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git-sim

git-sim-logo-with-tagline-1440x376p45

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Visually simulate Git operations in your own repos with a single terminal command.

This generates an image (default) or video visualization depicting the Git command's behavior.

Command syntax is based directly on Git's command-line syntax, so using git-sim is as familiar as possible.

Example: $ git-sim merge <branch>

git-sim-merge_04-22-23_21-04-32_cropped

Check out the git-sim release blog post for the full scoop!

Support git-sim

Git-Sim is Free and Open-Source Software (FOSS). Your support will help me work on it (and other Git projects) full time!

Use cases

  • Visualize Git commands to understand their effects on your repo before actually running them
  • Prevent unexpected working directory and repository states by simulating before running
  • Share visualizations (jpg/png image or mp4/webm video) of your Git commands with your team, or the world
  • Save visualizations as a part of your team documentation to document workflow and prevent recurring issues
  • Create static Git diagrams (jpg/png) or dynamic animated videos (mp4/webm) to speed up content creation
  • Help visual learners understand how Git commands work
  • Combine with bundled command git-dummy to generate a dummy Git repo and then simulate operations on it

Features

  • Run a one-liner git-sim command in the terminal to generate a custom Git command visualization (.jpg) from your repo
  • Supported commands: add, branch, checkout, cherry-pick, clean, clone, commit, config, fetch, init, log, merge, mv, pull, push, rebase, remote, reset, restore, revert, rm, stash, status, switch, tag
  • Generate an animated video (.mp4) instead of a static image using the --animate flag (note: significant performance slowdown, it is recommended to use --low-quality to speed up testing and remove when ready to generate presentation-quality video)
  • Color commits by parameter, such as author with the --color-by=author option
  • Choose between dark mode (default) and light mode
  • Specify output formats of either jpg, png, mp4, or webm
  • Combine with bundled command git-dummy to generate a dummy Git repo and then simulate operations on it
  • Animation only: Add custom branded intro/outro sequences if desired
  • Animation only: Speed up or slow down animation speed as desired

Quickstart

Note: If you prefer to install git-sim with Docker, skip steps (1) and (2) here and jump to the Docker installation section below, then come back here to step (3).

  1. Install Manim and its dependencies for your OS / environment:

  2. Install git-sim:

$ pip3 install git-sim

Note: For MacOS, it is recommended to NOT use the system Python to install Git-Sim, and instead use Homebrew to install a version of Python to work with Git-Sim. Virtual environments should work too.

  1. Browse to the Git repository you want to simulate Git commands in:
$ cd path/to/git/repo
  1. Run the program:
$ git-sim [global options] <subcommand> [subcommand options]

Optional: If you don't have an existing Git repo to simulate commands on, use the bundled git-dummy command to generate a dummy Git repo with the desired number of branches and commits to simulate operations on with git-sim:

$ git-dummy --name="dummy-repo" --branches=3 --commits=10
$ cd dummy-repo
$ git-sim [global options] <subcommand> [subcommand options]

Or if you want to do it all in a single command:

$ git-dummy --no-subdir --branches=3 --commits=10 && git-sim [global options] <subcommand> [subcommand options]
  1. Simulated output will be created as a .jpg file. Output files are named using the subcommand executed combined with a timestamp, and by default are stored in a subdirectory called git-sim_media/. The location of this subdirectory is customizable using the command line flag --media-dir=path/to/output. Note that when the --animate global flag is used, render times will be much longer and a .mp4 video output file will be produced.

  2. For convenience, environment variables can be set for any global command-line option available in git-sim. All environment variables start with git_sim_ followed by the name of the option.

For example, the --media-dir option can be set as an environment variable like:

$ export git_sim_media_dir=~/Desktop

Similarly, the --speed option can be set like:

$ export git_sim_speed=2

Boolean flags can be set like:

$ export git_sim_light_mode=true

In general:

$ export git_sim_option_name=option_value

Explicitly specifying options at the command-line takes precedence over the corresponding environment variable values.

  1. See global help for list of global options/flags and subcommands:
$ git-sim -h
  1. See subcommand help for list of options/flags for a specific subcommand:
$ git-sim <subcommand> -h

Requirements

Commands

Basic usage is similar to Git itself - git-sim takes a familiar set of subcommands including "add", "branch", "checkout", "cherry-pick", "clean", "clone", "commit", "config", "fetch", "init", "log", "merge", "mv", "pull", "push", "rebase", "remote", "reset", "restore", "revert", "rm", "stash", "status", "switch", "tag" along with corresponding options.

