git-tidy-python/git-tidy
James Smith dc028e1030 Change python to python3
Not all hosts have python3-is-python, and the script is definitely
python3 so there's no backwards-compatibility issies.

Closes #1.
2023-09-08 16:46:55 +02:00

159 lines
5.7 KiB
Python
Executable File

#!/usr/bin/env python3
# git-tidy 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 3 of the
# License, or (at your option) any later version.
# git-tidy 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 git-tidy. If not, see
# <https://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
"""git-tidy utility."""
import subprocess
import sys
from typing import List, Tuple, Union
common_default_branches = [
"main",
"master",
"devel",
"dev",
]
def run(command: Union[List[str], str]) -> Tuple[int, str]:
"""Run a subprocess.
The subprocess is checked for whether it returns successfully, and its
stdout or stderr is captured for the caller to make use of.
Parameters
----------
command
The command to run as a subprocess.
Returns
-------
returncode
The (integer) return code from the completed subprocess.
stdout / stderr
In the case of a zero return code, the stdout from the subprocess is
returned. In all other cases, the stderr is returned. In both cases,
the bytes are converted to str and stripped of whitespace on either
side.
"""
try:
process = subprocess.run(command, check=True, capture_output=True)
except subprocess.CalledProcessError as exception:
return exception.returncode, exception.stderr.decode().strip()
return process.returncode, process.stdout.decode().strip()
def get_default_branch() -> str:
"""Return the name of the repo's default branch.
First try the config, if that doesn't work, check existing branches for
some common defaults. If there aren't any or they're ambiguous, ask the
user.
Returns
-------
str
The name of the default branch with which we'll work for the rest of
the exercise.
"""
returncode, configured_default_branch = run(["git", "config", "--get", "--local", "tidy.defaultbranch"])
if returncode == 128:
# The --local flag caused this to fail because we're not in a git repository.
print("fatal: not inside a repository", file=sys.stderr)
sys.exit(returncode)
# If we're in a repository, we need a list of branches, either as a
# sanity check that the configured branch is there, or to choose one
# if it's not configured.
_, branch_list_raw = run(["git", "branch", "--list"])
branch_list = [
branch.strip("*").strip() # Remove the indicator of current branch.
for branch in branch_list_raw.split("\n")
if len(branch) # Ignore empty lines.
]
if returncode == 0: # The config entry was successfully returned.
# But it's worth checking that the branch exists nonetheless.
if configured_default_branch in branch_list:
return configured_default_branch
print(
f"{configured_default_branch} configured as default branch for tidying purposes, but it doesn't exist! "
"Attempting to reconfigure....",
file=sys.stderr,
)
else:
print("No default branch for git-tidy configured, will try to figure out which to use...")
candidates = []
# Check whether any branches match our list of common defaults.
for branch in branch_list:
if branch in common_default_branches:
candidates.append(branch)
if len(candidates) == 1:
# Only one branch name matches, so we'll go with that one.
print(f"Using branch {candidates[0]}...")
run(["git", "config", "--add", "tidy.defaultbranch", candidates[0]])
return candidates[0]
# If there's no clear default, let the user select which one to use:
selection = -1
while (selection < 0) or (selection >= len(branch_list)):
print("Unable to determine default branch automatically. Please select one:")
for n, branch in enumerate(branch_list):
print(f"{n}: {branch}")
raw_input = input("Which to choose? ")
try:
selection = int(raw_input)
except ValueError:
continue
print(selection)
return branch_list[selection]
if __name__ == "__main__":
default_branch = get_default_branch()
print(f"Switching to {default_branch}")
run(["git", "checkout", default_branch])
# Check which remote it's configured with.
_, remote = run(["git", "config", "--get", f"branch.{default_branch}.remote"])
print(f"{default_branch} is connected to {remote}")
# Get latest changes from remote, clear up unnecessary stuff.
returncode, output = run(["git", "fetch", "--all", "--prune"])
if returncode != 0: # possibly a problem in contacting the remote?
print(output, file=sys.stderr)
sys.exit(returncode)
print(output) # I like to see what `git fetch` has accomplished.
returncode, output = run(["git", "merge", "--ff-only", f"{remote}/{default_branch}", default_branch])
if returncode != 0: # Probably fast-forwarding won't work.
print(output, file=sys.stderr)
sys.exit(returncode)
# Check which branches are `--merged` and clean them up.
_, merged_branches_raw = run(["git", "branch", "--merged"])
merged_branches = [
branch for branch in merged_branches_raw.split("\n") if len(branch) # Remove zero-length elements.
]
for branch in merged_branches:
if branch[0] != "*": # This time we want to explicitly exclude the checked-out branch.
subprocess.run(["git", "branch", "-d", branch.strip()], check=True)