the latest unpublished release directly from git:
cargo install --git https://github.com/Byron/gitoxide gitoxide
On some platforms, installation may fail due to lack of tools required by C
toolchains. This can generally be avoided by installation
with cargo install gitoxide --no-default-features --features max-pure
.
What follows is a list of known failures.
- On Fedora,
perl
needs to be installed forOpenSSL
to build properly. This can be done with the following command:dnf install perl
(see this issue).
Once installed, there are two binaries:
- ein
- high level commands, porcelain, for every-day use, optimized for a pleasant user experience
- gix
- low level commands, plumbing, for use in more specialized cases and to validate newly written code in real-world scenarios
Project goals can change over time as we learn more, and they can be challenged.
- a pure-rust implementation of git
- including transport, object database, references, cli and tui
- a simple command-line interface is provided for the most common git operations, optimized for user experience. A simple-git if you so will.
- be the go-to implementation for anyone who wants to solve problems around git, and become
the alternative to
GitPython
and libgit2 in the process. - become the foundation for a distributed alternative to GitHub, and maybe even for use within GitHub itself
- learn from the best to write the best possible idiomatic Rust
- libgit2 is a fantastic resource to see what abstractions work, we will use them
- use Rust's type system to make misuse impossible
- be the best performing implementation
- use Rust's type system to optimize for work not done without being hard to use
- make use of parallelism from the get go
- sparse checkout support from day one
- assure on-disk consistency
- assure reads never interfere with concurrent writes
- assure multiple concurrent writes don't cause trouble
- take shortcuts, but not in quality
- binaries may use
anyhow::Error
exhaustively, knowing these errors are solely user-facing. - libraries use light-weight custom errors implemented using
quick-error
orthiserror
. - internationalization is nothing we are concerned with right now.
- IO errors due to insufficient amount of open file handles don't always lead to operation failure
- binaries may use
- Cross platform support, including Windows
- With the tools and experience available here there is no reason not to support Windows.
- Windows is tested on CI and failures do prevent releases.
Project non-goals can change over time as we learn more, and they can be challenged.
- replicate
git
command functionality perfectlygit
isgit
, and there is no reason to not use it. Our path is the one of simplicity to make getting started with git easy.
- be incompatible to git
- the on-disk format must remain compatible, and we will never contend with it.
- use async IO everywhere
- for the most part, git operations are heavily reliant on memory mapped IO as well as CPU to decompress data, which doesn't lend itself well to async IO out of the box.
- Use
blocking
as well asgix-features::interrupt
to bring operations into the async world and to control long running operations. - When connecting or streaming over TCP connections, especially when receiving on the server, async seems like a must though, but behind a feature flag.
If what you have seen so far sparked your interest to contribute, then let us say: We are happy to have you and help you to get started.
βοΈNoteβοΈ: For cloning,
gix-lfs
needs to be locally installed or the checkout will fail.git lfs install
must have been called once, followed bygit lfs pull
to replace thelfs
-pointer files.
We recommend running just test check-size
during the development process to assure CI is green before pushing.
A backlog for work ready to be picked up is available in the Project's Kanban board, which contains instructions on how to pick a task. If it's empty or you have other questions, feel free to start a discussion or reach out to @Byron privately.
For additional details, also take a look at the collaboration guide.
- Learning Rust with Gitoxide
- In 17 episodes you can learn all you need to meaningfully contribute to
gitoxide
.
- In 17 episodes you can learn all you need to meaningfully contribute to
- Getting into Gitoxide
- Get an introduction to
gitoxide
itself which should be a good foundation for any contribution, but isn't a requirement for contributions either.
- Get an introduction to
- Gifting Gitoxide
- See how PRs are reviewed along with a lot of inner monologue.
