Skip to content

15592198782/git-sim

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

git-sim

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_01-05-23_09-44-46

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 image or mp4 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) or dynamic animated videos (mp4) to speed up content creation
  • Help visual learners understand how Git commands work

Features

  • Run a one-liner git-sim command in the terminal to generate a custom Git command visualization (.jpg) from your repo
  • Supported commands: log, status, add, restore, commit, stash, branch, tag, reset, revert, merge, rebase, cherry-pick
  • 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)
  • Choose between dark mode (default) and light mode
  • Animation only: Add custom branded intro/outro sequences if desired
  • Animation only: Speed up or slow down animation speed as desired

Quickstart

  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]
  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. 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 "log", "status", "add", "restore", "commit", "stash", "branch", "tag", "reset", "revert", "merge", "rebase", "cherry-pick", along with corresponding options.

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

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

--light-mode: Use a light mode color scheme instead of default dark mode. --animate: Instead of outputting a static image, animate the Git command behavior in a .mp4 video. --disable-auto-open, -d: Disable the automatic opening of the image/video file after generation. --reverse, -r: Display commit history in the reverse direction. --video-format: Output format for the video file, i.e. mp4 or webm. Default output format is mp4.

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

--speed=n: Set the multiple of animation speed of the output simulation, n can be an integer or float, default is 1.
--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.

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 log

Usage: git-sim log

  • Simulated output will show the most recent 5 commits on the active branch by default

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

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 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 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 commit

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

  • Simulated output will show the new commit added to the tip of the active branch
  • Specify your commit message after 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"

git-sim-commit_01-05-23_22-10-21

git stash

Usage: git-sim stash <file>

  • Specify one or more <file> as a modified working directory file, or staged file
  • If no <file> is specified, all available working directory and staged files will be included
  • Simulated output will show files being moved to 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 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

git-sim-branch_01-05-23_22-13-17

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

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 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

git-sim-revert_01-05-23_22-16-59

git merge

Usage: git-sim merge <branch>

  • Specify <branch> as the branch name to merge into the active branch
  • 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

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

git rebase

Usage: git-sim rebase <new-base>

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

git-sim-rebase_01-05-23_09-53-34

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

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

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 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

Learn More

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

Authors

Jacob Stopak - on behalf of Initial Commit

About

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

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Python 100.0%