Dura is a background process that watches your Git repositories and commits your uncommitted changes without impacting
HEAD, the current branch, or the Git index (staged files). If you ever get into an "oh snap!" situation where you think
you just lost days of work, checkout a dura
branch and recover.
Without dura
, you use Ctrl-Z in your editor to get back to a good state. That's so 2021. Computers crash and Ctrl-Z
only works on files independently. Dura snapshots changes across the entire repository as-you-go, so you can revert to
"4 hours ago" instead of "hit Ctrl-Z like 40 times or whatever". Finally, some sanity.
Run it in the background:
$ dura serve &
The serve
can happen in any directory. The &
is Unix shell syntax to run the process in the background, meaning that you can start
dura
and then keep using the same terminal window while dura
keeps running. You could also run dura serve
in a
window that you keep open.
Let dura
know which repositories to watch:
$ cd some/git/repo
$ dura watch
Right now, you have to cd
into each repo that you want to watch, one at a time.
If you have thoughts on how to do this better, share them here. Until that's sorted, you can
run something like find ~ -type d -name .git -prune | xargs -I= sh -c "cd =/..; dura watch"
to get started on your existing repos.
Make some changes. No need to commit or even stage them. Use any Git tool to see the dura
branches:
$ git log --all
dura
produces a branch for every real commit you make and makes commits to that branch without impacting your working
copy. You keep using Git exactly as you did before.
Let dura
know that it should stop running in the background with the kill
command.
$ dura kill
The kill
can happen in any directory. It indicates to the serve
process that it should exit if there is a serve
process running.
The dura
branch that's tracking your current uncommitted changes looks like dura/f4a88e5ea0f1f7492845f7021ae82db70f14c725
.
In $SHELL, you can get the branch name via:
$ echo "dura/$(git rev-parse HEAD)"
Use git log
or tig
to figure out which commit you want to rollback to. Copy the hash
and then run something like
# Or, if you don't trust dura yet, `git stash`
$ git reset HEAD --hard
# get the changes into your working directory
$ git checkout $THE_HASH
# last few commands reset HEAD back to master but with changes uncommitted
$ git checkout -b temp-branch
$ git reset master
$ git checkout master
$ git branch -D temp-branch
If you're interested in improving this experience, collaborate here.
cargo install dura
else type cargo install --git https://github.com/tkellogg/dura
brew install rustup && brew install rust
)git clone https://github.com/tkellogg/dura.git
)cd dura
)cargo install --path .
Note: If you receive a failure fetching the cargo dependencies try using the local git client for cargo fetches. CARGO_NET_GIT_FETCH_WITH_CLI=true cargo install --path .
This installs dura
and sets up a launchctl service to keep it running.
$ brew install dura
git clone https://github.com/tkellogg/dura.git
)cd dura
)cargo install --path .
Note: If you receive a failure fetching the cargo dependencies try using the local git client for cargo fetches. CARGO_NET_GIT_FETCH_WITH_CLI=true cargo install --path .
$ paru -S dura-git
Nix is a tool that takes a unique approach to package management and system configuration. NixOS is a Linux distribution built on top of the Nix package manager.
To run dura
locally using pre-compiled binaries:
nix shell nixpkgs#dura
If you're willing to contribute and develop, dura
also provides its
own ready-to-use Nix flake.
To build and run the latest development version of dura
locally:
nix run github:tkellogg/dura
To run a development environment with the required tools to develop:
nix develop github:tkellogg/dura
Yes. Lots of people have been using it since 2022-01-01 without issue. It uses libgit2 to make the commits, so it's fairly battle hardened.
Every now and then, like 5 seconds or so. Internally there's a control loop that sleeps 5 seconds between iterations, so it runs less frequently than every 5 seconds (potentially a lot less frequently, if there's a lot of work to do).
Brought to you by Tim Kellogg.