Provide a CLI to for the most basic user journey:
- initialize a repository
- fetch
- and update worktree
- clone a repository
- bare
- with working tree
- create a commit after adding worktree files
- add a remote
- push
- create (thin) pack
-
gix tool open-remote
open the URL of the remote, possibly after applying known transformations to go fromssh
tohttps
. -
tix
as example implementation oftig
, displaying a version of the commit graph, useful for practicing how highly responsive GUIs can be made. - Something like
git-sizer
, but leveraging extreme decompression speeds of indexed packs. - Open up SQL for git using sqlite virtual tables. Check out gitqlite as well. What would an MVP look like? Maybe even something that could ship with gitoxide. See this go implementation as example.
- A truly awesome history rewriter which makes it easy to understand what happened while avoiding all pitfalls. Think BFG, but more awesome, if that's possible.
-
gix-tui
should learn a lot from fossil-scm regarding the presentation of data. Maybe this can be used for prompts. Probably magit has a lot to offer, too.
- A system to integrate tightly with
gix-lfs
to allow a multi-tier architecture so that assets can be stored in git and are accessible quickly from an intranet location (for example by accessing the storage read-only over the network) while changes are pushed immediately by the server to other edge locations, like the cloud or backups. Sparse checkouts along with explorer/finder integrations make it convenient to only work on a small subset of files locally. Clones can contain all configuration somebody would need to work efficiently from their location, and authentication for the git history as well as LFS resources make the system secure. One could imagine encryption support for untrusted locations in the cloud even though more research would have to be done to make it truly secure. - A syncthing like client/server application. This is to demonstrate how lower-level crates can be combined into custom applications that use only part of git's technology to achieve their very own thing. Watch out for big file support, multi-device cross-syncing, the possibility for untrusted destinations using full-encryption, case-insensitive and sensitive filesystems, and extended file attributes as well as ignore files.
- An event-based database that uses commit messages to store deltas, while occasionally aggregating the actual state in a tree. Of course it's distributed by nature, allowing
people to work offline.
- It's abstracted to completely hide the actual data model behind it, allowing for all kinds of things to be implemented on top.
- Commits probably need a nanosecond component for the timestamp, which can be added via custom header field.
- having recording all changes allows for perfect merging, both on the client or on the server, while keeping a natural audit log which makes it useful for mission critical databases in business.
- Applications
- Can markdown be used as database so issue-trackers along with meta-data could just be markdown files which are mostly human-editable? Could user interfaces
be meta-data aware and just hide the meta-data chunks which are now editable in the GUI itself? Doing this would make conflicts easier to resolve than an
sqlite
database. - A time tracker - simple data, very likely naturally conflict free, and interesting to see it in terms of teams or companies using it with maybe GitHub as Backing for authentication.
- How about supporting multiple different trackers, as in different remotes?
- Can markdown be used as database so issue-trackers along with meta-data could just be markdown files which are mostly human-editable? Could user interfaces
be meta-data aware and just hide the meta-data chunks which are now editable in the GUI itself? Doing this would make conflicts easier to resolve than an
Please take a look at the SHORTCOMINGS.md
file for details.
- itertools (MIT Licensed)
- We use the
izip!
macro in code
- We use the
- deflate2 (MIT Licensed)
- We use various abstractions to implement decompression and compression directly on top of the rather low-level
miniz_oxide
crate
- We use various abstractions to implement decompression and compression directly on top of the rather low-level
At least for now this section is exclusive to highlight the incredible support that Josh Triplett has provided to me
in the form of advice, sponsorship and countless other benefits that were incredibly meaningful. Going full time with gitoxide
would hardly have been
feasible without his involvement, and I couldn't be more grateful π.
This project is licensed under either of
- Apache License, Version 2.0, (LICENSE-APACHE or http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0)
- MIT license (LICENSE-MIT or http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT)
at your option.
- Originally @Byron was really fascinated by this problem
and believes that with
gitoxide
it will be possible to provide the fastest solution for it. - @Byron has been absolutely blown away by
git
from the first time he experienced git more than 13 years ago, and tried to implement it in various shapes and forms multiple times. Now with Rust @Byron finally feels to have found the right tool for the job!