go-git
GJSON
go-git | GJSON | |
---|---|---|
20 | 34 | |
5,498 | 13,636 | |
1.3% | - | |
9.0 | 5.1 | |
5 days ago | 13 days ago | |
Go | Go | |
Apache License 2.0 | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
go-git
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Show HN: Gogit – Just enough Git (in Go) to push itself to GitHub
I interpret "aims to be fully compatible" as meaning the operations it implements are intended to be compatible with how Git implements those operations. I do not interpret this statement as saying they implement all features of Git.
They offer a document which directly shows what is and isn't supported, and it specifically notes quite a few things that aren't supported yet: https://github.com/go-git/go-git/blob/master/COMPATIBILITY.m...
The godoc also says right upfront it "nowadays covers the majority of the plumbing read operations and some of the main write operations, but lacks the main porcelain operations such as merges." - https://pkg.go.dev/github.com/go-git/go-git/v5#pkg-overview
> I'm saying it's not a reasonable choice over just using git directly, and is unlikely to ever be.
OK, that's apparently true for your use-case. But again, what go-git implements is directly useful to a number of very popular projects, as well as literally two thousand less popular ones.
I find the exported functionality to be high quality, at least for my own use-case. I'm not commenting on the code quality. If I need a shed for bikes, and someone is giving out free but ugly bikesheds, I'm thankful. I don't complain about the color of the bikeshed.
- [Golang] Ejecutar comandos Go-git sobre SSH
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Git framework/library for Java
The go frameworks has some particular limitations at the moment (merge, rebase https://github.com/go-git/go-git/blob/master/COMPATIBILITY.md) but overall great framework.Used for some go tools..
- Go-Git: A highly extensible Git implementation in pure Go
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Auto fetch config from Git
You can monitor the sha of your config repos main branch with this I expect. https://github.com/go-git/go-git
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Is there a way to clone remote git repositories programmatically with go, without the need to import a whole dependency for that?
I'm remaking a package named owl. One of the features of this package is the ability to clone remote repositories. The first time I affront this problem, I solved it using go.Cmd and git command. Is there a way to achieve something similar without importing or using a dependency like go-git. Something like download files via http, ssh or something similar.
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Git as back end for applications like Figma and Google Docs
I think there are already some Git SDKs out there. For example https://github.com/go-git/go-git
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Kitsch-Prompt - golang based cross-platform shell prompt
I see that you’re using go-git, which has a problem with worktree.Status being unusably slow—and in a prompt you’ll most certainly need to use it. I know because I tried writing my prompt using go-git, and had it hang on a work repo for a good minute. Eventually bit the bullet and switched to git2go (libgit2 bindings; uses cgo).
- Ask HN: Is there a good tutorial on how to create a GitHub clone?
- Small Side Project On Sunday: Small Tool To Bump The Version
GJSON
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Rob Pike: Gobs of data (2011)
Someone made a benchmark of serialization libraries in go [1], and I was surprised to see gobs is one of the slowest ones, specially for decoding. I suspect part of the reason is that the API doesn't not allow reusing decoders [2]. From my explorations it seems like both JSON [3], message-pack [4] and CBOR [5] are better alternatives.
By the way, in Go there are a like a million JSON encoders because a lot of things in the std library are not really coded for maximum performance but more for easy of usage, it seems. Perhaps this is the right balance for certain things (ex: the http library, see [6]).
There are also a bunch of libraries that allow you to modify a JSON file "in place", without having to fully deserialize into structs (ex: GJSON/SJSON [7] [8]). This sounds very convenient and more efficient that fully de/serializing if we just need to change the data a little.
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1: https://github.com/alecthomas/go_serialization_benchmarks
2: https://github.com/golang/go/issues/29766#issuecomment-45492...
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3: https://github.com/goccy/go-json
4: https://github.com/vmihailenco/msgpack
5: https://github.com/fxamacker/cbor
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6: https://github.com/valyala/fasthttp#faq
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7: https://github.com/tidwall/gjson
8: https://github.com/tidwall/sjson
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Jj: JSON Stream Editor
```
I don't think there is a way to sort an array, though. However, there is an option to have keys sorted. Personally, I don't think there is much annoyance in that. One could just pipe `jj` output to `sort | uniq -c`.
[0]: https://github.com/tidwall/gjson/blob/master/SYNTAX.md
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Library to analyze an arbitrary JSON string
I’m using GJSON, so far so good!
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Mapping json fields in api calls to a struct to store them in a database or cache
If the fields you need are just a small subset of the whole json, maybe https://github.com/tidwall/gjson might be of use to read only those (using jsonpath) without needing to create complete corresponding structs.
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Which CPU to buy based on profiling
Thank you for the reminder, it's never too much of it :) Didn't say it, but the code was pprof-iled many times and i can really say it's well optimized. I use own libraries with on-the-fly equations (sums, avgs, emas, stds, ...) wherever possible and also made custom json parser as json messages are in fixed format, so the parser is about 10x faster than gjson. I optimized it to the point that I avoided using maps, and rather iterate via slice where ever possible.
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Jetro - transform and query JSON format
You are right, for learning purposes this fit my needs, but I can imagine an approach similar to this repo: https://github.com/tidwall/gjson
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Any way to convert unknown/dynamic json to generic object structure
https://github.com/tidwall/gjson is a relatively sensible library if this is something you need to deal with and the structure is actually unknowable.
- Need help with getting the grandchild in nested JSON
- Double down on python or learn Go
- Ad hoc JSON parsing
What are some alternatives?
watchman - Watches files and records, or triggers actions, when they change.
jsoniter - A high-performance 100% compatible drop-in replacement of "encoding/json"
sapling - A Scalable, User-Friendly Source Control System.
go-json - Fast JSON encoder/decoder compatible with encoding/json for Go
git - GitGitGadget's Git fork. Open Pull Requests here to submit them to the Git mailing list
intrinsic
git2go - Git to Go; bindings for libgit2. Like McDonald's but tastier.
gojson - Automatically generate Go (golang) struct definitions from example JSON
OS-Lab
hub - A command-line tool that makes git easier to use with GitHub.
scalar - Scalar: A set of tools and extensions for Git to allow very large monorepos to run on Git without a virtualization layer
ngrok - Unified ingress for developers