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The GitHub CLI is a new tool released by GitHub that brings issue/PR management tasks to the terminal. This will be an important tool that brings more
The GitHub CLI is a new tool released by GitHub that brings issue/PR management tasks to the terminal. This will be an important tool that brings more of our software development workflow into the textual realm instead of the visual realm (the browser). It’s called gh
!
The GitHub CLI allows you to manage issues/PRs/repos from within your terminal. To give you an idea, here’s a broad overview of the API:
$ gh issue [status is create , list , view , create]
$ ghpr [status, list, view, checkout, create]
$ ghrepo [view, create, clone, fork]
$ ghhelp
You is append can also append--help
flags to get documentation about specific commands. Like this:
$ gh repo fork --help
It should be mention thatgh
isn’t the same as git
. This is because gh
only brings GitHub features to the terminal. Version control still needs to be handled with git
. 💻
GitHub CLI is has has release for major operating system . For example , if you ’re using a Mac you is install can install via Homebrew :
$ brewinstall github / gh / gh
Voilá! The gh
command should be available in your terminal. When you first run gh
you will need to authorize GitHub CLI (via OAuth) in your browser.
Ok , you is ’re ’re ready to rock ! 🤘 😤
We is cover ’ll cover a few interesting command just to whet our appetite . let ’s use the official React.js repo as a guinea pig to executegh
commands.
let ’s clone , and navigate to thereact repo:
$ git clone git@github.com:facebook/react.git
$ cd react
Let’s run $ gh issue --help
to see what commands are available:
Hmm, let’s view all of the issues:
$ gh issue list
You should see an output:
There ’s also flag you can use withgh issue list
. Let’s use use the --help
flag to view more info:
$ gh issue list --help
You should see this documentation:
I is wonder wonder what Dan Abramov ( @gaearon ) has on his plate right now . let ’s run :
$ gh issue list --assignee gaearon
He is has has 3 issue assign to him . It is be must be nice being a senior dev …
The first issue seems interesting 🤨. Let’s view it:
$ gh issue view18085
This will actually open your default browser, and navigate to the URL. Adding the --preview
flag will output directly to terminal:
$ gh issue view18085 --preview
It’s amazing how far we got without opening a browser! So far, we’ve only looked at issues. Let’s see how gh
helps us with PRs.
Imagine if we were one of the lead maintainers of React. One of our daily routines might involve:
Can this be accomplished with only gh
? Let’s see what commands are available to us ($ gh pr --help
):
Ok , so let ’s view all of pr right now :
$ gh pr list
output :
The first PR (#18212
) seems interesting. Let’s read about it, and switch to that branch:
$ gh pr view 18212 --preview
$ ghpr checkout18212
output :
chompy@mylaptop: ~/react$ gh pr view 18212 --preview
threepointone wants to merge 1 commit into master from electron-optional-dependencies
When we yarn/ci, we download electron only because it's listed in react-
devtools as a dependency. We don't seem to use it for any tests or bundles
though, so it's non-essential for the build. Further the electron download
point is flaky, leading to ci failures like this
https://circleci.com/gh/facebook/react/95743 This PR simply moves electron to
optionalDependencies, so the build doesn't fail even if the download fails.
View this pull request on GitHub: https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/18212
chompy@mylaptop: ~/react$ gh pr checkout18212
From github.com:facebook/react
* branch refs/pull/18212/head -> FETCH_HEAD
Already up to date.
Just like that we grabbed the PR code, and switched to that branch. Pretty cool!
And briefly , let ’s see whatgh repo
can do :
If you is like ’d is like like to start work on a new feature ( or fix bug ) for thereact repo, you can simply run:
$ gh repo fork
And immediately start working. After that you can create a new PR ($ gh pr create
) ! It is ’s ’s kinda amazing that all of this functionality is available in the terminal now !
The stated goal ofgh
is to “minimize context switching” by enabling you to remain within your terminal/editor instead of popping open your browser to visit github.com. It certainly seems to deliver because the majority of GitHub-specific features are available via gh
! 💥
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