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The Skara command-line interface (CLI) tools enables enable a CLI driven workflow where reviews are made either via the mailing lists or in an a web browser using an external Git source code hosting provider's web application. The following CLI tools are currently available as part of project Skara:

  • git-jcheck - a backwards compatible Git port of jcheck

  • git-webrev - a backwards compatible Git port of webrev

  • git-defpath - a backwards compatible Git port of defpath

  • git-trees - a backwards compatible Git port of trees
  • git-fork - fork a project on an external Git source code hosting provider to your personal space and optionally clone it

  • git-sync - sync the personal fork of the project with the current state of the upstream repository
  • git-backport - fetch a commit from a remote repository and apply it on top of the current branch
  • git-pr - interact with pull requests for a project on an external Git source code hosting provider

  • git-info - show OpenJDK information about commits, e.g. issue links, authors, contributors, etc.

  • git-token - interact with a Git credential manager for handling personal access tokens

  • git-translate - translate between Mercurial and Git hashes

  • git-publish - publish a local branch to a remote repository
  • git-proxy - proxy all network traffic from a Git command through a HTTP(S) proxy
  • git-skara - learn about and update the Skara CLI tool

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Note: if your computer is behind a HTTP(S) proxy, ensure that you have set the HTTPS_PROXY environment variable correctly.

Note: installing skara more than once can cause issues. If git config --get-all include.path returns more than one line, the skara bootstrap mechanism will get confused. Either make sure to only have one installation, or edit that line to read grep 'skara.gitconfig' | tail -1 assuming the last one is the right one.

For additional ways to install the Skara CLI tooling, see project Skara's README.

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If you installed Git via Git for Windows and have a recent version, then you already have a credential manager from Microsoft installed (it is bundled with Git for Windows, but make sure to pick it during installation). If you installed Git via some other mechanism, then you must first install Microsoft's Git Credential Manager for Windows. You . If you have an older version of Git for Windows and using the deprecated Git Credential Manager for Windows, you may need to configure git to use the credential manager like this:

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