1=head1 NAME 2 3Git - Perl interface to the Git version control system 4 5=cut 6 7 8package Git; 9 10use strict; 11 12 13BEGIN { 14 15our ($VERSION, @ISA, @EXPORT, @EXPORT_OK); 16 17# Totally unstable API. 18$VERSION = '0.01'; 19 20 21=head1 SYNOPSIS 22 23 use Git; 24 25 my $version = Git::command_oneline('version'); 26 27 git_cmd_try { Git::command_noisy('update-server-info') } 28 '%s failed w/ code %d'; 29 30 my $repo = Git->repository (Directory => '/srv/git/cogito.git'); 31 32 33 my @revs = $repo->command('rev-list', '--since=last monday', '--all'); 34 35 my ($fh, $c) = $repo->command_output_pipe('rev-list', '--since=last monday', '--all'); 36 my $lastrev = <$fh>; chomp $lastrev; 37 $repo->command_close_pipe($fh, $c); 38 39 my $lastrev = $repo->command_oneline( [ 'rev-list', '--all' ], 40 STDERR => 0 ); 41 42=cut 43 44 45require Exporter; 46 47@ISA = qw(Exporter); 48 49@EXPORT = qw(git_cmd_try); 50 51# Methods which can be called as standalone functions as well: 52@EXPORT_OK = qw(command command_oneline command_noisy 53 command_output_pipe command_input_pipe command_close_pipe 54 version exec_path hash_object git_cmd_try); 55 56 57=head1 DESCRIPTION 58 59This module provides Perl scripts easy way to interface the Git version control 60system. The modules have an easy and well-tested way to call arbitrary Git 61commands; in the future, the interface will also provide specialized methods 62for doing easily operations which are not totally trivial to do over 63the generic command interface. 64 65While some commands can be executed outside of any context (e.g. 'version' 66or 'init'), most operations require a repository context, which in practice 67means getting an instance of the Git object using the repository() constructor. 68(In the future, we will also get a new_repository() constructor.) All commands 69called as methods of the object are then executed in the context of the 70repository. 71 72Part of the "repository state" is also information about path to the attached 73working copy (unless you work with a bare repository). You can also navigate 74inside of the working copy using the C<wc_chdir()> method. (Note that 75the repository object is self-contained and will not change working directory 76of your process.) 77 78TODO: In the future, we might also do 79 80 my $remoterepo = $repo->remote_repository (Name => 'cogito', Branch => 'master'); 81 $remoterepo ||= Git->remote_repository ('http://git.or.cz/cogito.git/'); 82 my @refs = $remoterepo->refs(); 83 84Currently, the module merely wraps calls to external Git tools. In the future, 85it will provide a much faster way to interact with Git by linking directly 86to libgit. This should be completely opaque to the user, though (performance 87increate nonwithstanding). 88 89=cut 90 91 92use Carp qw(carp croak); # but croak is bad - throw instead 93use Error qw(:try); 94use Cwd qw(abs_path); 95 96} 97 98 99=head1 CONSTRUCTORS 100 101=over 4 102 103=item repository ( OPTIONS ) 104 105=item repository ( DIRECTORY ) 106 107=item repository () 108 109Construct a new repository object. 110C<OPTIONS> are passed in a hash like fashion, using key and value pairs. 111Possible options are: 112 113B<Repository> - Path to the Git repository. 114 115B<WorkingCopy> - Path to the associated working copy; not strictly required 116as many commands will happily crunch on a bare repository. 117 118B<WorkingSubdir> - Subdirectory in the working copy to work inside. 119Just left undefined if you do not want to limit the scope of operations. 120 121B<Directory> - Path to the Git working directory in its usual setup. 122The C<.git> directory is searched in the directory and all the parent 123directories; if found, C<WorkingCopy> is set to the directory containing 124it and C<Repository> to the C<.git> directory itself. If no C<.git> 125directory was found, the C<Directory> is assumed to be a bare repository, 126C<Repository> is set to point at it and C<WorkingCopy> is left undefined. 