# git-cola **Repository Path**: mirrors_kurtmckee/git-cola ## Basic Information - **Project Name**: git-cola - **Description**: PR-only fork -- CHANGES MERGED 😄 - **Primary Language**: Unknown - **License**: GPL-2.0 - **Default Branch**: main - **Homepage**: None - **GVP Project**: No ## Statistics - **Stars**: 0 - **Forks**: 0 - **Created**: 2022-09-01 - **Last Updated**: 2026-05-24 ## Categories & Tags **Categories**: Uncategorized **Tags**: None ## README # git-cola: The highly caffeinated Git GUI Git Cola is a powerful Git GUI with a slick and intuitive user interface. git clone https://github.com/git-cola/git-cola.git [![License](https://img.shields.io/:license-GPL-green.svg)](LICENSE) [![Build status](https://github.com/git-cola/git-cola/actions/workflows/ci.yml/badge.svg?event=push)](https://github.com/git-cola/git-cola/actions/workflows/main.yml) [![OpenSSF Best Practices](https://bestpractices.coreinfrastructure.org/projects/251/badge)](https://bestpractices.coreinfrastructure.org/projects/251) [![pre-commit.ci](https://results.pre-commit.ci/badge/github/git-cola/git-cola/main.svg)](https://results.pre-commit.ci/latest/github/git-cola/git-cola/main) * [Screenshots](https://git-cola.github.io/screenshots.html) * [Downloads](https://git-cola.github.io/downloads.html) # Documentation * [Keyboard shortcuts](https://git-cola.github.io/share/doc/git-cola/hotkeys.html) * [HTML documentation](https://git-cola.readthedocs.io/en/latest/) * [Git Cola documentation](docs/git-cola.rst) * [Git DAG documentation](docs/git-dag.rst) * [Contributing guidelines](CONTRIBUTING.md) # Requirements ## Build * [Sphinx](http://sphinx-doc.org/) is used to generate the documentation. ## Runtime * [Git](https://git-scm.com/) 2.2.0 or newer. * [Python](https://python.org/) 3.6 or newer. * [QtPy](https://github.com/spyder-ide/qtpy) 1.1.0 or newer. Git Cola uses QtPy, so you can choose between PyQt6, PyQt5 and PySide2 by setting the `QT_API` environment variable to `pyqt6`, `pyqt5` or `pyside2` as desired. `qtpy` defaults to `pyqt5` and falls back to `pyqt6` and `pyside2` if `pyqt5` is not installed. Any of the following Python Qt libraries must be installed: * [PyQt5 / PyQt6](https://www.riverbankcomputing.com/software/pyqt/download5) 5.6 or newer is required. Qt 6.0 is also supported via QtPy. * [PySide2](https://github.com/PySide/PySide) 5.11.0 or newer. ## Optional Features Git Cola enables additional features when the following Python modules are installed. [Send2Trash](https://pypi.org/project/Send2Trash/) enables cross-platform "Send to Trash" functionality. ([source](https://github.com/hsoft/send2trash)) [pyobjc](https://pypi.org/project/pyobjc/) enables macOS-specific application themes on macOS. ([source](https://github.com/ronaldoussoren/pyobjc)) # Installation **IMPORTANT**: never run `pip install` or `garden install` outside of a Python virtualenv or as root! There are several ways to install Git Cola. ## Linux Linux is it! Your distro has probably already packaged `git-cola`. If not, please file a bug against your distribution ;-) ### Arch Available in the [AUR](https://aur.archlinux.org/packages/git-cola/). ### Debian, Ubuntu apt install git-cola ### Fedora dnf install git-cola ### Gentoo emerge git-cola ### OpenSUSE, SLE zypper install git-cola ### Slackware Available in [SlackBuilds.org](http://slackbuilds.org/result/?search=git-cola). ### Ubuntu [See here](https://packages.ubuntu.com/search?keywords=git-cola) for the versions that are available in Ubuntu's repositories. There was a [PPA by @pavreh](https://launchpad.net/~pavreh/+archive/ubuntu/git-cola) but it has not been updated for a while. ## FreeBSD # Install from official binary packages pkg install -r FreeBSD devel/git-cola # Build from source cd /usr/ports/devel/git-cola && make clean install ## Install into a Python Virtualenv from PyPI using pip **IMPORTANT**: never run `pip install` or `garden install` outside of a Python virtualenv or as root! One way to install the latest released version is to use `venv` (virtualenv) and `pip`. This installs [git-cola from pypi.org](https://pypi.org/project/git-cola/). If you already have `PyQt5` installed from your distribution's package manager then you should skip the `pip install PyQt` steps. If you already have the `qt5-devel` package installed then you can lookup its version so that your virtualenv can install a compatible version of PyQt using `qmake`: QT_VERSION=$(qmake -query QT_VERSION) QT_VERSION_MAJOR=$(qmake -query QT_VERSION | head -c 1) echo PyQt${QT_VERSION_MAJOR}==${QT_VERSION} Take note of the `PyQtX==A.B.C` value so that you can specify it when installing PyQt below if, and only if, you have `qmake` installed and want to interoperate with its corresponding Qt installation. python3 -m venv --system-site-packages