A Swift library and CLI that allows you to convert a Git repository of large files to Git LFS pointers.
4.0.1 is the last release in which the executable is named LFSPointers
. All future releases will name it lfs-pointers
.
- LFS Pointers
- Table of Contents
Created by gh-md-toc
It it recommended that you read the Git-LFS Homepage before continuing.
$ mint install LebJe/LFSPointers
$ brew install LebJe/formulae/lfs-pointers
If you would like to install from HEAD
then make sure swift --version
succeeds (Install Swift otherwise) then run:
$ brew install LebJe/formulae/lfs-pointers --HEAD
curl -s https://packagecloud.io/install/repositories/LebJe/LFSPointers/script.deb.sh > script.sh
chmod +x script.sh
sudo os=ubuntu dist=focal ./script.sh
sudo apt install lfspointers
curl -s https://packagecloud.io/install/repositories/LebJe/LFSPointers/script.rpm.sh > script.sh && chmod +x script.sh
sudo os=fedora dist=32 ./script.sh
sudo yum install LFSPointers
Build Using Docker
If you are on Ubuntu 16.04, 18.04, 20.04, or CentOS 8, you can build LFSPointers
using:
$ docker run --rm -v $(pwd):/src -w /src swift:xenial swift build -c release --enable-test-discovery --static-swift-stdlib -Xswiftc -static-executable
$ docker run --rm -v $(pwd):/src -w /src swift:bionic swift build -c release --enable-test-discovery --static-swift-stdlib -Xswiftc -static-executable
$ docker run --rm -v $(pwd):/src -w /src swift:focal swift build -c release --enable-test-discovery --static-swift-stdlib -Xswiftc -static-executable
$ docker run --rm -v $(pwd):/src -w /src swift:centos8 swift build -c release --enable-test-discovery --static-swift-stdlib -Xswiftc -static-executable
Then run mv .build/release/LFSPointers .
to move the binary to your current
directory.
If you don’t or can’t use Docker, you can Install Swift, then run:
$ swift build -c release
The binary will be located at /path/to/LFSPointers/.build/release/LFSPointers
.
Install Swift, open Windows Powershell
, navigate to the directory that contains LFSPointers
, and run:
swift build -Xswiftc -sdk -Xswiftc $env:SDKROOT
the executable will be located at C:\path\to\LFSPointers\.build\release\LFSPointers.exe
.
Simply download the release asset. The binary is statically linked, so there is no need to install additional software.
Create a file called ~/.oh-my-zsh/completions/_LFSPointers
, then run:
% LFSPointers --generate-completion-script zsh > ~/.oh-my-zsh/completions/_LFSPointers
Add
fpath=(~/.zsh/completion $fpath)
autoload -U compinit
compinit
to your .zshrc
, then create ~/.zsh/completion
, and run:
% LFSPointers --generate-completion-script zsh > ~/.zsh/completion/_LFSPointers
Create a directory to store Bash completions, (~/.bash_completions/
), and add this to your .bashrc
or .bash_profile
:
source ~/.bash_completions/LFSPointers.bash
, then run:
$ LFSPointers --generate-completion-script bash > ~/.bash_completions/LFSPointers.bash
Add this to the dependencies
array in Package.swift
:
.package(url: "https://github.com/LebJe/LFSPointers.git", from: “4.0.0”)
. Also add this to the targets
array in the aforementioned file:
.product(name: "LFSPointersKit", package: "LFSPointers")
import LFSPointersKit
To convert a file to a pointer you could write:
let pointer = try LFSPointer(fromFile: URL(fileURLWithPath: "path/to/file"))
The pointer is represented as a Swift struct
.
public struct LFSPointer {
/// The version of the pointer. Example: "https://git-lfs.github.com/spec/v1".
public let version: String
/// An SHA 256 hash for the pointer.
public let oid: String
/// The size of the converted file.
public let size: Int
/// The name of the file.
public let filename: String
/// The full path of the file.
public let filePath: String
/// String representation of this pointer.
public var stringRep: String
...