127If the C<$GIT_DIR> environment variable is set, things behave as expected 128as well. 129 130You should not use both C<Directory> and either of C<Repository> and 131C<WorkingCopy> - the results of that are undefined. 132 133Alternatively, a directory path may be passed as a single scalar argument 134to the constructor; it is equivalent to setting only the C<Directory> option 135field. 136 137Calling the constructor with no options whatsoever is equivalent to 138calling it with C<< Directory => '.' >>. In general, if you are building 139a standard porcelain command, simply doing C<< Git->repository() >> should 140do the right thing and setup the object to reflect exactly where the user 141is right now. 142 143=cut 144 145sub repository { 146 my $class = shift; 147 my @args = @_; 148 my %opts = (); 149 my $self; 150 151 if (defined $args[0]) { 152 if ($#args % 2 != 1) { 153 # Not a hash. 154 $#args == 0 or throw Error::Simple("bad usage"); 155 %opts = ( Directory => $args[0] ); 156 } else { 157 %opts = @args; 158 } 159 } 160 161 if (not defined $opts{Repository} and not defined $opts{WorkingCopy}) { 162 $opts{Directory} ||= '.'; 163 } 164 165 if ($opts{Directory}) { 166 -d $opts{Directory} or throw Error::Simple("Directory not found: $!"); 167 168 my $search = Git->repository(WorkingCopy => $opts{Directory}); 169 my $dir; 170 try { 171 $dir = $search->command_oneline(['rev-parse', '--git-dir'], 172 STDERR => 0); 173 } catch Git::Error::Command with { 174 $dir = undef; 175 }; 176 177 if ($dir) { 178 $dir =~ m#^/# or $dir = $opts{Directory} . '/' . $dir; 179 $opts{Repository} = $dir; 180 181 # If --git-dir went ok, this shouldn't die either. 182 my $prefix = $search->command_oneline('rev-parse', '--show-prefix'); 183 $dir = abs_path($opts{Directory}) . '/'; 184 if ($prefix) { 185 if (substr($dir, -length($prefix)) ne $prefix) { 186 throw Error::Simple("rev-parse confused me - $dir does not have trailing $prefix"); 187 } 188 substr($dir, -length($prefix)) = ''; 189 } 190 $opts{WorkingCopy} = $dir; 191 $opts{WorkingSubdir} = $prefix; 192 193 } else { 194 # A bare repository? Let's see... 195 $dir = $opts{Directory}; 196 197 unless (-d "$dir/refs" and -d "$dir/objects" and -e "$dir/HEAD") { 198 # Mimick git-rev-parse --git-dir error message: 199 throw Error::Simple('fatal: Not a git repository'); 200 } 201 my $search = Git->repository(Repository => $dir); 202 try { 203 $search->command('symbolic-ref', 'HEAD'); 204 } catch Git::Error::Command with { 205 # Mimick git-rev-parse --git-dir error message: 206 throw Error::Simple('fatal: Not a git repository'); 207 } 208 209 $opts{Repository} = abs_path($dir); 210 } 211 212 delete $opts{Directory}; 213 } 214 215 $self = { opts => \%opts }; 216 bless $self, $class; 217} 218 219 220=back 221 222=head1 METHODS 223 224=over 4 225 226=item command ( COMMAND [, ARGUMENTS... ] ) 227 228=item command ( [ COMMAND, ARGUMENTS... ], { Opt => Val ... } ) 229 230Execute the given Git C<COMMAND> (specify it without the 'git-' 231prefix), optionally with the specified extra C<ARGUMENTS>. 232 233The second more elaborate form can be used if you want to further adjust 234the command execution. Currently, only one option is supported: 235 236B<STDERR> - How to deal with the command's error output. By default (C<undef>) 237it is delivered to the caller's C<STDERR>. A false value (0 or '') will cause 238it to be thrown away. If you want to process it, you can get it in a filehandle 239you specify, but you must be extremely careful; if the error output is not 240very short and you want to read it in the same process as where you called 241C<command()>, you are set up for a nice deadlock! 