env3 # Skip this command if you already have PyQt installed or if you do not have qmake ./env3/bin/pip install PyQt${QT_VERSION_MAJOR}==${QT_VERSION} ./env3/bin/pip install git-cola ./env3/bin/git-cola Add the `env3/bin` directory to your `PATH` or symlink to `bin/git-cola` from somewhere in your `PATH` such as `~/.local/bin/git-cola`, and you can launch Git Cola like any other built-in `git` command: git cola git dag ## Install into a Python Virtualenv from Source If you don't have PyQt installed then the easiest way to get it is to use a Python virtualenv and install Git Cola into it in "editable" mode. This install method lets you upgrade Git Cola by running `git pull`. # Create a virtualenv called "env3" and activate it. python3 -m venv --system-site-packages env3 source env3/bin/activate # One-time setup: install dev and optional runtime requirements garden requirements/dev garden requirements/opt # Install git-cola in "editable" mode so that it uses the source tree. garden develop # Run Git Cola via the "git-cola" Git subcommand. git cola If you add `env3/bin` (or symlink to `bin/git-cola` ) to your `$PATH` then you can run `git cola` as if it were a builtin `git` command from outside of the virtualenv (eg. after running "deactivate" or when opening a new shell). ## Standalone Installation from Source Running `garden -D prefix=$HOME/.local install` will install Git Cola in your `$HOME/.local` directory (`$HOME/.local/bin/git-cola`, `$HOME/.local/lib`, etc). This installation method assumes that the `qtpy` and `PyQt*` dependencies have been pre-installed. The Garden recipe also supports `DESTDIR` to support creating packages for Linux package managers: garden -D DESTDIR=/tmp/stage -D prefix=/usr/local install ## macOS For most end-users we recommend using either Homebrew or installing into a Python virtualenv as described above. You can install Git Cola from source using the same steps as above. ### Homebrew An easy way to install Git Cola is to use [Homebrew](https://brew.sh/) . Use Homebrew to install the git-cola recipe: brew install git-cola If you install using Homebrew you can stop at this step. You don't need to clone the repo or anything. ### git-cola.app If you have all of the dependencies installed, either via `pip` or `brew` then you can build a shell `git-cola.app` app bundle wrapper for use in `/Applications`. If you'd like to build a `git-cola.app` bundle for `/Applications` run this command: garden macos/app You will need to periodically rebuild the app wrapper whenever Python is upgraded. ### Updating macOS and Homebrew Updating macOS can often break Homebrew-managed software. If you upgrade your macOS version and Git Cola no longer runs then then it is recommended that you re-install Git Cola's dependencies after upgrading. A quick fix when upgrading to newer versions of XCode or macOS is to reinstall pyqt5. brew reinstall pyqt@5 You may also need to relink your pyqt installation: brew link pyqt@5 This is required when upgrading to a modern (post-10.11 El Capitan) Mac OS X. Homebrew now bundles its own Python3 installation instead of using the system-provided default Python. If the "brew reinstall" command above does not work then re-installing from scratch using the instructions below should get things back in shape. # update homebrew brew update # uninstall git-cola and its dependencies brew uninstall git-cola brew uninstall pyqt5 brew uninstall sip # re-install git-cola and its dependencies brew install git-cola ## Windows IMPORTANT If you have a 64-bit machine, install the 64-bit versions only. Do not mix 32-bit and 64-bit versions. Download and install the following: * [Git for Windows](https://git-for-windows.github.io/) * [Git Cola](https://github.com/git-cola/git-cola/releases) Once these are installed you can run Git Cola from the Start menu. See "Windows (Continued)" below for more details. If you'd like to install Git Cola with [winget](https://github.com/microsoft/winget-cli) run the following command: winget install git-cola.git-cola As there is no dependency resolution yet you have to install Git as well with: winget install Git.Git # Goodies Git Cola ships with an interactive rebase editor called `git-cola-sequence-editor`. `git-cola-sequence-editor` is used to reorder and choose commits when rebasing. Start an interactive rebase through the "Rebase" menu, or through the `git cola rebase` sub-command to use the `git-cola-sequence-editor`: git cola rebase @{upstream} `git-cola-sequence-editor` can be launched independently of git cola by telling `git rebase` to use it as its editor through the `GIT_SEQUENCE_EDITOR` environment variable: export GIT_SEQUENCE_EDITOR="$HOME/git-cola/bin/git-cola-sequence-editor" git rebase -i @{upstream} ## Shell Completions Shell completion scripts