git-dude is a simple git desktop notifier. It monitors git repositories in current directory for new commits/branches/tags and shows desktop notification if anything new arrived.
It simply uses git fetch
and parses its output to see what has changed. Then it
formats new commit messages with git log
and shows desktop notification with
notify-send
/ kdialog
(Linux) or growlnotify
(OSX). All of this in infinite loop.
Fedora:
Ubuntu:
OSX:
Haiku:
On Linux:
notify-send
on Gnome (Fedora: libnotify package, Ubuntu: libnotify-bin package)kdialog
on KDE (included in KDE)
On OSX:
growlnotify
, from Growl Extras (Homebrew: growlnotify package)
$ curl -skL https://github.com/sickill/git-dude/raw/master/git-dude >~/bin/git-dude
$ chmod +x ~/bin/git-dude
* Make sure ~/bin
is in your $PATH
or put git-dude
script somewhere else
on your $PATH
.
Git-dude can be installed with the following command:
$ brew install https://gist.github.com/lukaszkorecki/1289314/raw/022cd33fc366378552dc3527d72b994568644df1/git-dude.rb --HEAD
The homebrew formula lives here.
git-dude iterates over repositories that live inside the dude directory. This directory is nothing more than container for cloned repositories of projects you want to watch. Name it like you want, here for example we use ~/.git-dude:
$ mkdir ~/.git-dude
$ cd ~/.git-dude
Clone some repositories:
$ git clone --mirror https://github.com/joelthelion/autojump.git
$ git clone --mirror git:https://github.com/pyromaniac/hoof.git
I recommend git clone --mirror
- it doesn't checkout working directory so it
saves some disk space for bigger projects.
Symlinked repositories work too. This way you can monitor already cloned projects:
$ ln -s ~/code/tmuxinator .
Now run this to monitor pwd:
$ git dude
You can also pass directory name as first argument to specify which directory to monitor instead of pwd.
$ git dude ~/watched-repos
This way you can have multiple dude directories each being monitored by separate git-dude process.
Set how often git-dude should check for changes (in seconds, default: 60):
$ git config --global dude.interval 30
Set path to icon used by desktop notifications (default: none):
$ git config --global dude.icon ~/.git-dude/github_32.png
Set custom notification command ($TITLE
, $DESCRIPTION
and $ICON_PATH
environment variables are set when invoking notification command):
$ git config --global dude.notify-command 'gntp-send "$TITLE" "$DESCRIPTION" "$ICON_PATH"'
$ git config --global dude.notify-command 'echo -e "$TITLE\n\n\n$DESCRIPTION" | espeak --stdin -k20 -ven+12'
Set path to icon used by desktop notifications for this repository (default: taken from global setting):
$ git config dude.icon ~/.git-dude/dm-core/datamapper.png
Tell git-dude to ignore specific repository (if you want to unmonitor it):
$ git config dude.ignore true
When you have forked a repository you are likely to be more interested in what changes happen in the upstream repository rather than your own fork. Therefore it is possible to specify a custom remote:
$ git config dude.remote upstream
With a Git remote configuration like below, it will monitor the upstream repo instead of your fork:
$ git remote -v
origin [email protected]:holmboe/git-dude.git (fetch)
origin [email protected]:holmboe/git-dude.git (push)
upstream git:https://github.com/sickill/git-dude.git (fetch)
upstream git:https://github.com/sickill/git-dude.git (push)
Marcin Kulik (https://ku1ik.com/ | @sickill)