242 243The method can be called without any instance or on a specified Git repository 244(in that case the command will be run in the repository context). 245 246In scalar context, it returns all the command output in a single string 247(verbatim). 248 249In array context, it returns an array containing lines printed to the 250command's stdout (without trailing newlines). 251 252In both cases, the command's stdin and stderr are the same as the caller's. 253 254=cut 255 256sub command { 257 my ($fh, $ctx) = command_output_pipe(@_); 258 259 if (not defined wantarray) { 260 # Nothing to pepper the possible exception with. 261 _cmd_close($fh, $ctx); 262 263 } elsif (not wantarray) { 264 local $/; 265 my $text = <$fh>; 266 try { 267 _cmd_close($fh, $ctx); 268 } catch Git::Error::Command with { 269 # Pepper with the output: 270 my $E = shift; 271 $E->{'-outputref'} = \$text; 272 throw $E; 273 }; 274 return $text; 275 276 } else { 277 my @lines = <$fh>; 278 defined and chomp for @lines; 279 try { 280 _cmd_close($fh, $ctx); 281 } catch Git::Error::Command with { 282 my $E = shift; 283 $E->{'-outputref'} = \@lines; 284 throw $E; 285 }; 286 return @lines; 287 } 288} 289 290 291=item command_oneline ( COMMAND [, ARGUMENTS... ] ) 292 293=item command_oneline ( [ COMMAND, ARGUMENTS... ], { Opt => Val ... } ) 294 295Execute the given C<COMMAND> in the same way as command() 296does but always return a scalar string containing the first line 297of the command's standard output. 298 299=cut 300 301sub command_oneline { 302 my ($fh, $ctx) = command_output_pipe(@_); 303 304 my $line = <$fh>; 305 defined $line and chomp $line; 306 try { 307 _cmd_close($fh, $ctx); 308 } catch Git::Error::Command with { 309 # Pepper with the output: 310 my $E = shift; 311 $E->{'-outputref'} = \$line; 312 throw $E; 313 }; 314 return $line; 315} 316 317 318=item command_output_pipe ( COMMAND [, ARGUMENTS... ] ) 319 320=item command_output_pipe ( [ COMMAND, ARGUMENTS... ], { Opt => Val ... } ) 321 322Execute the given C<COMMAND> in the same way as command() 323does but return a pipe filehandle from which the command output can be 324read. 325 326The function can return C<($pipe, $ctx)> in array context. 327See C<command_close_pipe()> for details. 328 329=cut 330 331sub command_output_pipe { 332 _command_common_pipe('-|', @_); 333} 334 335 336=item command_input_pipe ( COMMAND [, ARGUMENTS... ] ) 337 338=item command_input_pipe ( [ COMMAND, ARGUMENTS... ], { Opt => Val ... } ) 339 340Execute the given C<COMMAND> in the same way as command_output_pipe() 341does but return an input pipe filehandle instead; the command output 342is not captured. 343 344The function can return C<($pipe, $ctx)> in array context. 345See C<command_close_pipe()> for details. 346 347=cut 348 349sub command_input_pipe { 350 _command_common_pipe('|-', @_); 351} 352 353 354=item command_close_pipe ( PIPE [, CTX ] ) 355 356Close the C<PIPE> as returned from C<command_*_pipe()>, checking 357whether the command finished successfully. The optional C<CTX> argument 358is required if you want to see the command name in the error message, 359and it is the second value returned by C<command_*_pipe()> when 360called in array context. The call idiom is: 361 362 my ($fh, $ctx) = $r->command_output_pipe('status'); 363 while (<$fh>) { ... } 364 $r->command_close_pipe($fh, $ctx); 365 366Note that you should not rely on whatever actually is in C<CTX>; 367currently it is simply the command name but in future the context might 368have more complicated structure. 369 370=cut 371 372sub command_close_pipe { 373 my ($self, $fh, $ctx) = _maybe_self(@_); 374 $ctx ||= '<unknown>'; 375 _cmd_close($fh, $ctx); 376} 377 378 379=item command_noisy ( COMMAND [, ARGUMENTS... ] ) 380 381Execute the given C<COMMAND> in the same way as command() does but do not 382capture the command output - the standard output is not redirected and goes 383to the standard output of the caller application. 