stagit
-======
+------
-static git page generator
+static git page generator. personal fork with syntax highlighting and some
+quality of life improvements
+It generates static HTML pages for a git repository.
Usage
-----
Make index file for repositories:
- $ stagit-index repodir1 repodir2 repodir3 > index.html
+ $ stagit-index repodir1 repodir2 repodir3
-Install
--------
+Build and install
+-----------------
$ make
# make install
Dependencies
------------
-- libgit2 (v0.22+).
-- libc (tested with OpenBSD, FreeBSD, glibc and musl).
- C compiler (C99).
-- make
+- libc (tested with OpenBSD, FreeBSD, NetBSD, Linux: glibc and musl).
+- libgit2 (v0.22+).
+- POSIX make (optional).
+- Python3, pip.
Documentation
Extract owner field from git config
-----------------------------------
-A (hacky) way to extract the gitweb owner for example in the format:
+A way to extract the gitweb owner for example in the format:
[gitweb]
owner = Name here
}'
+Set clone url for a directory of repos
+--------------------------------------
+ #!/bin/sh
+ cd "$dir"
+ for i in *; do
+ test -d "$i" && echo "git://git.codemadness.org/$i" > "$i/url"
+ done
+
+
+Update files on git push
+------------------------
+
+Using a post-receive hook the static files can be automatically updated.
+Keep in mind git push -f can change the history and the commits may need
+to be recreated. This is because stagit checks if a commit file already
+exists. It also has a cache (-c) option which can conflict with the new
+history. See stagit(1).
+
+git post-receive hook (repo/.git/hooks/post-receive):
+
+ #!/bin/sh
+ # detect git push -f
+ force=0
+ while read -r old new ref; do
+ hasrevs=$(git rev-list "$old" "^$new" | sed 1q)
+ if test -n "$hasrevs"; then
+ force=1
+ break
+ fi
+ done
+
+ # remove commits and .cache on git push -f
+ #if test "$force" = "1"; then
+ # ...
+ #fi
+
+ # see example_create.sh for normal creation of the files.
+
+
Create .tar.gz archives by tag
------------------------------
#!/bin/sh
name="stagit"
mkdir -p archives
git tag -l | while read -r t; do
- f="archives/$name-$t.tar.gz"
- test -f "$f" || git archive --format tar.gz "$t" -o "$f"
+ f="archives/${name}-$(echo "${t}" | tr '/' '_').tar.gz"
+ test -f "${f}" && continue
+ git archive \
+ --format tar.gz \
+ --prefix "${t}/" \
+ -o "${f}" \
+ -- \
+ "${t}"
done
----
- Not suitable for large repositories (2000+ commits), because diffstats are
- an expensive operation.
+ an expensive operation, the cache (-c flag) is a workaround for this in
+ some cases.
+- Not suitable for large repositories with many files, because all files are
+ written for each execution of stagit. This is because stagit shows the lines
+ of textfiles and there is no "cache" for file metadata (this would add more
+ complexity to the code).
- Not suitable for repositories with many branches, a quite linear history is
assumed (from HEAD).
+
+ In these cases it is better to just use cgit or possibly change stagit to
+ run as a CGI program.
+
- Relatively slow to run the first time (about 3 seconds for sbase,
1500+ commits), incremental updates are faster.
- Does not support some of the dynamic features cgit has, like:
- - snapshot tarballs.
- - file tree per commit.
- - history log of branches diverged from HEAD.
- - stats (git shortlog -s).
+ - Snapshot tarballs per commit.
+ - File tree per commit.
+ - History log of branches diverged from HEAD.
+ - Stats (git shortlog -s).
- this is by design, just use git locally.
+ This is by design, just use git locally.