Abstract
# git-cola: The highly caffeinated Git GUI
git-cola is a powerful Git GUI with a slick and intuitive user interface.
Copyright (C) 2007-2015, David Aguilar and contributors
This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation, either version 2 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
## SCREENSHOTS
Screenshots are available on the
[git-cola screenshots page](https://git-cola.github.io/screenshots.html).
## DOWNLOAD
apt-get install git-cola python-pyinotify
New releases are available on the
[git-cola download page](https://git-cola.github.io/downloads.html).
## FORK
git clone git://github.com/git-cola/git-cola.git
[git-cola on github](https://github.com/git-cola/git-cola)
[git-cola google group](http://groups.google.com/group/git-cola/)
# NUTRITIONAL FACTS
## ACTIVE INGREDIENTS
* [git](http://git-scm.com/) 1.6.3 or newer.
* [Python](http://python.org/) 2.6, 2.7, and 3.2 or newer.
* [PyQt4](http://www.riverbankcomputing.co.uk/software/pyqt/download) 4.4 or newer
* [argparse](https://pypi.python.org/pypi/argparse) 1.1 or newer.
argparse is part of the stdlib in Python 2.7; install argparse separately if
you are running on Python 2.6.
* [Sphinx](http://sphinx-doc.org/) for building the documentation.
## ADDITIVES
*git-cola* enables additional features when the following
Python modules are installed.
[pyinotify](https://github.com/seb-m/pyinotify) 0.7.1 or newer
enables inotify support on Linux.
[send2trash](https://github.com/hsoft/send2trash) enables cross-platform
"Send to Trash" functionality.
# BREWING INSTRUCTIONS
## RUN FROM SOURCE
You don't need to install *git-cola* to run it.
Running *git-cola* from its source tree is the easiest
way to try the latest version.
git clone git://github.com/git-cola/git-cola.git
cd git-cola
./bin/git-cola
./bin/git-dag
Having *git-cola*'s *bin/* directory in your path allows you to run
*git cola* like a regular built-in Git command:
# Replace "$PWD/bin" with the path to git-cola's bin/ directory
PATH="$PWD/bin":"$PATH"
export PATH
git cola
git dag
The instructions below assume that you have *git-cola* present in your
`$PATH`. Replace "git cola" with "./bin/git-cola" as needed if you'd like to
just run it in-place.
# INSTALLATION
Normally you can just do "make install" to install *git-cola*
in your `$HOME` directory (`$HOME/bin`, `$HOME/share`, etc).
If you want to do a global install you can do
make prefix=/usr install
There are also platform-specific installation methods.
You'll probably want to use one of these anyways since they
have a nice side-effect of installing *git-cola*'s PyQt4
and argparse dependencies.
## LINUX
Linux is it! Your distro has probably already packaged git-cola.
If not, please file a bug against your distribution ;-)
### arch
yaourt -S git-cola
### debian, ubuntu
apt-get install git-cola
### fedora
yum install git-cola
### gentoo
emerge git-cola
### opensuse
Use the [one-click install link](http://software.opensuse.org/package/git-cola).
## MAC OS X
Before setting up homebrew, use
[pip](https://pip.readthedocs.org/en/latest/installing.html) to install
[sphinx](http://sphinx-doc.org/latest/install.html).
Sphinx is used to build the documentation.
sudo pip install sphinx
[Homebrew](http://mxcl.github.com/homebrew/) is the easiest way to install
git-cola's *Qt4* and *PyQt4* dependencies. We will use homebrew to install
the git-cola recipe, but build our own .app bundle from source.
brew install git-cola
Once brew has installed git-cola you can:
1. Clone git-cola
`git clone git://github.com/git-cola/git-cola.git && cd git-cola`
2. Build the git-cola.app application bundle
`make git-cola.app`
3. Copy it to _/Applications_
`rm -fr /Applications/git-cola.app && cp -r git-cola.app /Applications`
## WINDOWS INSTALLATION
Download the latest stable Git, Python 2.x, and Py2x-PyQt4 installers
* [msysGit](http://msysgit.github.com/)
* [Python](http://python.org/download/)
* [PyQt](http://www.riverbankcomputing.co.uk/software/pyqt/download/)
* [git-cola Installer](https://github.com/git-cola/git-cola/downloads)
Once these are installed you can run *git-cola* from the Start menu or
by double-clicking on the `git-cola.pyw` script.
