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= octopi
Octopi is a Ruby interface to GitHub API v2 (http://develop.github.com).
To install it as a Gem, just run:
$ sudo gem install octopi
Get notifications via Twitter, following @octopi_gem: http://twitter.com/octopi_gem
== Authenticated Usage
=== Seamless authentication using .gitconfig defaults
If you have your ~/.gitconfig file in place, and you have a [github] section (if you don't, take a look at this GitHub Guides entry: http://github.com/guides/tell-git-your-user-name-and-email-address), you can use seamless authentication using this method:
authenticated do |g| repo = g.repository("api-labrat") (...) end
=== Explicit authentication
Sometimes, you may not want to get authentication data from ~/.gitconfig. You want to use GitHub API authenticated as a third party. For this use case, you have a couple of options too.
1. Providing login and token inline:
authenticated_with "mylogin", "mytoken" do |g| repo = g.repository("api-labrat") issue = repo.open_issue :title => "Sample issue", :body => "This issue was opened using GitHub API and Octopi" puts issue.number end
2. Providing a YAML file with authentication information:
Use the following format:
login: github-username token: github-token
trace: curl
And change the way you connect to:
authenticated_with :config => "github.yml" do |g| (...) end
== Anonymous Usage
This reflects the usage of the API to retrieve information on a read-only fashion, where the user doesn't have to be authenticated.
=== Users API
Getting user information
user = User.find("fcoury") puts "#{user.name} is being followed by #{user.followers.join(", ")} and following #{user.following.join(", ")}"
The bang methods followers!
and following!
retrieves a full User object for each user login returned, so it has to be used carefully.
user.followers!.each do |u| puts " - #{u.name} (#{u.login}) has #{u.public_repo_count} repo(s)" end
Searching for user
users = User.find_all("silva") puts "#{users.size} users found for 'silva':" users.each do |u| puts " - #{u.name}" end
=== Repositories API
repo = user.repository("octopi") # same as: Repository.find("fcoury", "octopi") puts "Repository: #{repo.name} - #{repo.description} (by #{repo.owner}) - #{repo.url}" puts " Tags: #{repo.tags and repo.tags.map {|t| t.name}.join(", ")}"
Search:
repos = Repository.find_all("ruby", "git") puts "#{repos.size} repository(ies) with 'ruby' and 'git':" repos.each do |r| puts " - #{r.name}" end
Issues API integrated into the Repository object:
issue = repo.issues.first puts "First open issue: #{issue.number} - #{issue.title} - Created at: #{issue.created_at}"
Single issue information:
issue = repo.issue(11)
Commits API information from a Repository object:
first_commit = repo.commits.first puts "First commit: #{first_commit.id} - #{first_commit.message} - by #{first_commit.author['name']}"
Single commit information:
puts "Diff:" first_commit.details.modified.each {|m| puts "#{m['filename']} DIFF: #{m['diff']}" }
== Tracing
=== Levels
You can can use tracing to enable better debugging output when something goes wrong. There are 3 tracing levels:
If you choose curl tracing, the curl command equivalent to each command sent to GitHub will be output to the stdout, like this example:
=== Enabling
Tracing can be enabled in different ways, depending on the API feature you're using:
Anonymous (this will be improved later):
ANONYMOUS_API.trace_level = "trace-level"
Seamless authenticated
authenticated :trace => "trace-level" do |g|; ...; end
Explicitly authenticated
Current version of explicit authentication requires a :config param to a YAML file to allow tracing. For enabling tracing on a YAML file refer to the config.yml example presented on the Explicit authentication section.
== Author
== Contributors
In alphabetical order:
Thanks guys!
== Copyright
Copyright (c) 2009 Felipe Coury. See LICENSE for details.
FAQs
Unknown package
We found that ddollar-octopi demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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