Sin descripción

Jelmer Vernooij 4628ddb46c merge patch from durin42 to use setuptools if possible. hace 15 años
bin 94281c2930 Add convenience function for creating a new commit in a git repository. hace 15 años
docs 9ef6fddeb2 Tutorial 1-initial-commit.txt: should also import parse_timezone hace 15 años
dulwich b71676dc35 Allow time-less tags. hace 15 años
.bzrignore c3b1605bab ignore coverage files. hace 16 años
AUTHORS a5391292cc Add simple AUTHORS file. hace 16 años
COPYING c4c19475f3 Make it more like a real project. hace 18 años
HACKING 881a8e8e17 Clarify that C modules should be optional. hace 15 años
MANIFEST.in 7b387b0d58 Add manifest file to include some more docs. hace 16 años
Makefile e062bc049f Add command for generating coverage-annotated files. hace 16 años
NEWS 5484737a52 Add functionality for writing patches in dulwich.patch. hace 15 años
README e69ef48e08 Remove mention of no write support. hace 15 años
dulwich.cfg 3653de1aeb Support generating pydoctor output. hace 16 años
setup.py 7347f39e62 setup: use setuptools if available hace 15 años

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.