If you are developing *git-cola* on Windows you can use `python.exe` to run
*git-cola* directly from source.
python.exe ./bin/git-cola
See "WINDOWS (continued)" below for more details.
# DOCUMENTATION
* [HTML documentation](https://git-cola.readthedocs.org/en/latest/)
* [git-cola manual](share/doc/git-cola/git-cola.rst)
* [git-dag manual](share/doc/git-cola/git-dag.rst)
* [Keyboard shortcuts](https://git-cola.github.io/share/doc/git-cola/hotkeys.html)
* [Contributing guidelines](CONTRIBUTING.md)
# GOODIES
*git-cola* ships with an interactive rebase editor called *git-xbase*.
*git-xbase* can be used to reorder and choose commits and is typically
launched through the *git-cola*'s "Rebase" menu.
*git-xbase* can also be launched independently of the main *git-cola* interface
by telling `git rebase` to use it as its editor:
env GIT_SEQUENCE_EDITOR="$PWD/share/git-cola/bin/git-xbase" \
git rebase -i origin/master
The quickest way to launch *git-xbase* is via the *git cola rebase*
sub-command (as well as various other sub-commands):
git cola rebase origin/master
# COMMAND-LINE TOOLS
The *git-cola* command exposes various sub-commands that allow you to quickly
launch tools that are available from within the *git-cola* interface.
For example, `./bin/git-cola find` launches the file finder,
and `./bin/git-cola grep` launches the grep tool.
See `git cola --help-commands` for the full list of commands.
$ git cola --help-commands
usage: git-cola [-h]
{cola,am,archive,branch,browse,classic,config,
dag,diff,fetch,find,grep,merge,pull,push,
rebase,remote,search,stash,tag,version}
...
valid commands:
{cola,am,archive,branch,browse,classic,config,
dag,diff,fetch,find,grep,merge,pull,push,
rebase,remote,search,stash,tag,version}
cola start git-cola
am apply patches using "git am"
archive save an archive
branch create a branch
browse browse repository
classic browse repository
config edit configuration
dag start git-dag
diff view diffs
fetch fetch remotes
find find files
grep grep source
merge merge branches
pull pull remote branches
push push remote branches
rebase interactive rebase
remote edit remotes
search search commits
stash stash and unstash changes
tag create tags
version print the version
## WINDOWS (continued)
# WINDOWS-ONLY HISTORY BROWSER CONFIGURATION UPGRADE
You may need to configure your history browser if you are upgrading from an
older version of *git-cola*.
`gitk` was originally the default history browser, but `gitk` cannot be
launched as-is on Windows because `gitk` is a shell script.
If you are configured to use `gitk`, then change your configuration to
go through Git's `sh.exe` on Windows. Similarly,we must go through
`python.exe` if we want to use `git-dag`.
If you want to use *gitk* as your history browser open the
*Preferences* screen and change the history browser command to:
C:/Git/bin/sh.exe --login -i C:/Git/bin/gitk
Alternatively, if you'd like to use *git-dag* as your history browser, use:
C:/Python27/python.exe C:/git-cola/bin/git-dag
*git-dag* became the default history browser on Windows in `v2.3`, so new
users should not need to configure anything.
# BUILDING WINDOWS INSTALLERS
Windows installers are built using
[Pynsist](http://pynsist.readthedocs.org/en/latest/).
[NSIS](http://nsis.sourceforge.net/Main_Page) is also needed.
To build the installer using *Pynsist*:
1. (If building from a non-Windows platform), run
`./contrib/win32/fetch_pyqt_windows.sh`.
This will download a PyQt binary installer for Windows and unpack its files
into `pynsist_pkgs/`.
2. Run `pynsist pynsist.cfg`.
The installer will be built in `build/nsis/`.
Before *Pynsist*, installers were built using *InnoSetup*.
The *InnoSetup* scripts are still available:
./contrib/win32/create-installer.sh
You have to make sure that the file */share/InnoSetup/ISCC.exe* exists.
That is normally the case when you run the *msysGit bash* and not the
*Git for Windows bash* (look [here](http://msysgit.github.com/)
for the differences).