GRM helps you manage git repositories in a declarative way. Configure your repositories in a TOML or YAML file, GRM does the rest.
Also, GRM can be used to work with git worktrees in an opinionated, straightforward fashion.
Take a look at the official documentation for installation & quickstart.
I have a lot of repositories on my machines. My own stuff, forks, quick clones of other's repositories, projects that never went anywhere ... In short, I lost overview.
To sync these repositories between machines, I've been using Nextcloud. The thing
is, Nextcloud is not too happy about too many small files that change all the time,
like the files inside .git
. Git also assumes that those files are updated as
atomically as possible. Nextcloud cannot guarantee that, so when I do a git status
during a sync, something blows up. And resolving these conflicts is just no fun ...
In the end, I think that git repos just don't belong into something like Nextcloud. Git is already managing the content & versions, so there is no point in having another tool do the same. But of course, setting up all those repositories from scratch on a new machine is too much hassle. What if there was a way to clone all those repos in a single command?
Also, I once transferred the domain of my personal git server. I updated a few remotes manually, but I still stumble upon old, stale remotes in projects that I haven't touched in a while. What if there was a way to update all those remotes in once place?
This is how GRM came to be. I'm a fan of infrastructure-as-code, and GRM is a bit like Terraform for your local git repositories. Write a config, run the tool, and your repos are ready. The only thing that is tracked by git it the list of repositories itself.
toml
for the configuration file.serde
, together withserde_yaml
andserde_json
. Because we're using Rust, after all.git2
, a safe wrapper aroundlibgit2
, for all git operations.clap
,console
,comfy_table
andshellexpand
for good UX.isahc
as the HTTP client for forge integrations.
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