Hit is a reimplementation of some git operations in pure haskell.
what it does do:
- read loose objects, and packed objects.
- write new loose objects
- git like operations available: commit, cat-file, verify-pack, rev-list, ls-tree.
what is doesn't do:
- reimplement the whole of git.
- checkout's index reading/writing, fetching, merging, diffing.
The main functions for users are available from the Data.Git module.
The essential functions are:
- withRepo: create a new git context and execute a function with the context. functional equivalent of withFile but for git repository.
- withCurrentRepo: similar to withRepo but found the repository from the user current directory.
- resolveRevision: turns a git revision (e.g. HEAD, 0a24^^^~3) into a SHA1 reference.
- resolvePath: from a commit ref and a path, it will gives the tree or blob reference of the object at the specific path (see example).
- getObject: from a SHA1 reference, gives a high level object (Commit, Blob, Tree, Tag, Delta) from the git repository. if called with resolveDelta set, it will resolves deltas to be simple objects with the deltas applied.
- getObjectRaw: similar to getObject but gives a raw representation (lazy bytestring) of the object.
- getCommit: similar to getObject but gives back a commit.
- getTree: similar to getObject but gives back a tree.
resolving path of the README file and returning the reference to the blob :
{-# LANGUAGE OverloadedStrings #-}
import Data.Git.Repository
showPathRef commitRef = withRepo ".git" $ \git -> do
ref <- maybe (error "inexistent object at this path") id `fmap` resolvePath git commitRef ["README"]
putStrLn ("README has the reference: " ++ show ref)
catting an object from a ref:
import Data.Git.Repository
catFile ref = withRepo ".git" $ \git -> do
obj <- maybe (error "not a valid object") id `fmap` getObjectRaw git ref True
L.putStrLn (oiData obj)
more examples on how to use api can be found in Hit.hs.