384 385While the method is called command_noisy(), you might want to as well use 386it for the most silent Git commands which you know will never pollute your 387stdout but you want to avoid the overhead of the pipe setup when calling them. 388 389The function returns only after the command has finished running. 390 391=cut 392 393sub command_noisy { 394 my ($self, $cmd, @args) = _maybe_self(@_); 395 _check_valid_cmd($cmd); 396 397 my $pid = fork; 398 if (not defined $pid) { 399 throw Error::Simple("fork failed: $!"); 400 } elsif ($pid == 0) { 401 _cmd_exec($self, $cmd, @args); 402 } 403 if (waitpid($pid, 0) > 0 and $?>>8 != 0) { 404 throw Git::Error::Command(join(' ', $cmd, @args), $? >> 8); 405 } 406} 407 408 409=item version () 410 411Return the Git version in use. 412 413=cut 414 415sub version { 416 my $verstr = command_oneline('--version'); 417 $verstr =~ s/^git version //; 418 $verstr; 419} 420 421 422=item exec_path () 423 424Return path to the Git sub-command executables (the same as 425C<git --exec-path>). Useful mostly only internally. 426 427=cut 428 429sub exec_path { command_oneline('--exec-path') } 430 431 432=item repo_path () 433 434Return path to the git repository. Must be called on a repository instance. 435 436=cut 437 438sub repo_path { $_[0]->{opts}->{Repository} } 439 440 441=item wc_path () 442 443Return path to the working copy. Must be called on a repository instance. 444 445=cut 446 447sub wc_path { $_[0]->{opts}->{WorkingCopy} } 448 449 450=item wc_subdir () 451 452Return path to the subdirectory inside of a working copy. Must be called 453on a repository instance. 454 455=cut 456 457sub wc_subdir { $_[0]->{opts}->{WorkingSubdir} ||= '' } 458 459 460=item wc_chdir ( SUBDIR ) 461 462Change the working copy subdirectory to work within. The C<SUBDIR> is 463relative to the working copy root directory (not the current subdirectory). 464Must be called on a repository instance attached to a working copy 465and the directory must exist. 466 467=cut 468 469sub wc_chdir { 470 my ($self, $subdir) = @_; 471 $self->wc_path() 472 or throw Error::Simple("bare repository"); 473 474 -d $self->wc_path().'/'.$subdir 475 or throw Error::Simple("subdir not found: $!"); 476 # Of course we will not "hold" the subdirectory so anyone 477 # can delete it now and we will never know. But at least we tried. 478 479 $self->{opts}->{WorkingSubdir} = $subdir; 480} 481 482 483=item config ( VARIABLE ) 484 485Retrieve the configuration C<VARIABLE> in the same manner as C<config> 486does. In scalar context requires the variable to be set only one time 487(exception is thrown otherwise), in array context returns allows the 488variable to be set multiple times and returns all the values. 489 490This currently wraps command('config') so it is not so fast. 491 492=cut 493 494sub config { 495 my ($self, $var) = _maybe_self(@_); 496 497 try { 498 my @cmd = ('config'); 499 unshift @cmd, $self if $self; 500 if (wantarray) { 501 return command(@cmd, '--get-all', $var); 502 } else { 503 return command_oneline(@cmd, '--get', $var); 504 } 505 } catch Git::Error::Command with { 506 my $E = shift; 507 if ($E->value() == 1) { 508 # Key not found. 509 return undef; 510 } else { 511 throw $E; 512 } 513 }; 514} 515 516 517=item config_bool ( VARIABLE ) 518 519Retrieve the bool configuration C<VARIABLE>. The return value 520is usable as a boolean in perl (and C<undef> if it's not defined, 521of course). 522 523This currently wraps command('config') so it is not so fast. 524 525=cut 526 527sub config_bool { 528 my ($self, $var) = _maybe_self(@_); 529 530 try { 531 my @cmd = ('config', '--bool', '--get', $var); 532 unshift @cmd, $self if $self; 533 my $val = command_oneline(@cmd); 534 return undef unless defined $val; 535 return $val eq 'true'; 536 } catch Git::Error::Command with { 537 my $E = shift; 538 if ($E->value() == 1) { 539 # Key not found. 