$ git-sim [global options] <subcommand> [subcommand options]

The [global options] apply to the overarching git-sim simulation itself, including:

-n <number>: Number of commits to display from each branch head.
--all: Display all local branches in the log output.
--animate: Instead of outputting a static image, animate the Git command behavior in a .mp4 video.
--color-by author: Color commits by parameter, such as author.
--invert-branches: Invert positioning of branches by reversing order of multiple parents where applicable.
--hide-merged-branches: Hide commits from merged branches, i.e. only display mainline commits.
--media-dir: The path at which to store the simulated output media files.
-d: Disable the automatic opening of the image/video file after generation. Useful to avoid errors in console mode with no GUI.
--light-mode: Use a light mode color scheme instead of default dark mode.
--reverse, -r: Display commit history in the reverse direction.
--img-format: Output format for the image file, i.e. jpg or png. Default output format is jpg.
--stdout: Write raw image data to stdout while suppressing all other program output.
--output-only-path: Only output the path to the generated media file to stdout. Useful for other programs to ingest.
--quiet, -q: Suppress all output except errors.
--highlight-commit-messages: Make commit message text bigger and bold, and hide commit ids.
--style: Graphical style of the output image or animated video, i.e. clean (default) or thick.

Animation-only global options (to be used in conjunction with --animate):

--video-format: Output format for the video file, i.e. mp4 or webm. Default output format is mp4.
--speed=n: Set the multiple of animation speed of the output simulation, n can be an integer or float, default is 1.5.
--low-quality: Render the animation in low quality to speed up creation time, recommended for non-presentation use.
--show-intro: Add an intro sequence with custom logo and title.
--show-outro: Add an outro sequence with custom logo and text.
--title=title: Custom title to display at the beginning of the animation.
--logo=logo.png: The path to a custom logo to use in the animation intro/outro.
--outro-top-text: Custom text to display above the logo during the outro.
--outro-bottom-text: Custom text to display below the logo during the outro.
--font: Font family used to display rendered text.

The [subcommand options] are like regular Git options specific to the specified subcommand (see below for a full list).

The following is a list of Git commands that can be simulated and their corresponding options/flags.

git add

Usage: git-sim add <file 1> <file 2> ... <file n>

  • Specify one or more <file> as a modified working directory file, or an untracked file
  • Simulated output will show files being moved to the staging area
  • Note that simulated output will also show the most recent 5 commits on the active branch

git-sim-add_01-05-23_22-07-40

git branch

Usage: git-sim branch <new branch name>

  • Specify <new branch name> as the name of the new branch to simulate creation of
  • Simulated output will show the newly create branch ref along with most recent 5 commits on the active branch

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git checkout

Usage: git-sim checkout [-b] <branch>

  • Checks out <branch> into the working directory, i.e. moves HEAD to the specified <branch>
  • The -b flag creates a new branch with the specified name <branch> and checks it out, assuming it doesn't already exist

git-sim-checkout_04-09-23_21-46-04

git cherry-pick

Usage: git-sim cherry-pick <commit>

  • Specify <commit> as a ref (branch name/tag) or commit ID to cherry-pick onto the active branch
  • Supports editing the cherry-picked commit message with: $ git-sim cherry-pick <commit> -e "Edited commit message"

git-sim-cherry-pick_01-05-23_22-23-08

git clean

Usage: git-sim clean

  • Simulated output will show untracked files being deleted
  • Since this is just a simulation, no need to specify -i, -n, -f as in regular Git
  • Note that simulated output will also show the most recent 5 commits on the active branch

git-sim-clean_04-09-23_22-05-54

git clone

Usage: git-sim clone <url>

  • Clone the remote repo from <url> (web URL or filesystem path) to a new folder in the current directory
  • Output will report if clone operation is successful and show log of local clone

git-sim-clone_04-09-23_21-51-53

git commit

Usage: git-sim commit -m "Commit message"

  • Simulated output will show the new commit added to the tip of the active branch
  • Specify a commit message with the -m option
  • HEAD and the active branch will be moved to the new commit
  • Simulated output will show files in the staging area being included in the new commit
  • Supports amending the last commit with: $ git-sim commit --amend -m "Amended commit message"

