A zsh
prompt that displays information about the current git repository. In particular the branch name, difference with remote branch, number of files staged, changed, etc.
This fork was motivated by the sluggishness of the git prompt from zsh-git-prompt, despite a prototype cache system. Getting the git status via python was still retained as the preferred way as it is much neater than the vcs_info alternative.
The prompt may look like the following:
(master↑3|✚1)
: on branchmaster
, ahead of remote by 3 commits, 1 file changed but not staged(status|●2)
: on branchstatus
, 2 files staged(master|✚7⚡…)
: on branchmaster
, 7 files changed, some files untracked(master|✖2✚3)
: on branchmaster
, 2 conflicts, 3 files changed(experimental↓2↑3|✔)
: on branchexperimental
; your branch has diverged by 3 commits, remote by 2 commits; the repository is otherwise clean(:70c2952|✔)
: not on any branch; parent commit has hash70c2952
; the repository is otherwise clean
Here is how it could look like when you are ahead by 4 commits, behind by 5 commits, and have 1 staged files, 1 changed but unstaged file, and some untracked files, on branch dev
:
By default, the general appearance of the prompt is:
(<branch><branch tracking>|<local status>)
The symbols are as follows:
- Local Status Symbols
✔: repository clean ●n: there are n
staged files✖n: there are n
unmerged files✚n: there are n
changed but unstaged files⚡n: there are n
untracked files (forn
< 10)⚡…: there are many more untracked files
- Branch Tracking Symbols
↑n: ahead of remote by n
commits↓n: behind remote by n
commits↓m↑n: branches diverged, other by m
commits, yours byn
commits
- Branch Symbols
- When the branch name starts with a colon
:
, it means it's actually a hash, not a branch (although it should be pretty clear, unless you name your branches like hashes :-)
Create the directory
~/.zsh/git-prompt-python
if it does not exist (this location is customizable).Move the file
gitstatus.py
into~/.zsh/git-prompt-python/
.After configuring your prompt in
git-prompt-python.zsh
, source the filegit-prompt-python.zsh
from your~/.zshrc
config file. So, somewhere in~/.zshrc
, you should have:source path/to/git-prompt-python.zsh
Alternatively, you could also configure directly your prompt in
~/.zshrc
(remove the definition ingit-prompt-python.zsh
):# an example prompt PROMPT='%B%m%~%b$(git_super_status) %# '
You may also redefine the function
git_super_status
to adapt it to your needs (to change the order in which the information is displayed). You may also change a number of variables (the name of which start withZSH_THEME_GIT_PROMPT_
) to change the appearance of the prompt. Take a look in the filegit-prompt-python.zsh
to see how the functiongit_super_status
is defined, and what variables are available.Go in a git repository and test it!
Enjoy!