540 return undef; 541 } else { 542 throw $E; 543 } 544 }; 545} 546 547=item config_int ( VARIABLE ) 548 549Retrieve the integer configuration C<VARIABLE>. The return value 550is simple decimal number. An optional value suffix of 'k', 'm', 551or 'g' in the config file will cause the value to be multiplied 552by 1024, 1048576 (1024^2), or 1073741824 (1024^3) prior to output. 553It would return C<undef> if configuration variable is not defined, 554 555This currently wraps command('config') so it is not so fast. 556 557=cut 558 559sub config_int { 560 my ($self, $var) = _maybe_self(@_); 561 562 try { 563 my @cmd = ('config', '--int', '--get', $var); 564 unshift @cmd, $self if $self; 565 return command_oneline(@cmd); 566 } catch Git::Error::Command with { 567 my $E = shift; 568 if ($E->value() == 1) { 569 # Key not found. 570 return undef; 571 } else { 572 throw $E; 573 } 574 }; 575} 576 577=item get_colorbool ( NAME ) 578 579Finds if color should be used for NAMEd operation from the configuration, 580and returns boolean (true for "use color", false for "do not use color"). 581 582=cut 583 584sub get_colorbool { 585 my ($self, $var) = @_; 586 my $stdout_to_tty = (-t STDOUT) ? "true" : "false"; 587 my $use_color = $self->command_oneline('config', '--get-colorbool', 588 $var, $stdout_to_tty); 589 return ($use_color eq 'true'); 590} 591 592=item get_color ( SLOT, COLOR ) 593 594Finds color for SLOT from the configuration, while defaulting to COLOR, 595and returns the ANSI color escape sequence: 596 597 print $repo->get_color("color.interactive.prompt", "underline blue white"); 598 print "some text"; 599 print $repo->get_color("", "normal"); 600 601=cut 602 603sub get_color { 604 my ($self, $slot, $default) = @_; 605 my $color = $self->command_oneline('config', '--get-color', $slot, $default); 606 if (!defined $color) { 607 $color = ""; 608 } 609 return $color; 610} 611 612=item ident ( TYPE | IDENTSTR ) 613 614=item ident_person ( TYPE | IDENTSTR | IDENTARRAY ) 615 616This suite of functions retrieves and parses ident information, as stored 617in the commit and tag objects or produced by C<var GIT_type_IDENT> (thus 618C<TYPE> can be either I<author> or I<committer>; case is insignificant). 619 620The C<ident> method retrieves the ident information from C<git-var> 621and either returns it as a scalar string or as an array with the fields parsed. 622Alternatively, it can take a prepared ident string (e.g. from the commit 623object) and just parse it. 624 625C<ident_person> returns the person part of the ident - name and email; 626it can take the same arguments as C<ident> or the array returned by C<ident>. 627 628The synopsis is like: 629 630 my ($name, $email, $time_tz) = ident('author'); 631 "$name <$email>" eq ident_person('author'); 632 "$name <$email>" eq ident_person($name); 633 $time_tz =~ /^\d+ [+-]\d{4}$/; 634 635=cut 636 637sub ident { 638 my ($self, $type) = _maybe_self(@_); 639 my $identstr; 640 if (lc $type eq lc 'committer' or lc $type eq lc 'author') { 641 my @cmd = ('var', 'GIT_'.uc($type).'_IDENT'); 642 unshift @cmd, $self if $self; 643 $identstr = command_oneline(@cmd); 644 } else { 645 $identstr = $type; 646 } 647 if (wantarray) { 648 return $identstr =~ /^(.*) <(.*)> (\d+ [+-]\d{4})$/; 649 } else { 650 return $identstr; 651 } 652} 653 654sub ident_person { 655 my ($self, @ident) = _maybe_self(@_); 656 $#ident == 0 and @ident = $self ? $self->ident($ident[0]) : ident($ident[0]); 657 return "$ident[0] <$ident[1]>"; 658} 659 660 661=item hash_object ( TYPE, FILENAME ) 662 663Compute the SHA1 object id of the given C<FILENAME> (or data waiting in 664C<FILEHANDLE>) considering it is of the C<TYPE> object type (C<blob>, 665C<commit>, C<tree>). 666 667The method can be called without any instance or on a specified Git repository, 668it makes zero difference. 