1.1.0 • Published 10 years ago

rotting v1.1.0

Weekly downloads
14
License
-
Repository
github
Last release
10 years ago

How rotten is your git repo?

  • How many branches have how many commits waiting to get into master?
  • How much code is rotting in remote branches, waiting for release?
  • How many harvested branches are sitting around occupying space in your repo?

Try it out.

$ npm -g install rotting
$ cd ~/source/redback
$ rotting -d

Running against /Users/ceej/source/redback
Checking branches against production branch master
.

Harvested branches:
	 origin/keypair-multiget

To delete all the harvested branches:
git push origin :keypair-multiget; git branch -D keypair-multiget;

All branches have been fully merged into master.

Summary:
	 rotting branches: 0
	 harvested branches: 1

My most common usage pattern for this tool is to look for branches that include my username, to make sure I'm cleaning up as I work. You can grep the output if you like, or use the --filter option to consider only branches matching the given pattern. E.g., rotting -prod release -f biz\|ceej.

Usage

Usage: rotting --repo /path/to/git/repo --prod master

Options:
  -r, --repo      the repo to examine for rotting code                        [default: "."]
  -p, --prod      the branch running in production                            [default: "master"]
  -c, --commits   sort rotten branches by commit count instead of age         [default: false]
  -d, --deadwood  show git branch delete commands for all harvested branches  [default: false]
  -f, --filter    filter results to branches that contain this string         [default: ""]

By default rotten branches are sorted by age, with the oldest unharvested branch shown first. You can instead sort by the number of unharvested commits by passing the --commits option.

Credits

Original rotting script called rotten by David Trejo over in his repo.

License

MIT.

1.1.0

10 years ago

1.0.2

11 years ago

1.0.1

12 years ago

1.0.0

12 years ago