Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
79 lines (56 loc) · 3.77 KB

readme.markdown

File metadata and controls

79 lines (56 loc) · 3.77 KB

#Git Pivotal

##Prelude You might want to have this song running in the background while you read this.

##Let's Git Pivotal Inspired by Hashrocket's blend of git and Pivotal Tracker and a popular article on effective git workflows, I set off to create a set of utilities to simplify the workflow between the two.

###Git Feature/Bug/Chore The Git Pivotal utility provides three tools to integrate with your Pivotal Tracker project -- git feature, git bug and git chore. These commands collect the top-most available feature, bug or chore (respectively) from your Pivotal Tracker and creates a unique feature branch for it.

1 git-pivotal:master % git feature
Collecting latest stories from Pivotal Tracker...
Story: Test git pivotal
URL:   http://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/1234567
Updating story status in Pivotal Tracker...
Enter branch name (will be prepended by 1234567) [feature]: testing
Creating 1234567-testing branch...
2 git-pivotal:1234567-testing %

###Git Finish When on a feature branch, this command will close the associated story in Pivotal Tracker, merge the branch into your integration branch (master by default) and remove the feature branch.

3 git-pivotal:1234567-testing % git finish
Marking Story 1234567 as finished...
Merging 1234567-testing into master
Removing 1234567-testing branch
4 git-pivotal:master %

###Git Info When on a feature/bug/chore branch, this command will display the story information as recorded in Pivotal Tracker.

5 git-pivotal:1234567-testing % git info
Story:        Test git pivotal
URL:          http://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/1234567
Description:  The awesome story description
6 git-pivotal:1234567-testing % 

##Installation To install git-pivotal, simply run

[sudo] gem install git-pivotal

Configuration

Once installed, git pivotal needs three bits of info: your Pivotal Tracker API Token, your name as it appears in Pivotal Tracker and your Pivotal Tracker project id. The former two are best set as a global git config options:
git config --global pivotal.api-token 9a9a9a9a9a9a9a9a9a9a
git config --global pivotal.full-name "Jeff Tucker"
git config --global pivotal.initials "JT"

If you prefer to merge back to a branch other than master when you've finished a story, you can configure that:

git config --global pivotal.integration-branch develop

If you only want to pick up bugs/features/chores that are already assigned to you, set:

git config --global pivotal.only-mine true

The project id is best placed within your project's git config:

git config -f .git/config pivotal.project-id 88888

If you would rather have the story id appended to the branch name (feature-123456) instead of prepending (123456-feature), you can configue that:

git config -f .git/config pivotal.append-name true

If you're not interested in storing these options in git, you can pass them into git pivotal as command line arguments. See the usage guides for more details.

##TODO This is beta software. Several things on the ol' todo list:

  • Create a general Pivotal::Base#update_attributes method
  • git pick doesn't update the story to indicate who claimed it
  • Add command to close/finish currently 'picked' feature
  • Reduce verbosity of git pick
  • Allow users to define their development branch name for git finish
  • Add option to install git commit hooks which add commit messages to story comments
  • Drop custom Pivotal API in favor of pivotal-tracker gem
  • More that I can't recall at the moment