}
To convert a folder of files to pointers, you could write:
let pointers = try LFSPointer.pointers(forDirectory: URL(fileURLWithPath: "path/to/folder"), searchType: .filenames(["foo.java", "bar.js", "baz.py"]))
The search types available are:
// Array of filenames.
.fileNames(["foo.java", "bar.js", "baz.py"])
// Regular expression.
.regex(NSRegularExpression(pattern: "^*.swift$"))
// All files.
.all
That function returns an array of LFSPointer
s.
After you generate a pointer, write it to a file using:
let pointer = try LFSPointer(...)
try pointer.write(toFile: URL(fileURLWithPath: "path/to/file"), shouldAppend: false)
To convert a pointer to JSON:
let pointer = try LFSPointer(...)
try JSONEncoder().encode(pointer)
and to convert an array of LFSPointer
s:
let pointers = try LFSPointer.pointers(...)
JSONEncoder().encode(pointers)
The JSON for the LFSPointer
array will be structured as shown here, and the JSON for the single LFSPointer
will be structured as shown here.
If you want to use the Docker image, prefix all the following commands with: docker run --rm -v $(pwd):/src -w /src ghcr.io/lebje/lfs-pointers:latest <command>
Let's imagine you have a directory of large png
and jpg
files called Project Logos
. If you wanted to convert the files with the extension png
to LFS pointers, you could run
$ LFSPointers path/to/Project\ Logos path/to/Project\ Logos/*.png
. The first argument is the path to the directory, and the second argument is a regular expression used to search for png
files that your shell will convert to a list of filenames.
But wait! It's not safe to run random programs on your computer! To backup your files just in case something goes wrong, add -b path/to/backup-directory
to the previous command, like this:
$ LFSPointers -b path/to/backup-directory path/to/Project\ Logos path/to/Project\ Logos/*.png
If you want to generate JSON output instead, run:
$ LFSPointers --json path/to/Project\ Logos path/to/Project\ Logos/*.png
The JSON will be structured as shown here.
Run LFSPointers --help
.
Tested on MacOS 10.15 and 11, using Swift 5.2 and 5.3.
Tested on Ubuntu 18.04 (x86_64
and aarch64
), also using Swift 5.2 and 5.3.
This project has not been tested on iOS yet, although, at the time of writing the sample project in Samples/FileToPointer
is currently working.
LFSPointers
is currently being built and tested on Windows, but there are a few problems:
- Windows paths are converted to UNIX paths:
C:\Users\user\file
=>C:/Users/user/file
[
{
"version": "https://git-lfs.github.com/spec/v1",
"oid": "10b2cd328e193dd4b81d921dbe91bda74bda704c37bca43f1e15f41fcd20ac2a",
"size": 1455,
"filename": "foo.txt",
"filePath": "/path/to/foo.txt"
},
{
"version": "https://git-lfs.github.com/spec/v1",
"oid": "601952b2d85214ea602104a4784728ffa6b323b3a6131a124044fa5bfc2f7bf2",
"size": 1285200,
"filename": "bar.txt",
"filePath": "/path/to/bar.txt"
}
]
{
"version": "https://git-lfs.github.com/spec/v1",
"oid": "10b2cd328e193dd4b81d921dbe91bda74bda704c37bca43f1e15f41fcd20ac2a",
"size": 1455,
"filename": "foo.txt",
"filePath": "/path/to/foo.txt"
}
Install Swift
Download Swift, then follow the instructions for your platform:
More information at swift-arm64.
$ curl -s https://packagecloud.io/install/repositories/swift-arm/release/script.deb.sh | sudo bash
sudo apt install swiftlang
Before committing, please install pre-commit, and swift-format and install the pre-commit hook:
$ brew bundle # install the packages specified in Brewfile
$ pre-commit install
# Commit your changes.
To install pre-commit on other platforms, refer to the documentation.