are available for bash and zsh. Each script contains instructions on how to install and activate the completions. * [bash completion script](contrib/git-cola-completion.bash) * [zsh completion script](contrib/_git-cola) # Git Cola Sub-commands The `git-cola` command exposes various sub-commands that allow you to quickly launch tools that are available from within the git-cola interface. For example, `git cola find` launches the file finder, and `git cola grep` launches the grep tool. See `git cola --help-commands` for the full list of commands. $ git cola --help-commands usage: git-cola [-h] {cola,am,archive,branch,browse,config, dag,diff,fetch,find,grep,merge,pull,push, rebase,remote,search,stash,tag,version} ... valid commands: {cola,am,archive,branch,browse,config, dag,diff,fetch,find,grep,merge,pull,push, rebase,remote,search,stash,tag,version} cola start git-cola am apply patches using "git am" archive save an archive branch create a branch browse browse repository config edit configuration dag start git-dag diff view diffs fetch fetch remotes find find files grep grep source merge merge branches pull pull remote branches push push remote branches rebase interactive rebase remote edit remotes search search commits stash stash and unstash changes tag create tags version print the version ## Development If you already have Git Cola's dependencies installed then you can start `cola` as a Python module if you have the source code available. python -m cola python -m cola dag The following commands should be run during development: # Run the unit tests $ garden test # Run tests and longer-running pylint checks $ garden check # Run tests against multiple python interpreters using tox $ garden tox The test suite can be found in the [test](test) directory. Commits and pull requests are automatically tested for code quality using [GitHub Actions](https://github.com/git-cola/git-cola/actions/workflows/main.yml). Auto-format `cola/i18n/*.po` files before committing when updating translations: $ garden po When submitting patches, consult the [contributing guidelines](CONTRIBUTING.md). ## Packaging Notes Git Cola installs its modules into the default Python site-packages directory (eg. `lib/python3.7/site-packages`) using setuptools. While end-users can use `pip install git-cola` to install Git Cola, distribution packagers should use the `garden -D prefix=/usr install` process. Git Cola's Garden recipe wraps `pip install --prefix=` to provide a packaging-friendly `garden install` target. # Windows (Continued) ## Microsoft Visual C++ 2015 Redistributable Earlier versions of Git Cola may have shipped without `vcruntime140.dll` and may not run on machines that are missing this DLL. To fix this, download the [Microsoft Visual C++ 2015 Redistributable](https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/download/details.aspx?id=52685) and install it Git Cola v4.0.0 and newer include this DLL and do not require this to be installed separately. ## Development In order to develop Git Cola on Windows you will need to install Python3 and pip. Install PyQt5 using `pip install PyQt5` to make the PyQt5 bindings available to Python. Once these are installed you can use `python.exe` to run directly from the source tree. For example, from a Git Bash terminal: /c/Python39/python.exe ./bin/git-cola ## Multiple Python versions If you have multiple versions of Python installed, the `contrib/win32/cola` launcher script might choose the newer version instead of the python that has PyQt installed. In order to resolve this, you can set the `cola.pythonlocation` git configuration variable to tell cola where to find python. For example: git config --global cola.pythonlocation /c/Python39 ## Building Windows Installers Windows installers are built using * [Pynsist](https://pynsist.readthedocs.io/en/latest/). * [NSIS](http://nsis.sourceforge.net/Main_Page) is also needed. To build the installer using Pynsist run: ./contrib/win32/run-pynsist.sh This will generate an installer in `build/nsis/`. ## Windows "History Browser" Configuration Upgrade You may need to configure your history browser if you are upgrading from an older version of Git Cola on Windows. `gitk` was originally the default history browser, but `gitk` cannot be launched as-is on Windows because `gitk` is a shell script. If you are configured to use `gitk`, then change your configuration to go through Git's `sh.exe` on Windows. Similarly, we must go through `python.exe` if we want to use `git-dag`. If you want to use gitk as your history browser open the Preferences screen and change the history browser command to: "C:/Program Files/Git/bin/sh.exe" --login -i C:/Git/bin/gitk `git-dag` became the default history browser on Windows in `v2.3`, so new users do not need to configure anything.