Research
Security News
Threat Actor Exposes Playbook for Exploiting npm to Build Blockchain-Powered Botnets
A threat actor's playbook for exploiting the npm ecosystem was exposed on the dark web, detailing how to build a blockchain-powered botnet.
simple-git
Advanced tools
The simple-git npm package is a light-weight interface for running git commands in any node.js application. It provides a chainable git API for node and supports TypeScript types.
Checking out branches
This feature allows you to checkout different branches within your git repository.
const simpleGit = require('simple-git');
const git = simpleGit();
git.checkout('some-branch-name');
Pulling from a remote repository
This feature is used to pull the latest changes from a remote repository.
const simpleGit = require('simple-git');
const git = simpleGit();
git.pull('origin', 'master');
Committing changes
This feature allows you to stage changes and commit them to your local repository.
const simpleGit = require('simple-git');
const git = simpleGit();
git.add('./*').commit('Commit message');
Pushing to a remote repository
This feature enables you to push your committed changes to a remote repository.
const simpleGit = require('simple-git');
const git = simpleGit();
git.push('origin', 'master');
Listing remote repositories
This feature allows you to list all the remote repositories your local repo is connected to.
const simpleGit = require('simple-git');
const git = simpleGit();
git.getRemotes(true).then(remotes => console.log(remotes));
NodeGit is a more comprehensive Git library for Node.js, providing a 1-to-1 mapping of Git concepts. It is more complex and has a steeper learning curve compared to simple-git, but it offers more detailed control over the Git operations.
Isomorphic-git is a pure JavaScript implementation of Git that works in both Node.js and browser environments. It is similar to simple-git but can be used for front-end projects as well, making it more versatile in different environments.
Gitty is another simple Git command wrapper for Node.js. It has a simpler API than simple-git but is not as actively maintained and lacks some of the more advanced features found in simple-git.
A lightweight interface for running git
commands in any node.js application.
Use your favourite package manager:
Requires git to be installed and that it can be called using the command git
.
Include into your JavaScript app using common js:
// require the library, main export is a function
const simpleGit = require('simple-git');
simpleGit().clean(simpleGit.CleanOptions.FORCE);
// or use named properties
const { simpleGit, CleanOptions } = require('simple-git');
simpleGit().clean(CleanOptions.FORCE);
Include into your JavaScript app as an ES Module:
import { simpleGit, CleanOptions } from 'simple-git';
simpleGit().clean(CleanOptions.FORCE);
Include in a TypeScript app using the bundled type definitions:
import { simpleGit, SimpleGit, CleanOptions } from 'simple-git';
const git: SimpleGit = simpleGit().clean(CleanOptions.FORCE);
Configure each simple-git
instance with a properties object passed to the main simpleGit
function:
import { simpleGit, SimpleGit, SimpleGitOptions } from 'simple-git';
const options: Partial<SimpleGitOptions> = {
baseDir: process.cwd(),
binary: 'git',
maxConcurrentProcesses: 6,
trimmed: false,
};
// when setting all options in a single object
const git: SimpleGit = simpleGit(options);
// or split out the baseDir, supported for backward compatibility
const git: SimpleGit = simpleGit('/some/path', { binary: 'git' });
The first argument can be either a string (representing the working directory for git
commands to run in),
SimpleGitOptions
object or undefined
, the second parameter is an optional SimpleGitOptions
object.
All configuration properties are optional, the default values are shown in the example above.
To prefix the commands run by simple-git
with custom configuration not saved in the git config (ie: using the
-c
command) supply a config
option to the instance builder:
// configure the instance with a custom configuration property
const git: SimpleGit = simpleGit('/some/path', { config: ['http.proxy=someproxy'] });
// any command executed will be prefixed with this config
// runs: git -c http.proxy=someproxy pull
await git.pull();
AbortController
Terminate pending and future tasks in a simple-git
instance (requires node >= 16).
Custom Binary
Customise the git
binary simple-git
uses when spawning git
child processes.
Completion Detection
Customise how simple-git
detects the end of a git
process.
Error Detection
Customise the detection of errors from the underlying git
process.
Progress Events
Receive progress events as git
works through long-running processes.
Spawned Process Ownership
Configure the system uid
/ gid
to use for spawned git
processes.
