Swift bindings to libgit2.
let URL: NSURL = ...
let repo = Repository.at(URL)
if let repo = repo.value {
let latestCommit: Result<Commit, NSError> = repo
.HEAD()
.flatMap { repo.commit($0.oid) }
if let commit = latestCommit.value {
print("Latest Commit: \(commit.message) by \(commit.author.name)")
} else {
print("Could not get commit: \(latestCommit.error)")
}
} else {
println("Could not open repository: \(repo.error)")
}
SwiftGit2 uses value objects wherever possible. That means using Swift’s struct
s and enum
s without holding references to libgit2 objects. This has a number of advantages:
- Values can be used concurrently.
- Consuming values won’t result in disk access.
- Disk access can be contained to a smaller number of APIs.
This vastly simplifies the design of long-lived applications, which are the most common use case with Swift. Consequently, SwiftGit2 APIs don’t necessarily map 1-to-1 with libgit2 APIs.
All methods for reading from or writing to a repository are on SwiftGit’s only class
: Repository
. This highlights the failability and mutation of these methods, while freeing up all other instances to be immutable struct
s and enum
s.
To build SwiftGit2, you'll need the following tools installed locally:
- cmake
- libssh2
- libtool
- autoconf
- automake
- pkg-config
The easiest way to add SwiftGit2 to your project is to use Carthage. Simply add github "SwiftGit2/SwiftGit2"
to your Cartfile
and run carthage update
.
If you’d like, you can do things the hard old-fashioned way:
- Add SwiftGit2 as a submodule of your project’s repository.
- Run
git submodule update --init --recursive
to fetch all of SwiftGit2’s depedencies. - Add
SwiftGit2.xcodeproj
to your project’s Xcode project or workspace. - On the “Build Phases” tab of your application target, add
SwiftGit2.framework
to the “Link Binary With Libraries” phase. SwiftGit2 must also be added to a “Copy Frameworks” build phase. - If you added SwiftGit2 to a project (not a workspace), you will also need to add the appropriate SwiftGit2 target to the “Target Dependencies” of your application.
If you want to build a copy of SwiftGit2 without Carthage, possibly for development:
- Clone SwiftGit2
- Run
git submodule update --init --recursive
to clone the submodules - Build in Xcode
We ❤️ to receive pull requests! GitHub makes it easy:
- Fork the repository
- Create a branch with your changes
- Send a Pull Request
All contributions should match GitHub’s Swift Style Guide.
SwiftGit2 is available under the MIT license.