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git config

Usage: git-sim config [--list] <section.option> <value>

  • Simulated output describes the specified configuration change
  • Use --list or -l to display all configuration

git-sim-config_04-16-24_08-34-34

git fetch

Usage: git-sim fetch <remote> <branch>

  • Fetches the specified <branch> from the specified <remote> to the local repo

git-sim-fetch_04-09-23_21-47-59

git init

Usage: git-sim init

  • Simulated output describes the initialized .git/ directory and it's contents

git-sim-init_04-16-24_08-34-47

git log

Usage: git-sim log [-n <number>] [--all]

  • Simulated output will show the most recent 5 commits on the active branch by default
  • Use -n <number> to set number of commits to display from each branch head
  • Set --all to display all local branches in the log output

git-sim-log_01-05-23_22-02-39

git merge

Usage: git-sim merge <branch> [-m "Commit message"] [--no-ff]

  • Specify <branch> as the branch name to merge into the active branch
  • If desired, specify a commit message with the -m option
  • Simulated output will depict a fast-forward merge if possible
  • Otherwise, a three-way merge will be depicted
  • To force a merge commit when a fast-forward is possible, use --no-ff
  • If merge fails due to merge conflicts, the conflicting files are displayed

git-sim-merge_01-05-23_09-44-46

git mv

Usage: git-sim mv <file> <new file>

  • Specify <file> as file to update name/path
  • Specify <new file> as new name/path of file
  • Simulated output will show the name/path of the file being updated
  • Note that simulated output will also show the most recent 5 commits on the active branch

git-sim-mv_04-09-23_22-05-13

git pull

Usage: git-sim pull [<remote> <branch>]

  • Pulls the specified <branch> from the specified <remote> to the local repo
  • If <remote> and <branch> are not specified, the active branch is pulled from the default remote
  • If merge conflicts occur, they are displayed in a table

git-sim-pull_04-09-23_21-50-15

git push

Usage: git-sim push [<remote> <branch>]

  • Pushes the specified <branch> to the specified <remote> and displays the local result
  • If <remote> and <branch> are not specified, the active branch is pushed to the default remote
  • If the push fails due to remote changes that don't exist in the local repo, a message is included telling the user to pull first, along with color coding which commits need to be pulled

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git rebase

Usage: git-sim rebase <new-base>

  • Specify <new-base> as the branch name to rebase the active branch onto

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git remote

Usage: git-sim remote [add|rename|remove|get-url|set-url] [<remote>] [<url>]

  • Simulated output will show remotes being added, renamed, removed, modified as indicated
  • Running git-sim remote with no options will list all existing remotes and their details

git-sim-remote_04-16-24_08-40-37

git reset

Usage: git-sim reset <reset-to> [--mixed|--soft|--hard]

  • Specify <reset-to> as any commit id, branch name, tag, or other ref to simulate reset to from the current HEAD (default: HEAD)
  • As with a normal git reset command, default reset mode is --mixed, but can be specified using --soft, --hard, or --mixed
  • Simulated output will show branch/HEAD resets and resulting state of the working directory, staging area, and whether any file changes would be deleted by running the actual command

git-sim-reset_01-05-23_22-15-49

git restore

Usage: git-sim restore <file 1> <file 2> ... <file n>

  • Specify one or more <file> as a modified working directory file, or staged file
  • Simulated output will show files being moved back to the working directory or discarded changes
  • Note that simulated output will also show the most recent 5 commits on the active branch

git-sim-restore_01-05-23_22-09-14

git revert

Usage: git-sim revert <to-revert>

  • Specify <to-revert> as any commit id, branch name, tag, or other ref to simulate revert for
  • Simulated output will show the new commit which reverts the changes from <to-revert>
  • Simulated output will include the next 4 most recent commits on the active branch

