A collection of shell scripts for making pulling, pushing, branching, merging, and stashing with Git fast and painless.
Git sometimes requires typing two or three commands just to execute something basic like fetching new code. git-friendly adds a few new commands — pull, push, branch, merge and stash which:
- does the most useful thing by default; plus
- push copies a GitHub compare URL to your clipboard;
- pull runs commands like
bundle install,npm install,yarn install,pnpm installandcomposer installif necessary; - branch tracks remote branches if they are available;
- stash includes untracked files by default.
Less time fighting Git — more time actually doing work.
brew install git-friendly/git-friendly/git-friendlyThe Homebrew tap for this project can be found here
Unofficial builds of stable releases can be found in Fedora Copr: fuhrmann/git-friendly.
dnf copr enable fuhrmann/git-friendly
dnf install git-friendlyRun this one-liner, which will download the scripts into /usr/local/bin:
curl -sS https://raw.githubusercontent.com/git-friendly/git-friendly/main/install.sh | bashNote
If you don’t have write access to /usr/local/bin you’ll need to run this command using sudo.
You can change the installation directory:
curl -sS https://raw.githubusercontent.com/git-friendly/git-friendly/main/install.sh | bash -s ~/bin/git-friendlyCheckout the code:
git clone git://github.com/git-friendly/git-friendly.git ~/dev/git-friendlyThen update your ~/.bash_profile or ~/.bashrc to make git-friendly available each time you launch a new terminal:
export PATH=~/dev/git-friendly:$PATHYou now have some awesome new commands: branch, merge, pull, push and stash:
Example session:
pull
branch awesomeness # Create a new branch (or switch to existing one)
echo "BUMP" >> README
git commit -a -m "Righteous bump"
branch main # Switch back to main
merge awesomeness # Merge awesomeness branch to main
push # Push changesSwitch branches or create new local branch if it doesn’t exist. Intelligently sets up remote branch tracking so you can just type git pull and not always git pull origin newbranch. If no argument specified, will list all local and remote branches.
branch [name]Supports branch deletion with -d or -D keys:
branch -d [name]
branch -D [name]And switching to a previous branch with -:
branch -- Merge the specified branch into the current branch;
- rebase first if the branch is local-only.
merge [name]
- Stash any local changes;
- pull from the remote using rebase;
- update submodules;
- pop your stash;
- run
bundle install,npm install,yarn install,pnpm installorcomposer installif there are any changes inGemfile,package.json, etc.
- Push your changes to the remote;
- copy a compare URL, like https://github.com/git-friendly/git-friendly/compare/e96033...5daed4, to your clipboard (works on Mac and Linux).
Any extra arguments will be passed through to git push, for example push -f.
- Stashes untracked files by default, when run without arguments;
- behaves like normal
git stashotherwise.
stash
stash pop
Change git-friendly behavior using environment variables. For example, add this line to your ~/.bash_profile to disable running bundle install in the pull command:
export GIT_FRIENDLY_NO_BUNDLE=trueAvailable environment variables:
| Variable | Description | Commands | Default value |
|---|---|---|---|
GIT_FRIENDLY_NO_BUNDLE |
Disables bundle install |
pull |
false |
GIT_FRIENDLY_NO_COMPOSER |
Disables composer install |
pull |
false |
GIT_FRIENDLY_NO_NPM |
Disables npm install |
pull |
false |
GIT_FRIENDLY_NO_YARN |
Disables yarn install |
pull |
false |
GIT_FRIENDLY_NO_PNPM |
Disables pnpm install |
pull |
false |
GIT_FRIENDLY_NO_REBASE_ON_PULL |
Disables rebasing local commits on top of the updated remote branch | pull |
false |
GIT_FRIENDLY_NO_COPY_URL_AFTER_PUSH |
Disables copying URL to clipboard | push |
false |
- bundler (ruby)
- composer (PHP)
- npm (JavaScript)
- yarn (JavaScript)
- pnpm (JavaScript)
Support for more is always welcome.
We strongly recommend editing your global ~/.gitconfig and adding features like ANSI color, command aliases (like git st instead of git status), automatic remote tracking and more. Check out this sample ~/.gitconfig to get started.
We also recommend adding the current Git branch to your Terminal prompt (PS1) or you’ll quickly lose your place — here is a pimp_prompt() bash function which goes in your ~/.bash_profile or ~/.bashrc, then type source ~/.bashrc to reload.
Add to your shell config file .bash_profile, .bashrc or .profile:
if type __git_complete &> /dev/null; then
_branch () {
delete="${words[1]}"
if [ "$delete" == "-d" ] || [ "$delete" == "-D" ]; then
_git_branch
else
_git_checkout
fi
}
__git_complete branch _branch
__git_complete merge _git_merge
fi;Now typing branch <tab> will suggest or autocomplete branches you can checkout to, branch -d <tab> branches you can delete and merge <tab> branches you can merge.
Note
You need to call your git-completion script before this snippet.
Add to your .zshrc:
fpath=($(brew --prefix)/share/zsh/functions $fpath)
autoload -Uz _git && _git
compdef __git_branch_names branchNow you can type branch, press Tab and you’ll see a list of branches in your repo.
Note
You’ll need to adjust the path in the first line if you’re not using Homebrew or macOS.
Fork away, do whatever. Pull requests welcome.
Following the practices of Rubinius, anyone who submits an accepted patch is granted a commit bit (write access to the repository).
Following the practices of FAT Lab, anyone who submits an accepted patch is granted credit and attribution bits.



