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#!/usr/bin/php | |
<?php | |
$repos = array(); | |
exec('find -type d -name .git | sed -e "s/\.git//"', $repos); | |
foreach ($repos as $repo) { | |
$status = shell_exec("cd $repo && git status"); | |
if (false == strpos($status, 'nothing to commit (working directory clean)')) { | |
echo "$repo\n" . str_repeat('-', strlen($repo)) . "\n$status\n\n"; | |
} | |
} |
Thank you @hoijui!
One comment: the script fails if the folder contains '.git' in its name. For example, I have a Github page repo named Gabriel-p.github.io
and the script will fail with:
fatal: cannot change to './Gabriel-phub.io/': No such file or directory
@Gabriel-p strange.. it does not happen here. :-/
I tested it like this:
mkdir tmp
cd tmp
mkdir .git
mkdir bla.github
mkdir ergwergwerg
mkdir ergwergwerggit
mkdir ergwergwerg/bla.github
find . -name '.git'
Which spits out only this:
./.git
which I think.. is what should happen, according to the man page of find
; -name
should match only on the complete file name.
Is it possible that you are using some obscure version of find
? maybe OSX?
though even there it woudl be strange to diverge like this... I don't know!
@hoijui Try creating a .git
folder inside bla.github
(and remove the top .git
folder to avoid an error because it is not a valid git
folder), and then run your script. I get this:
fatal: cannot change to './blahub/': No such file or directory
The problem is not with the find . -name '.git'
line but with the repo=${repo//\.git/}
line. Using this instead
repo=${repo%".git"}
seems to do the trick.
ahh very good, thank you @Gabriel-p!
//
replaces anywhere, %
replaces only a match on the end of the string, so %
is to be used here.
fixed version of the script:
#!/usr/bin/env bash
# Recursive `git status` (including sub-modules)
set -e
status_ops="$*"
find . -name '.git' \
| while read -r repo
do
repo=${repo%".git"}
(git -C "$repo" status -s \
| grep -q -v "^\$" \
&& echo -e "\n\033[1m${repo}\033[m" \
&& git -C "$repo" status $status_ops) \
|| true
done
... and as one-liner:
find . -name '.git' | while read -r repo ; do repo=${repo%".git"}; (git -C "$repo" status -s | grep -q -v "^\$" && echo -e "\n\033[1m${repo}\033[m" && git -C "$repo" status -s) || true; done
For Windows users... try this in the root folder above the folders to search:
for /f "tokens=*" %a in ('dir .git /adh /b /s') do (echo off & cd "%~pa" & cd & git status -s)
(The echo off
helps the output look less cluttered but may wreck your prompt. If so, exit the window when done.)
@glittle , awesome,
If you want to check all git folders in "C:\some-folder" run the following (1 level, runs faster)
for /f "tokens=*" %a in ('dir /ad /b') do (echo off & cd "c:\\some-folder\\%~a" & cd & git status -s)
You don't need to search everything. Do:
find . -maxdepth 2 -name .git -type d -exec sh -c "cd {}/..;git status" \;
find . -name '.git' | while read repo; do echo -e "\n$(dirname $repo)"; git --git-dir=$repo --work-tree=$(dirname $repo) status -s -b; done
ahh very good, thank you @Gabriel-p!
//
replaces anywhere,%
replaces only a match on the end of the string, so%
is to be used here.fixed version of the script:
#!/usr/bin/env bash # Recursive `git status` (including sub-modules) set -e status_ops="$*" find . -name '.git' \ | while read -r repo do repo=${repo%".git"} (git -C "$repo" status -s \ | grep -q -v "^\$" \ && echo -e "\n\033[1m${repo}\033[m" \ && git -C "$repo" status $status_ops) \ || true done... and as one-liner:
find . -name '.git' | while read -r repo ; do repo=${repo%".git"}; (git -C "$repo" status -s | grep -q -v "^\$" && echo -e "\n\033[1m${repo}\033[m" && git -C "$repo" status -s) || true; done
I discovered from here that if you want to run that script as a git command without making an alias, you have to:
- Name your script: "git-command"
- Make your script executable
- Move your script to a directory that's in your PATH
E.g.:
If your PATH contains ~/.local/bin/ and you named your script "git-str" then:
chmod +x git-str && mv git-str ~/.local/bin/
Now you can run: git str.
To any Linux novice, beware of what script you make executable, as it may be dangerous for your system.
(The
echo off
helps the output look less cluttered but may wreck your prompt. If so, exit the window when done.)
after the command is done, typing echo on
will bring back the prompt.
This one (1) produces a slim output, and (2) starts printing the results instantly (you don't have to wait it to finish to see the final output):
find . -maxdepth 2 -name .git -type d -exec sh -c "cd {}/..; pwd; git status -s" \;
based on:
changes:
.git
is actually often not a directory, but a file (in the case of sub-modules), thus I had to remove the-type d
partgrep ...
part to not exclude the parent repo, if it contains changesfeatures:
.git
sub-modulesone-liner:
as bash script file with custom extra options for status:
If you store this in your
PATH
asgit-status-recursive
,and use
git config --global alias.rst '!git-status-recursive'
(for example in your~/.profile
),then you can use it like
git rst -s
.