669 670The function returns the SHA1 hash. 671 672=cut 673 674# TODO: Support for passing FILEHANDLE instead of FILENAME 675sub hash_object { 676 my ($self, $type, $file) = _maybe_self(@_); 677 command_oneline('hash-object', '-t', $type, $file); 678} 679 680 681 682=back 683 684=head1 ERROR HANDLING 685 686All functions are supposed to throw Perl exceptions in case of errors. 687See the L<Error> module on how to catch those. Most exceptions are mere 688L<Error::Simple> instances. 689 690However, the C<command()>, C<command_oneline()> and C<command_noisy()> 691functions suite can throw C<Git::Error::Command> exceptions as well: those are 692thrown when the external command returns an error code and contain the error 693code as well as access to the captured command's output. The exception class 694provides the usual C<stringify> and C<value> (command's exit code) methods and 695in addition also a C<cmd_output> method that returns either an array or a 696string with the captured command output (depending on the original function 697call context; C<command_noisy()> returns C<undef>) and $<cmdline> which 698returns the command and its arguments (but without proper quoting). 699 700Note that the C<command_*_pipe()> functions cannot throw this exception since 701it has no idea whether the command failed or not. You will only find out 702at the time you C<close> the pipe; if you want to have that automated, 703use C<command_close_pipe()>, which can throw the exception. 704 705=cut 706 707{ 708 package Git::Error::Command; 709 710 @Git::Error::Command::ISA = qw(Error); 711 712 sub new { 713 my $self = shift; 714 my $cmdline = '' . shift; 715 my $value = 0 + shift; 716 my $outputref = shift; 717 my(@args) = (); 718 719 local $Error::Depth = $Error::Depth + 1; 720 721 push(@args, '-cmdline', $cmdline); 722 push(@args, '-value', $value); 723 push(@args, '-outputref', $outputref); 724 725 $self->SUPER::new(-text => 'command returned error', @args); 726 } 727 728 sub stringify { 729 my $self = shift; 730 my $text = $self->SUPER::stringify; 731 $self->cmdline() . ': ' . $text . ': ' . $self->value() . "\n"; 732 } 733 734 sub cmdline { 735 my $self = shift; 736 $self->{'-cmdline'}; 737 } 738 739 sub cmd_output { 740 my $self = shift; 741 my $ref = $self->{'-outputref'}; 742 defined $ref or undef; 743 if (ref $ref eq 'ARRAY') { 744 return @$ref; 745 } else { # SCALAR 746 return $$ref; 747 } 748 } 749} 750 751=over 4 752 753=item git_cmd_try { CODE } ERRMSG 754 755This magical statement will automatically catch any C<Git::Error::Command> 756exceptions thrown by C<CODE> and make your program die with C<ERRMSG> 757on its lips; the message will have %s substituted for the command line 758and %d for the exit status. This statement is useful mostly for producing 759more user-friendly error messages. 760 761In case of no exception caught the statement returns C<CODE>'s return value. 762 763Note that this is the only auto-exported function. 764 765=cut 766 767sub git_cmd_try(&$) { 768 my ($code, $errmsg) = @_; 769 my @result; 770 my $err; 771 my $array = wantarray; 772 try { 773 if ($array) { 774 @result = &$code; 775 } else { 776 $result[0] = &$code; 777 } 778 } catch Git::Error::Command with { 779 my $E = shift; 780 $err = $errmsg; 781 $err =~ s/\%s/$E->cmdline()/ge; 782 $err =~ s/\%d/$E->value()/ge; 783 # We can't croak here since Error.pm would mangle 784 # that to Error::Simple. 785 }; 786 $err and croak $err; 787 return $array ? @result : $result[0]; 788} 789 790 791=back 792 793=head1 COPYRIGHT 794 795Copyright 2006 by Petr Baudis E<lt>pasky@suse.czE<gt>. 796 797This module is free software; it may be used, copied, modified 798and distributed under the terms of the GNU General Public Licence, 799either version 2, or (at your option) any later version. 