Timeout
Automatically kill the wrapped git
process after a rolling timeout.
Unsafe
Selectively opt out of simple-git
safety precautions - for advanced users and use cases.
Each task in the API returns the simpleGit
instance for chaining together multiple tasks, and each
step in the chain is also a Promise
that can be await
ed in an async
function or returned in a
Promise
chain.
const git = simpleGit();
// chain together tasks to await final result
await git.init().addRemote('origin', '...remote.git');
// or await each step individually
await git.init();
await git.addRemote('origin', '...remote.git');
To catch errors in async code, either wrap the whole chain in a try/catch:
const git = simpleGit();
try {
await git.init();
await git.addRemote(name, repoUrl);
} catch (e) {
/* handle all errors here */
}
or catch individual steps to permit the main chain to carry on executing rather than
jumping to the final catch
on the first error:
const git = simpleGit();
try {
await git.init().catch(ignoreError);
await git.addRemote(name, repoUrl);
} catch (e) {
/* handle all errors here */
}
function ignoreError() {}
In addition to returning a promise, each method can also be called with a trailing callback argument to handle the result of the task.
const git = simpleGit();
git.init(onInit).addRemote('origin', 'git@github.com:steveukx/git-js.git', onRemoteAdd);
function onInit(err, initResult) {}
function onRemoteAdd(err, addRemoteResult) {}
If any of the steps in the chain result in an error, all pending steps will be cancelled, see the parallel tasks section for more information on how to run tasks in parallel rather than in series .
Whether using a trailing callback or a Promise, tasks either return the raw string
or Buffer
response from the
git
binary, or where possible a parsed interpretation of the response.
For type details of the response for each of the tasks, please see the TypeScript definitions.
From v3 of simple-git
you can now import as an ES module, Common JS module or as TypeScript with bundled type
definitions. Upgrading from v2 will be seamless for any application not relying on APIs that were marked as deprecated
in v2 (deprecation notices were logged to stdout
as console.warn
in v2).
API | What it does |
---|---|
.add([fileA, ...], handlerFn) | adds one or more files to be under source control |
.addAnnotatedTag(tagName, tagMessage, handlerFn) | adds an annotated tag to the head of the current branch |
.addTag(name, handlerFn) | adds a lightweight tag to the head of the current branch |
.catFile(options, [handlerFn]) | generate cat-file detail, options should be an array of strings as supported arguments to the cat-file command |
.checkIgnore([filepath, ...], handlerFn) | checks if filepath excluded by .gitignore rules |
.clearQueue() | immediately clears the queue of pending tasks (note: any command currently in progress will still call its completion callback) |
.commit(message, handlerFn) | commits changes in the current working directory with the supplied message where the message can be either a single string or array of strings to be passed as separate arguments (the git command line interface converts these to be separated by double line breaks) |
.commit(message, [fileA, ...], options, handlerFn) | commits changes on the named files with the supplied message, when supplied, the optional options object can contain any other parameters to pass to the commit command, setting the value of the property to be a string will add name=value to the command string, setting any other type of value will result in just the key from the object being passed (ie: just name ), an example of setting the author is below |
.customBinary(gitPath) | sets the command to use to reference git, allows for using a git binary not available on the path environment variable docs |
.env(name, value) | Set environment variables to be passed to the spawned child processes, see usage in detail below. |
.exec(handlerFn) | calls a simple function in the current step |
.fetch([options, ] handlerFn) | update the local working copy database with changes from the default remote repo and branch, when supplied the options argument can be a standard options object either an array of string commands as supported by the git fetch. |
.fetch(remote, branch, handlerFn) | update the local working copy database with changes from a remote repo |
.fetch(handlerFn) | update the local working copy database with changes from the default remote repo and branch |
.outputHandler(handlerFn) | attaches a handler that will be called with the name of the command being run and the stdout and stderr readable streams created by the child process running that command, see examples |
.raw(args, [handlerFn]) | Execute any arbitrary array of commands supported by the underlying git binary. When the git process returns a non-zero signal on exit and it printed something to stderr , the command will be treated as an error, otherwise treated as a success. |
.rebase([options,] handlerFn) | Rebases the repo, options should be supplied as an array of string parameters supported by the git rebase command, or an object of options (see details below for option formats). |
