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8a757ae2
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2020-04-04T18:31:00
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cli: introduce a clone command
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e427d0a1
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2021-11-30T10:33:24
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cli: add `hash-object` command
Introduce a simple command that emulates `git hash-object`.
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b8771227
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2021-11-28T10:32:03
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cli: add `cat-file` command
Introduce a simple command that emulates `git cat-file`.
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f8e7d8fd
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2021-11-26T17:33:38
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cli: support `help <command>`
Support `help <command>` by re-invoking the command itself with the
`--help` argument. This allows us to keep the help logic with the
commands itself.
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c6dd82d9
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2020-02-23T11:54:33
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cli: introduce a help command
Add a framework for commands to be defined, and add our first one,
"help". When `git2_cli help` is run, the `cmd_help` function will be
invoked with the remaining command line arguments. This allows users to
invoke `git2_cli help foo` to get information about the `foo` subcommand.
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8526cbd5
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2021-11-26T09:37:29
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opt: use a custom function to print usage
Our argument parser (https://github.com/ethomson/adopt) includes a
function to print a usage message based on the allowed options. Omit
this and use a cutom function that understands that we have subcommands
("checkout", "revert", etc) that each have their own options.
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3a3ab065
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2020-05-03T23:13:28
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cli: infrastructure for a cli project
Introduce a command-line interface for libgit2. The goal is for it to
be git-compatible.
1. The libgit2 developers can more easily dogfood libgit2 to find bugs,
and performance issues.
2. There is growing usage of libgit2's examples as a client; libgit2's
examples should be exactly that - simple code samples that illustrate
libgit2's usage. This satisfies that need directly.
3. By producing a client ourselves, we can better understand the needs
of client creators, possibly producing a shared "middleware" for
commonly-used pieces of client functionality like interacting with
external tools.
4. Since git is the reference implementation, we may be able to benefit
from git's unit tests, running their test suite against our CLI to
ensure correct behavior.
This commit introduces a simple infrastructure for the CLI.
The CLI is currently links libgit2 statically; this is because the
utility layer is required for libgit2 _but_ shares the error state
handling with libgit2 itself. There's no obviously good solution
here without introducing annoying indirection or more complexity.
Until we can untangle that dependency, this is a good step forward.
In the meantime, we link the libgit2 object files, but we do not include
the (private) libgit2 headers. This constrains the CLI to the public
libgit2 interfaces.
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