Nav apraksta

Jelmer Vernooij 1ef1e5ad91 Remove one-line function, only used in one place. 16 gadi atpakaļ
bin 8964c8fb91 Working pass at an HTTP server, only dumb at the moment 16 gadi atpakaļ
docs 03e55762d4 Fix commit id, thanks Bryan Bishop. 16 gadi atpakaļ
dulwich 1ef1e5ad91 Remove one-line function, only used in one place. 16 gadi atpakaļ
.bzrignore e70e67b6ad ignore coverage files. 16 gadi atpakaļ
AUTHORS 0b2d9e4b0d Add simple AUTHORS file. 17 gadi atpakaļ
COPYING 7cf5612d20 Make it more like a real project. 19 gadi atpakaļ
HACKING 54979db29c Clarify that C modules should be optional. 16 gadi atpakaļ
MANIFEST.in 1566561bf3 Add manifest file to include some more docs. 17 gadi atpakaļ
Makefile 4a619177b7 Add command for generating coverage-annotated files. 16 gadi atpakaļ
NEWS 272b2af4cd Mark current version as 0.5.0 16 gadi atpakaļ
README 05a12a4f8c Remove mention of no write support. 16 gadi atpakaļ
dulwich.cfg c89721d124 Support generating pydoctor output. 16 gadi atpakaļ
setup.py 272b2af4cd Mark current version as 0.5.0 16 gadi atpakaļ

README

This is the dulwich project.

It aims to give an interface to git repos that doesn't call out to git
directly but instead uses pure Python.

Open up a repo by passing it the path to the .git dir. You can then ask for
HEAD with repo.head() or a ref with repo.ref(name). Both return the SHA id
they currently point to. You can then grab this object with
repo.get_object(sha).

For the actual objects the ShaFile.from_file(filename) will return the object
stored in the file whatever it is. To ensure you get the correct type then
call {Blob,Tree,Commit}.from_file(filename). I will add repo methods to do
this for you with file lookup soon.

There is also support for creating blobs. Blob.from_string(string) will create
a blob object from the string. You can then call blob.sha() to get the sha
object for this blob, and hexdigest() on that will get its ID.

The project is named after the part of London that Mr. and Mrs. Git live in
in the particular Monty Python sketch. It is based on the Python-Git module
that James Westby released in 2007 and now
maintained by Jelmer Vernooij and John Carr.