.revert(commit , [options , [handlerFn]]) | reverts one or more commits in the working copy. The commit can be any regular commit-ish value (hash, name or offset such as HEAD~2 ) or a range of commits (eg: master~5..master~2 ). When supplied the options argument contain any options accepted by git-revert. |
.rm([fileA, ...], handlerFn) | removes any number of files from source control |
.rmKeepLocal([fileA, ...], handlerFn) | removes files from source control but leaves them on disk |
.tag(args[], handlerFn) | Runs any supported git tag commands with arguments passed as an array of strings . |
.tags([options, ] handlerFn) | list all tags, use the optional options object to set any options allows by the git tag command. Tags will be sorted by semantic version number by default, for git versions 2.7 and above, use the --sort option to set a custom sort. |
.applyPatch(patch, [options])
applies a single string patch (as generated by git diff
), optionally configured with the supplied options to set any arguments supported by the apply command. Returns the unmodified string response from stdout
of the git
binary..applyPatch(patches, [options])
applies an array of string patches (as generated by git diff
), optionally configured with the supplied options to set any arguments supported by the apply command. Returns the unmodified string response from stdout
of the git
binary..branch([options])
uses the supplied options to run any arguments supported by the branch command. Either returns a BranchSummaryResult instance when listing branches, or a BranchSingleDeleteResult type object when the options included -d
, -D
or --delete
which cause it to delete a named branch rather than list existing branches..branchLocal()
gets a list of local branches as a BranchSummaryResult instance.deleteLocalBranch(branchName)
deletes a local branch - treats a failed attempt as an error.deleteLocalBranch(branchName, forceDelete)
deletes a local branch, optionally explicitly setting forceDelete to true - treats a failed attempt as an error.deleteLocalBranches(branchNames)
deletes multiple local branches.deleteLocalBranches(branchNames, forceDelete)
deletes multiple local branches, optionally explicitly setting forceDelete to true.clean(mode)
clean the working tree. Mode should be "n" - dry run or "f" - force.clean(cleanSwitches [,options])
set cleanSwitches
to a string containing any number of the supported single character options, optionally with a standard options object.checkout(checkoutWhat , [options])
- checks out the supplied tag, revision or branch when supplied as a string,
additional arguments supported by git checkout can be supplied as an
options object/array.
.checkout(options)
- check out a tag or revision using the supplied options
.checkoutBranch(branchName, startPoint)
- checks out a new branch from the supplied start point.
.checkoutLocalBranch(branchName)
- checks out a new local branch
.clone(repoPath, [localPath, [options]])
clone a remote repo at repoPath
to a local directory at localPath
, optionally with a standard options object of additional arguments to include between git clone
and the trailing repo local
arguments
.clone(repoPath, [options])
clone a remote repo at repoPath
to a directory in the current working directory with the same name as the repo
mirror(repoPath, [localPath, [options]])
behaves the same as the .clone
interface with the --mirror
flag enabled.
.addConfig(key, value, append = false, scope = 'local')
add a local configuration property, when append
is set to
true
the configuration setting is appended to rather than overwritten in the local config. Use the scope
argument
to pick where to save the new configuration setting (use the exported GitConfigScope
enum, or equivalent string
values - worktree | local | global | system
).
.getConfig(key)
get the value(s) for a named key as a ConfigGetResult
.getConfig(key, scope)
get the value(s) for a named key as a ConfigGetResult but limit the
scope of the properties searched to a single specified scope (use the exported GitConfigScope
enum, or equivalent
string values - worktree | local | global | system
)
.listConfig()
reads the current configuration and returns a ConfigListSummary
.listConfig(scope: GitConfigScope)
as with listConfig
but returns only those items in a specified scope (note that configuration values are overlaid on top of each other to build the config git
will actually use - to resolve the configuration you are using use (await listConfig()).all
without the scope argument)
.countObjects()
queries the pack and disk usage properties of the local repository and returns a CountObjectsResult. All disk sizes are reported in Kb, see https://git-scm.com/docs/git-count-objects for full description of properties..diff([ options ])
get the diff of the current repo compared to the last commit, optionally including
any number of other arguments supported by git diff supplied as an
options object/array. Returns the raw diff
output as a string.