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git rm

Usage: git-sim rm <file 1> <file 2> ... <file n>

  • Specify one or more <file> as a tracked file
  • Simulated output will show files being removed from Git tracking
  • Note that simulated output will also show the most recent 5 commits on the active branch

git-sim-rm_04-09-23_22-01-29

git stash

Usage: git-sim stash [push|pop|apply] <file>

  • Specify one or more <file> as a modified working directory file, or staged file
  • If no <file> is specified, all available files will be included
  • Simulated output will show files being moved in/out of the Git stash
  • Note that simulated output will also show the most recent 5 commits on the active branch

git-sim-stash_01-05-23_22-11-18

git status

Usage: git-sim status

  • Simulated output will show the state of the working directory, staging area, and untracked files
  • Note that simulated output will also show the most recent 5 commits on the active branch

git-sim-status_01-05-23_22-06-28

git switch

Usage: git-sim switch [-c] <branch>

  • Switches the checked-out branch to <branch>, i.e. moves HEAD to the specified <branch>
  • The -c flag creates a new branch with the specified name <branch> and switches to it, assuming it doesn't already exist

git-sim-switch_04-09-23_21-42-43

git tag

Usage: git-sim tag <new tag name>

  • Specify <new tag name> as the name of the new tag to simulate creation of
  • Simulated output will show the newly create tag ref along with most recent 5 commits on the active branch

git-sim-tag_01-05-23_22-14-18

Video animation examples

$ git-sim --animate reset HEAD^
GitSim.reset.mp4
$ git checkout main
$ git-sim --animate merge dev
GitSim.merge.mp4
$ git checkout dev
$ git-sim --animate rebase main
GitSim.rebase.mp4
$ git checkout main
$ git-sim --animate cherry-pick dev
GitSim.cherry-pick.mp4

Basic command examples

Simulate the output of the git log command:

$ cd path/to/git/repo
$ git-sim log

Simulate the output of the git status command:

$ git-sim status

Simulate adding a file to the Git staging area:

$ git-sim add filename.ext

Simulate restoring a file from the Git staging area:

$ git-sim restore filename.ext

Simulate creating a new commit based on currently staged changes:

$ git-sim commit -m "Commit message"

Simulate stashing all working directory and staged changes:

$ git-sim stash

Simulate creating a new Git branch:

$ git-sim branch new-branch-name

Simulate creating a new Git tag:

$ git-sim tag new-tag-name

Simulate a hard reset of the current branch HEAD to the previous commit:

$ git-sim reset HEAD^ --hard

Simulate reverting the changes in an older commit:

$ git-sim revert HEAD~7

Simulate merging a branch into the active branch:

$ git-sim merge feature1

Simulate rebasing the active branch onto a new base:

$ git-sim rebase main

Simulate cherry-picking a commit from another branch onto the active branch:

$ git-sim cherry-pick 0ae641

Command examples with extra options/flags

Use light mode for white background and black text, instead of the default black background with white text:

$ git-sim --light-mode status

Animate the simulated output as a .mp4 video file:

$ git-sim --animate add filename.ext

Add an intro and outro with custom text and logo (must include --animate):

$ git-sim --animate --show-intro --show-outro --outro-top-text="My Git Repo" --outro-bottom-text="Thanks for watching!" --logo=path/to/logo.png status

Customize the output image/video directory location:

$ git-sim --media-dir=path/to/output status

Optionally, set the environment variable git_sim_media_dir to set a global default media directory, to be used if no --media-dir is provided. Simulated output images/videos will be placed in this location, in subfolders named with the corresponding repo's name.

$ export git_sim_media_dir=path/to/media/directory
$ git-sim status

Note: --media-dir takes precedence over the environment variable. If you set the environment variable and still provide the argument, you'll find the media in the path provided by --media-dir.

Generate output video in low quality to speed up rendering time (useful for repeated testing, must include --animate):

$ git-sim --animate --low-quality status

Installation

See Quickstart section for details on installing manim and other dependencies. Then run:

$ pip3 install git-sim

Docker installation

  1. Clone down the git-sim repository:
$ git clone https://github.com/initialcommit-com/git-sim.git
  1. Browse into the git-sim folder and build the Docker image:
$ docker build -t git-sim .
  1. Run git-sim commands as follows:
    • Windows: docker run --rm -v %cd%:/usr/src/git-sim git-sim [global options] <subcommand> [subcommand options]
    • MacOS / Linux: docker run --rm -v $(pwd):/usr/src/git-sim git-sim [global options] <subcommand> [subcommand options]

Optional: On MacOS / Linux / or GitBash in Windows, create an alias for the long docker command so your can run it as a normal git-sim command. To do so add the following line to your .bashrc or equivalent, then restart your terminal:

git-sim() { docker run --rm -v $(pwd):/usr/src/git-sim git-sim "$@"; }

This will enable you to run git-sim subcommands as described above.

Learn More

Learn more about this tool on the git-sim project page.

Authors

Jacob Stopak - on behalf of Initial Commit