.github | ||
.vscode | ||
assets | ||
asyncgit | ||
invalidstring | ||
scopetime | ||
src | ||
wix | ||
.clippy.toml | ||
.gitignore | ||
Cargo.lock | ||
Cargo.toml | ||
CHANGELOG.md | ||
demo.gif | ||
KEY_CONFIG.md | ||
LICENSE.md | ||
Makefile | ||
README.md | ||
rustfmt.toml | ||
THEMES.md | ||
vim_style_key_config.ron |
Blazing fast terminal client for git written in Rust
Features
- Fast and intuitive keyboard only control
- Context based help (no need to memorize tons of hot-keys)
- Inspect, commit, and amend changes (incl. hooks: commit-msg/post-commit)
- Stage, unstage, revert and reset files, hunks and lines
- Stashing (save, pop, apply, drop, and inspect)
- Push/Fetch to/from remote
- Branch List (create, rename, delete, checkout, remotes)
- Browse commit log, diff committed changes
- Scalable terminal UI layout
- Async input polling
- Async git API for fluid control
Benchmarks
For a RustBerlin meetup presentation (slides) I compared lazygit
,tig
and gitui
by parsing the entire Linux git repository (which contains over 900k commits):
Time | Memory (GB) | Binary (MB) | Freezes | Crashes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
gitui |
24 s ✅ | 0.17 ✅ | 1.4 | No ✅ | No ✅ |
lazygit |
57 s | 2.6 | 16 | Yes | Sometimes |
tig |
4 m 20 s | 1.3 | 0.6 ✅ | Sometimes | No ✅ |
Motivation
I do most of my git usage in a terminal but I frequently found myself using git UIs for some use cases like: index, commit, diff, stash and log.
Over the last 2 years my go-to GUI tool for this was fork because it was snappy, free, and not bloated. Unfortunately the free part will change soon and so I decided to build a fast and simple terminal tool to help with features I use the most.
Known Limitations
- no support for conflict resolution yet (see #485)
- no support for bare repositories (see #100)
- no support for core.hooksPath config
Currently, this tool does not fully substitute the git shell, however both tools work well in tandem.
gitui
currently lacks essential features in git like push, pull, and checkout. The priorities are the basics (add, commit), and on features that are making me mad when done on the git shell, like stashes and hunks. Eventually, I will be able to work on features that could lead to making gitui
a one stop solution to get rid of the shell entirely - but for that I need help - this is just a spare time project right now.
All support is welcomed! Sponsors as well! ❤️
Installation
For the time being this product is in alpha and is not considered production ready. However, for personal use it is reasonably stable and is being used while developing itself.
Arch Linux
pacman -S gitui
Fedora
sudo dnf install gitui
Gentoo
Available in dm9pZCAq overlay
sudo eselect repository enable dm9pZCAq
sudo emerge --sync dm9pZCAq
sudo emerge dev-vcs/gitui::dm9pZCAq
Homebrew (macOS)
brew install gitui
Scoop (Windows)
scoop install gitui
Chocolatey (Windows)
choco install gitui
Nix (Nix/NixOS)
Nixpkg
nix-env -iA nixpkgs.gitui
NixOS
nix-env -iA nixos.gitui
Release Binaries
Available for download in releases
Binaries available for:
- Linux
- macOS
- Windows
Build
Requirements
- Latest
rust
andcargo
- See Install Rust
Cargo Install
The simplest way to start playing around with gitui
is to have cargo
build and install it with cargo install gitui
Diagnostics
To run with logging enabled run gitui -l
.
This will log to:
- macOS:
$HOME/Library/Caches/gitui/gitui.log
- Linux using
XDG
:$XDG_CACHE_HOME/gitui/gitui.log
- Linux:
$HOME/.cache/gitui/gitui.log
- Windows:
%LOCALAPPDATA%/gitui/gitui.log
Color Theme
gitui
should automatically work on both light and dark terminal themes.
However, you can customize everything to your liking: See Themes.
Key Bindings
The key bindings can be customized: See Key Config on how to set them to vim
-like bindings.
Road(map) to 1.0
These are the high level goals before calling out 1.0
:
- merging with conflicts (#485)
- log search (commit, author, sha) (#449,#429)
- file history log (#381)
- more tag support (#483)
- file blame (#484)
- visualize branching structure in log tab (#81)
Inspiration
- lazygit
- tig
- GitUp
- It would be nice to come up with a way to have the map view available in a terminal tool
- git-brunch