.diffSummary([ options ])
creates a DiffResult
to summarise the diff for files in the repo. Uses the --stat
format by default which can be overridden
by passing in any of the log format commands (eg: --numstat
or --name-stat
) as part of the optional
options object/array.
.grep(searchTerm)
searches for a single search term across all files in the working tree, optionally passing a standard options object of additional arguments.grep(grepQueryBuilder(...))
use the grepQueryBuilder
to create a complex query to search for, optionally passing a standard options object of additional arguments.hashObject(filePath, write = false)
computes the object ID value for the contents of the named file (which can be
outside of the work tree), optionally writing the resulting value to the object database..init(bare , [options])
initialize a repository using the boolean bare
parameter to intialise a bare repository.
Any number of other arguments supported by git init can be supplied as an
options object/array.
.init([options])
initialize a repository using any arguments supported by
git init supplied as an options object/array.
.log([options])
list commits between options.from
and options.to
tags or branch (if not specified will
show all history). Use the options
object to set any options supported by the
git log command or any of the following:
options.file
- the path to a file in your repository to only consider this path.options.format
- custom log format object, keys are the property names used on the returned object, values are the format string from pretty formatsoptions.from
- sets the oldest commit in the range to return, use along with options.to
to set a bounded rangeoptions.mailMap
- defaults to true, enables the use of mail map in returned values for email and name from the default formatoptions.maxCount
- equivalent to setting the --max-count
optionoptions.multiLine
- enables multiline body values in the default format (disabled by default)options.splitter
- the character sequence to use as a delimiter between fields in the log, should be a value that doesn't appear in any log message (defaults to ò
)options.strictDate
- switches the authored date value from an ISO 8601-like format to be strict ISO 8601 formatoptions.symmetric
- defaults to true, enables symmetric revision range rather than a two-dot rangeoptions.to
- sets the newset commit in the range to return, use along with options.from
to set a bounded rangeWhen only one of options.from
and options.to
is supplied, the default value of the omitted option is equivalent to HEAD
. For any other commit, explicitly supply both from and to commits (for example use await git.firstCommit()
as the default value of from
to log since the first commit of the repo).
.merge(options)
runs a merge using any configuration options supported
by git merge.
Conflicts during the merge result in an error response, the response is an instance of
MergeSummary whether it was an error or success.
When successful, the MergeSummary has all detail from a the PullSummary
along with summary detail for the merge.
When the merge failed, the MergeSummary contains summary detail for why the merge failed and which files
prevented the merge.
.mergeFromTo(remote, branch , [options])
- merge from the specified branch into the currently checked out branch,
similar to .merge
but with the remote
and branch
supplied as strings separately to any additional
options.
.mv(from, to)
rename or move a single file at from
to to
.mv(from, to)
move all files in the from
array to the to
directory
.pull([options])
pulls all updates from the default tracked remote, any arguments supported by
git pull can be supplied as an options object/array.
.pull(remote, branch, [options])
pulls all updates from the specified remote branch (eg 'origin'/'master') along
with any custom options object/array
.push([options])
pushes to a named remote/branch using any supported options
from the git push command. Note that simple-git
enforces the use of
--verbose --porcelain
options in order to parse the response. You don't need to supply these options.
.push(remote, branch, [options])
pushes to a named remote/branch, supports additional
options from the git push command.
.pushTags(remote, [options])
pushes local tags to a named remote (equivalent to using .push([remote, '--tags'])
)
.addRemote(name, repo, [options])
adds a new named remote to be tracked as name
at the path repo
, optionally with any supported options for the git add call..getRemotes([verbose])
gets a list of the named remotes, supply the optional verbose
option as true
to include the URLs and purpose of each ref.listRemote([options])
lists remote repositories - there are so many optional arguments in the underlying git ls-remote
call, just supply any you want to use as the optional options eg: git.listRemote(['--heads', '--tags'], console.log)
.remote([options])
runs a git remote
command with any number of options.removeRemote(name)
removes the named remote.reset(resetMode, [resetOptions])
resets the repository, sets the reset mode to one of the supported types (use a constant from
the exported ResetMode
enum, or a string equivalent: mixed
, soft
, hard
, merge
, keep
). Any number of other arguments
supported by git reset can be supplied as an options object/array.
