Skip to content
forked from Rich-Harris/degit

πŸš€ degit with github proxy and fix some bugs

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

justorez/degitc

This branch is 8 commits ahead of Rich-Harris/degit:master.

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

dec6cad Β· Feb 6, 2024
Aug 25, 2019
Feb 6, 2024
Jan 22, 2024
Feb 6, 2024
Feb 6, 2024
Jan 21, 2024
Feb 6, 2024
Jan 22, 2024
Aug 12, 2019
Jan 21, 2024
Apr 1, 2021
Nov 1, 2019
Nov 5, 2019
Feb 6, 2024
Jan 21, 2024
Feb 6, 2024
Feb 6, 2024

Repository files navigation

degitc β€” straightforward project scaffolding

npm version publish Known Vulnerabilities Contributor Covenant PRs Welcome

Base on Rich-Harris/degit v2.8.4

  • fix: remove .git error on windows
  • fix: --help no such file help.md
  • feat: add --proxy cli option
  • feat: add default GitHub Proxy for CN user. Use --no-ghp to disable, if you don't need

degitc makes copies of git repositories. When you run degitc some-user/some-repo, it will find the latest commit on https://github.com/some-user/some-repo and download the associated tar file to ~/.degitc/some-user/some-repo/commithash.tar.gz if it doesn't already exist locally. (This is much quicker than using git clone, because you're not downloading the entire git history.)

Installation

pnpm add -g degitc

Usage

Basics

The simplest use of degitc is to download the master branch of a repo from GitHub to the current working directory:

degitc user/repo

# these commands are equivalent
degitc github:user/repo
degitc [email protected]:user/repo
degitc https://github.com/user/repo

Or you can download from GitLab and BitBucket:

# download from GitLab
degitc gitlab:user/repo
degitc [email protected]:user/repo
degitc https://gitlab.com/user/repo

# download from BitBucket
degitc bitbucket:user/repo
degitc [email protected]:user/repo
degitc https://bitbucket.org/user/repo

# download from Sourcehut
degitc git.sr.ht/user/repo
degitc [email protected]:user/repo
degitc https://git.sr.ht/user/repo

Specify a tag, branch or commit

The default branch is master.

degitc user/repo#dev       # branch
degitc user/repo#v1.2.3    # release tag
degitc user/repo#1234abcd  # commit hash

Create a new folder for the project

If the second argument is omitted, the repo will be cloned to the current directory.

degitc user/repo my-new-project

Specify a subdirectory

To clone a specific subdirectory instead of the entire repo, just add it to the argument:

degitc user/repo/subdirectory

Private repositories

Private repos can be cloned by specifying --mode=git (the default is tar). In this mode, degitc will use git under the hood. It's much slower than fetching a tarball, which is why it's not the default.

Note: this clones over SSH, not HTTPS.

See all options

degitc --help

Not supported

  • Private repositories

Pull requests are very welcome!

Wait, isn't this just git clone --depth 1?

A few salient differences:

  • If you git clone, you get a .git folder that pertains to the project template, rather than your project. You can easily forget to re-init the repository, and end up confusing yourself
  • Caching and offline support (if you already have a .tar.gz file for a specific commit, you don't need to fetch it again).
  • Less to type (degitc user/repo instead of git clone --depth 1 [email protected]:user/repo)
  • Composability via actions
  • Interactive mode, friendly onboarding and postinstall scripts

JavaScript API

You can also use degitc inside a Node script:

const degitc = require('degitc');

const emitter = degitc('user/repo', {
  cache: true,
  force: true,
  verbose: true,
});

emitter.on('info', info => {
  console.log(info.message);
});

emitter.clone('path/to/dest').then(() => {
  console.log('done');
});

Actions

You can manipulate repositories after they have been cloned with actions, specified in a degit.json file that lives at the top level of the working directory. Currently, there are two actions β€” clone and remove. Additional actions may be added in future.

clone

// degit.json
[
  {
    "action": "clone",
    "src": "user/another-repo"
  }
]

This will clone user/another-repo, preserving the contents of the existing working directory. This allows you to, say, add a new README.md or starter file to a repo that you do not control. The cloned repo can contain its own degit.json actions.

remove

// degit.json
[
  {
    "action": "remove",
    "files": ["LICENSE"]
  }
]

Remove a file at the specified path.

See also

License

MIT.

About

πŸš€ degit with github proxy and fix some bugs

Topics

Resources

License

Code of conduct

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • JavaScript 99.6%
  • Shell 0.4%