Git repository summary in your terminal
You can not select more than 25 topics Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.
 
 
 
 
o2sh cfd8ee064c reduce gap between chip and language name 4 years ago
.cargo add audit.toml to ignore time rustsec errors 4 years ago
.github Fix working directory for Vercel CI (#714) 4 years ago
assets Generate Windows installer from CD (#668) 4 years ago
docs reduce gap between chip and language name 4 years ago
resources remove licenses folder 4 years ago
snap map HOME to SNAP_REAL_HOME, #588 4 years ago
src gitoxide update (#705) 4 years ago
.editorconfig trim trailing whitespade in ascii art 5 years ago
.gitattributes move vercel into docs folder 4 years ago
.gitignore add DS_STORE to gitignore 4 years ago
.mailmap update .mailmap 5 years ago
CHANGELOG.md Prepare changelog for upcoming 2.13 release. 4 years ago
CONTRIBUTING.md Extract language definitions into data file (#699) 4 years ago
Cargo.lock gitoxide update (#705) 4 years ago
Cargo.toml move vercel into docs folder 4 years ago
LICENSE.md add contributors file 7 years ago
Makefile Generate Windows installer from CD (#668) 4 years ago
README.md adding french documentation support (#693) 4 years ago
build.rs Extract language definitions into data file (#699) 4 years ago
languages.yaml remove empty line from ascii logo 4 years ago

README.md

A command-line Git information tool written in Rust

cargo Build Status help wanted

日本語 | فارسی | 简体中文 | Русский | Español | Français

Onefetch is a command-line Git information tool written in Rust that displays project information and code statistics for a local Git repository directly on your terminal. The tool is completely offline - no network access is required.

By default, the repo's information is displayed alongside the dominant language's logo, but you can further configure onefetch to instead use an image - on supported terminals -, a text input or nothing at all.

It automatically detects open source licenses from texts and provides the user with valuable information like code distribution, pending changes, number of dependencies (by package manager), top contributors (by number of commits), size on disk, creation date, LOC (lines of code), etc.

Onefetch can be configured via command-line flags to display exactly what you want, the way you want it to: you can customize ASCII/Text formatting, disable info lines, ignore files & directories, output in multiple formats (Json, Yaml), etc.

As of now, onefetch supports more than 50 different programming languages; if your language of choice isn't supported: Open up an issue and support will be added.

Contributions are very welcome! See CONTRIBUTING for more info.

More: [Wiki] [Installation] [Getting Started]