.reset(resetOptions)
resets the repository with the supplied options
.reset()
resets the repository in soft
mode.
.revparse([options])
sends the supplied options to git rev-parse and returns the string response from git
.
.checkIsRepo()
gets whether the current working directory is a descendent of a git repository.
.checkIsRepo('bare')
gets whether the current working directory is within a bare git repo (see either git clone --bare or git init --bare).
.checkIsRepo('root')
gets whether the current working directory is the root directory for a repo (sub-directories will return false).
.firstCommit()
gets the commit hash of the first commit made to the current repo.
.show(options)
show various types of objects for example the file content at a certain commit. options
is the single value string or any options supported by the git show command..showBuffer(options)
same as the .show
API, but returns the Buffer content directly to allow for showing binary file content..status([options])
gets the status of the current repo, resulting in a StatusResult. Additional arguments
supported by git status can be supplied as an options object/array..subModule(options)
Run a git submodule
command with on or more arguments passed in as an options array or object.submoduleAdd(repo, path)
Adds a new sub module.submoduleInit([options]
Initialises sub modules, the optional options argument can be used to pass extra options to the git submodule init
command..submoduleUpdate(subModuleName, [options])
Updates sub modules, can be called with a sub module name and options, just the options or with no arguments.stash([ options ])
Stash the working directory, optional first argument can be an array of string arguments or options object to pass to the git stash command.
.stashList([ options ])
Retrieves the stash list, optional first argument can be an object in the same format as used in git log.
.version()
retrieve the major, minor and patch for the currently installed git
. Use the .installed
property of the result to determine whether git
is accessible on the path..cwd(workingDirectory)
Sets the working directory for all future commands - note, this will change the working for the root instance, any chain created from the root will also be changed..cwd({ path, root = false })
Sets the working directory for all future commands either in the current chain of commands (where root
is omitted or set to false
) or in the main instance (where root
is true
).Where the task accepts custom options (eg: pull
or commit
), these can be supplied as an object, the keys of which
will all be merged as trailing arguments in the command string, or as a simple array of strings.
When the value of the property in the options object is a string
, that name value
pair will be included in the command string as name=value
. For example:
// results in 'git pull origin master --no-rebase'
git.pull('origin', 'master', { '--no-rebase': null });
// results in 'git pull origin master --rebase=true'
git.pull('origin', 'master', { '--rebase': 'true' });
Options can also be supplied as an array of strings to be merged into the task's commands in the same way as when an object is used:
// results in 'git pull origin master --no-rebase'
git.pull('origin', 'master', ['--no-rebase']);
Major release 3.x changes the packaging of the library, making it consumable as a CommonJS module, ES module as well as with TypeScript (see usage above). The library is now published as a single file, so please ensure your application hasn't been making use of non-documented APIs by importing from a sub-directory path.
See also:
When the methods of simple-git
are chained together, they create an execution chain that will run in series, useful
for when the tasks themselves are order-dependent, eg:
simpleGit().init().addRemote('origin', 'https://some-repo.git').fetch();
Each task requires that the one before it has been run successfully before it is called, any errors in a step of the chain should prevent later steps from being attempted.
When the methods of simple-git
are called on the root instance (ie: git = simpleGit()
) rather than chained
off another task, it starts a new chain and will not be affected failures in tasks already being run. Useful
for when the tasks are independent of each other, eg:
const git = simpleGit();
const results = await Promise.all([
git.raw('rev-parse', '--show-cdup').catch(swallow),
git.raw('rev-parse', '--show-prefix').catch(swallow),
]);
function swallow(err) {
return null;
}
Each simple-git
instance limits the number of spawned child processes that can be run simultaneously and
manages the queue of pending tasks for you. Configure this value by passing an options object to the
simpleGit
function, eg:
const git = simpleGit({ maxConcurrentProcesses: 10 });
Treating tasks called on the root instance as the start of separate chains is a change to the behaviour of
simple-git
and was added in version 2.11.0
.
