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Parser for git log --raw

Project description

glrp - git log raw parser

A parser for parsing the output of git log, specifically with the --format=raw option. This is the intended git command to use:

git log -p --format=raw --show-signature --stat

Simply pipe the output:

git log -p --format=raw --show-signature --stat | glrp --pretty

The CLI outputs one JSON object per commit. Each JSON object is on one line, they are separated by newlines. This format is sometimes referred to as JSONL or JSON lines format. With --pretty, each JSON object is indented to be more readable and printed across multiple lines. (But then it is no longer JSONL, strictly speaking).

Why?

The above command provides a lot of useful information about each git commit, which we can analyze, including:

  • Commit message
  • Diff
  • Author name and email
  • Committer name and email
  • Timestamps
  • GPG signature

On its own, git log does not output its information in a format which is easy for other programs to use. So, this tool parses the output and turns it into JSON which is more easy to analyze and check.

Installation

pipx install glrp

Usage

Using it is simple. Run it inside a git repo:

glrp .

Or you can pipe git log output to it:

git log -p --format=raw --show-signature --stat | glrp --output-dir=./out/

Or perhaps a bit more realistic:

git clone https://github.com/cfengine/core
(cd core && git log -p --format=raw --show-signature --stat HEAD~500..HEAD 2>/dev/null) | glrp

(Clone CFEngine core, start subshell which enters the subdirectory and runs git log for the past 500 commits).

Specifying input

By default, glrp parses standard input, and outputs to stdout. To take input from somewhere else, supply a filename:

glrp some_file.jsonl

The file, some_file.jsonl is opened and read, its content is used instead of standard input. You can also specify the path to a folder:

glrp some_dir/

The glrp tool will run the git log command (git log -p --format=raw --show-signature --stat) inside that folder. Output from the git command will be parsed instead of standard input.

Specifying output

You can use shell redirection to print to file instead of standard output:

glrp . > output.txt

Compare

If you want to compare the stats for 2 branches, use the --compare flag:

glrp --compare main,feature...main

(This assumes that feature is based on main).

Alternately, you can compare the 5 last commits:

glrp --compare main~5,main...main~5

This generates a .before.json and .after.json file, which can be used to compare those 2 ranges.

Combine

You can combine summary files using the --combine flag:

glrp --combine .before.json,.after.json > combined.json

This is useful for example after generating summaries for different repos. You can use it to create a global summary of all commits in all repos of an organization.

Important notes

Note: This tool is meant specifically as a parser for the command shown above, not as a generic parser for all the different things git log can output.

Warning: The output of --show-signature varies depending on which keys you have imported / trusted in your installation of GPG. Make sure you import the correct GPG keys beforehand, and don't expect output to be identical across different machines with different GPG states.

Warning: Consider this a best-effort, "lossy" parsing. Commits may contain non utf-8 characters, to avoid "crashing", we skip these, replacing them with question marks. Thus, the parsing is lossy, don't expect all the information to be there. This tool can be used for searching / analyzing commits, but don't use it as some kind of backup tool where you expect to have the ability to "reconstruct" the commits and repo entirely.

Details

For details on how the parsing works, try running with --debug and look at the resulting ./debug/ folder. Also, see the comments in the source code; ./glrp/internal_parser.py

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