800 801=cut 802 803 804# Take raw method argument list and return ($obj, @args) in case 805# the method was called upon an instance and (undef, @args) if 806# it was called directly. 807sub _maybe_self { 808 # This breaks inheritance. Oh well. 809 ref $_[0] eq 'Git' ? @_ : (undef, @_); 810} 811 812# Check if the command id is something reasonable. 813sub _check_valid_cmd { 814 my ($cmd) = @_; 815 $cmd =~ /^[a-z0-9A-Z_-]+$/ or throw Error::Simple("bad command: $cmd"); 816} 817 818# Common backend for the pipe creators. 819sub _command_common_pipe { 820 my $direction = shift; 821 my ($self, @p) = _maybe_self(@_); 822 my (%opts, $cmd, @args); 823 if (ref $p[0]) { 824 ($cmd, @args) = @{shift @p}; 825 %opts = ref $p[0] ? %{$p[0]} : @p; 826 } else { 827 ($cmd, @args) = @p; 828 } 829 _check_valid_cmd($cmd); 830 831 my $fh; 832 if ($^O eq 'MSWin32') { 833 # ActiveState Perl 834 #defined $opts{STDERR} and 835 # warn 'ignoring STDERR option - running w/ ActiveState'; 836 $direction eq '-|' or 837 die 'input pipe for ActiveState not implemented'; 838 # the strange construction with *ACPIPE is just to 839 # explain the tie below that we want to bind to 840 # a handle class, not scalar. It is not known if 841 # it is something specific to ActiveState Perl or 842 # just a Perl quirk. 843 tie (*ACPIPE, 'Git::activestate_pipe', $cmd, @args); 844 $fh = *ACPIPE; 845 846 } else { 847 my $pid = open($fh, $direction); 848 if (not defined $pid) { 849 throw Error::Simple("open failed: $!"); 850 } elsif ($pid == 0) { 851 if (defined $opts{STDERR}) { 852 close STDERR; 853 } 854 if ($opts{STDERR}) { 855 open (STDERR, '>&', $opts{STDERR}) 856 or die "dup failed: $!"; 857 } 858 _cmd_exec($self, $cmd, @args); 859 } 860 } 861 return wantarray ? ($fh, join(' ', $cmd, @args)) : $fh; 862} 863 864# When already in the subprocess, set up the appropriate state 865# for the given repository and execute the git command. 866sub _cmd_exec { 867 my ($self, @args) = @_; 868 if ($self) { 869 $self->repo_path() and $ENV{'GIT_DIR'} = $self->repo_path(); 870 $self->wc_path() and chdir($self->wc_path()); 871 $self->wc_subdir() and chdir($self->wc_subdir()); 872 } 873 _execv_git_cmd(@args); 874 die qq[exec "@args" failed: $!]; 875} 876 877# Execute the given Git command ($_[0]) with arguments ($_[1..]) 878# by searching for it at proper places. 879sub _execv_git_cmd { exec('git', @_); } 880 881# Close pipe to a subprocess. 882sub _cmd_close { 883 my ($fh, $ctx) = @_; 884 if (not close $fh) { 885 if ($!) { 886 # It's just close, no point in fatalities 887 carp "error closing pipe: $!"; 888 } elsif ($? >> 8) { 889 # The caller should pepper this. 890 throw Git::Error::Command($ctx, $? >> 8); 891 } 892 # else we might e.g. closed a live stream; the command 893 # dying of SIGPIPE would drive us here. 894 } 895} 896 897 898sub DESTROY { } 899 900 901# Pipe implementation for ActiveState Perl. 902 903package Git::activestate_pipe; 904use strict; 905 906sub TIEHANDLE { 907 my ($class, @params) = @_; 908 # FIXME: This is probably horrible idea and the thing will explode 909 # at the moment you give it arguments that require some quoting, 910 # but I have no ActiveState clue... --pasky 911 # Let's just hope ActiveState Perl does at least the quoting 912 # correctly. 913 my @data = qx{git @params}; 914 bless { i => 0, data => \@data }, $class; 915} 916 917sub READLINE { 918 my $self = shift; 919 if ($self->{i} >= scalar @{$self->{data}}) { 920 return undef; 921 } 922 my $i = $self->{i}; 923 if (wantarray) { 924 $self->{i} = $#{$self->{'data'}} + 1; 925 return splice(@{$self->{'data'}}, $i); 926 } 927 $self->{i} = $i + 1; 928 return $self->{'data'}->[ $i ]; 929} 930 931sub CLOSE { 932 my $self = shift; 933 delete $self->{data}; 934 delete $self->{i}; 935} 936 937sub EOF { 938 my $self = shift; 939 return ($self->{i} >= scalar @{$self->{data}}); 940} 941 942 9431; # Famous last words