When no suitable wrapper exists in the interface for creating a request, run the command directly
using git.raw([...], handler)
. The array of commands are passed directly to the git
binary:
const path = '/path/to/repo';
const commands = ['config', '--global', 'advice.pushNonFastForward', 'false'];
// using an array of commands and node-style callback
simpleGit(path).raw(commands, (err, result) => {
// err is null unless this command failed
// result is the raw output of this command
});
// using a var-args of strings and awaiting rather than using the callback
const result = await simpleGit(path).raw(...commands);
// automatically trim trailing white-space in responses
const result = await simpleGit(path, { trimmed: true }).raw(...commands);
The easiest way to supply a username / password to the remote host is to include it in the URL, for example:
const USER = 'something';
const PASS = 'somewhere';
const REPO = 'github.com/username/private-repo';
const remote = `https://${USER}:${PASS}@${REPO}`;
simpleGit()
.clone(remote)
.then(() => console.log('finished'))
.catch((err) => console.error('failed: ', err));
Be sure to not enable debug logging when using this mechanism for authentication to ensure passwords aren't logged to stdout.
Pass one or more environment variables to the child processes spawned by simple-git
with the .env
method which
supports passing either an object of name=value pairs or setting a single variable at a time:
const GIT_SSH_COMMAND = 'ssh -o UserKnownHostsFile=/dev/null -o StrictHostKeyChecking=no';
simpleGit()
.env('GIT_SSH_COMMAND', GIT_SSH_COMMAND)
.status((err, status) => {
/* */
});
simpleGit()
.env({ ...process.env, GIT_SSH_COMMAND })
.status()
.then((status) => {})
.catch((err) => {});
Note - when passing environment variables into the child process, these will replace the standard process.env
variables, the example above creates a new object based on process.env
but with the GIT_SSH_COMMAND
property added.
When the git
process exits with a non-zero status (or in some cases like merge
the git process exits with a
successful zero code but there are conflicts in the merge) the task will reject with a GitError
when there is no
available parser to handle the error or a
GitResponseError
for when there is.
See the err
property of the callback:
git.merge((err, mergeSummary) => {
if (err.git) {
mergeSummary = err.git; // the failed mergeSummary
}
});
Catch errors with try/catch in async code:
try {
const mergeSummary = await git.merge();
console.log(`Merged ${mergeSummary.merges.length} files`);
} catch (err) {
// err.message - the string summary of the error
// err.stack - some stack trace detail
// err.git - where a parser was able to run, this is the parsed content
console.error(`Merge resulted in ${err.git.conflicts.length} conflicts`);
}
Catch errors with a .catch
on the promise:
const mergeSummary = await git.merge().catch((err) => {
if (err.git) {
return err.git;
} // the unsuccessful mergeSummary
throw err; // some other error, so throw
});
if (mergeSummary.failed) {
console.error(`Merge resulted in ${mergeSummary.conflicts.length} conflicts`);
}
With typed errors available in TypeScript
import { simpleGit, MergeSummary, GitResponseError } from 'simple-git';
try {
const mergeSummary = await simpleGit().merge();
console.log(`Merged ${mergeSummary.merges.length} files`);
} catch (err) {
// err.message - the string summary of the error
// err.stack - some stack trace detail
// err.git - where a parser was able to run, this is the parsed content
const mergeSummary: MergeSummary = (err as GitResponseError<MergeSummary>).git;
const conflicts = mergeSummary?.conflicts || [];
console.error(`Merge resulted in ${conflicts.length} conflicts`);
}
See the debug logging guide for logging examples and how to make use of the debug library's programmatic interface in your application.
See the debug logging guide for the full list of verbose logging options to use with the debug library.
There are a few potential reasons:
git
isn't available as a binary for the user running the main node
process, custom paths to the binary can be used
with the .customBinary(...)
API option.
the working directory passed in to the main simple-git
function isn't accessible, check it is read/write accessible
by the user running the node
process. This library uses
@kwsites/file-exists to validate the working directory exists,
to output its logs add @kwsites/file-exists
to your DEBUG
environment variable. eg:
DEBUG=@kwsites/file-exists,simple-git node ./your-app.js
The properties of git log
are fetched using the --pretty=format
argument which supports different tokens depending
on the version of git
- for example the %D
token used to show the refs was added in git 2.2.3
, for any version
before that please ensure you are supplying your own format object with properties supported by the version of git you
are using.
