This is my implementation of Jit, from James Coglan's book Building Git.
Build the rug
binary and add it to your PATH:
$ cargo build
$ export PATH=/path/to/rug/target/debug:$PATH
Switch to the directory you want to track using rug
:
$ mkdir /tmp/rug-test && cd /tmp/rug-test
$ mkdir -p foo/bar
$ echo "hello" > hello.txt
$ echo "world" > foo/bar/world.txt
Finally, initialize a Git repo and create a commit:
$ rug init
$ rug add .
# Currently, this waits for your input. Type in your commit message
and hit Ctrl+D
$ rug commit
You should now be able to use Git to view the commit you just created:
git show
rug status
rug status --porcelain
rug diff
rug diff --cached
rug branch foo HEAD~5
I use rug
as the version-control system for the rug
source-code. However, because all commands are not implemented yet,
I've been using git
for eg. pushing to Github.
This means sometimes you might have to hackily modify files in .git
to bring it back into a state that rug
finds acceptable. Here are
some ways in which things can break:
-
Updating
master
after pulling fromorigin
rug pull
does not currently work.After running
git fetch origin
, copy the SHA from.git/refs/remotes/origin/master
into.git/refs/heads/master
:cp .git/refs/remotes/origin/master .git/refs/heads/master
-
rug
doesn't understand packed objectsCopy the packed object outside
.git
and unpack it:mkdir temp mv .git/objects/pack/pack-ab7ec7453bc7444032731b68f2c1fe06279bd017.pack temp/ git unpack-objects < temp/pack-ab7ec7453bc7444032731b68f2c1fe06279bd017.pack