For more details of the supported tokens, please see the
official git log
documentation
The properties of git.log
are fetched using the character sequence ò
as a delimiter. If your commit messages
use this sequence, supply a custom splitter
in the options, for example: git.log({ splitter: '💻' })
DEBUG=simple-git:task:*,simple-git:output:*
simple-git:output:diff:1 [stdOut] 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+)
)stdOut
output is the same as you would expect to see when running the command directly in terminalIn some cases git
will show progress messages or additional detail on error states in the output for
stdErr
that will help debug your issue, these messages are also included in the verbose log.
From v3.x
, simple-git
will drop support for node.js
version 10 or below, to use in a lower version of node will
result in errors such as:
Object.fromEntries is not a function
Object.entries is not a function
message.flatMap is not a function
To resolve these issues, either upgrade to a newer version of node.js or ensure you are using the necessary polyfills
from core-js
- see Legacy Node Versions.
If the simple-git
API doesn't explicitly limit the scope of the task being run (ie: git.add()
requires the files to
be added, but git.status()
will run against the entire repo), add a pathspec
to the command using trailing options:
import { simpleGit, pathspec } from "simple-git";
const git = simpleGit();
const wholeRepoStatus = await git.status();
const subDirStatusUsingOptArray = await git.status([pathspec('sub-dir')]);
const subDirStatusUsingOptObject = await git.status({ 'sub-dir': pathspec('sub-dir') });
async function status(workingDir) {
let statusSummary = null;
try {
statusSummary = await simpleGit(workingDir).status();
} catch (e) {
// handle the error
}
return statusSummary;
}
// using the async function
status(__dirname + '/some-repo').then((status) => console.log(status));
const git = simpleGit(__dirname);
git.checkIsRepo()
.then((isRepo) => !isRepo && initialiseRepo(git))
.then(() => git.fetch());
function initialiseRepo(git) {
return git.init().then(() => git.addRemote('origin', 'https://some.git.repo'));
}
simpleGit(__dirname + '/some-repo')
.pull()
.tags((err, tags) => console.log('Latest available tag: %s', tags.latest));
// update repo and when there are changes, restart the app
simpleGit().pull((err, update) => {
if (update && update.summary.changes) {
require('child_process').exec('npm restart');
}
});
simpleGit()
.init()
.add('./*')
.commit('first commit!')
.addRemote('origin', 'https://github.com/user/repo.git')
.push('origin', 'master');
-u
simpleGit()
.add('./*')
.commit('first commit!')
.addRemote('origin', 'some-repo-url')
.push(['-u', 'origin', 'master'], () => console.log('done'));
See progress events for more details on logging progress updates.
const git = simpleGit({
progress({ method, stage, progress }) {
console.log(`git.${method} ${stage} stage ${progress}% complete`);
},
});
git.checkout('https://github.com/user/repo.git');
// when using a chain
simpleGit()
.exec(() => console.log('Starting pull...'))
.pull((err, update) => {
if (update && update.summary.changes) {
require('child_process').exec('npm restart');
}
})
.exec(() => console.log('pull done.'));
// when using async and optional chaining
const git = simpleGit();
console.log('Starting pull...');
if ((await git.pull())?.summary.changes) {
require('child_process').exec('npm restart');
}
console.log('pull done.');
console.log(await simpleGit().log());
console.log(await simpleGit().log('0.11.0', '0.12.0'));
simpleGit()
.addConfig('user.name', 'Some One')
.addConfig('user.email', 'some@one.com')
.commit('committed as "Some One"', 'file-one')
.commit('committed as "Another Person"', 'file-two', {
'--author': '"Another Person <another@person.com>"',
});
simpleGit().listRemote(['--get-url'], (err, data) => {
if (!err) {
console.log('Remote url for repository at ' + __dirname + ':');
console.log(data);
}
});
FAQs
Simple GIT interface for node.js
The npm package simple-git receives a total of 3,542,468 weekly downloads. As such, simple-git popularity was classified as popular.
We found that simple-git demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 2 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
Research
Security News
A threat actor's playbook for exploiting the npm ecosystem was exposed on the dark web, detailing how to build a blockchain-powered botnet.
Security News
NVD’s backlog surpasses 20,000 CVEs as analysis slows and NIST announces new system updates to address ongoing delays.
Security News
Research
A malicious npm package disguised as a WhatsApp client is exploiting authentication flows with a remote kill switch to exfiltrate data and destroy files.