git2prompt 0.1.0

git2prompt is a command-line tool that takes a GitHub repository URL, downloads its contents, and generates a single text file optimized for use as input to AI tools.
Documentation

git2prompt

git2prompt is a command-line utility written in Rust that streamlines the process of preparing GitHub repository content for large language models (LLMs). It clones repositories, filters out unnecessary files, and concatenates the source code into a single, clean markdown file, ready to be used as context for AI tools.

Features

  • Seamless Integration: Simply provide one or more GitHub repository URLs to get started.
  • Content Concatenation: Merges all processed files into a single output file, or creates a separate file for each repository.
  • Intelligent Filtering: Automatically ignores common non-text files and the .git directory to ensure only relevant source code is included.
  • Customizable Filtering: Use a .git2promptignore file to specify additional files or directories to exclude from the output.
  • Readability: Automatically adds markdown headers and language-specific code fences to the output for enhanced readability by both humans and AI models.

How to Use It

To get started, clone the repository and build the project with Cargo.

cargo build --release

After building, you can use the compiled binary directly.

The output files are stored within an output folder which is created where the binary is ran from.

Basic Usage

To process a single repository and output a single file:

git2prompt <owner/repo>

For example:

git2prompt rust-lang/rust-by-example

Advanced Usage

Process multiple repositories and merge their contents into a single file:

git2prompt --merge-files rust-lang/rust rust-lang/book

Use the --no-headers flag to remove the file path headers above each code block:

git2prompt --no-headers rust-lang/rust-by-example

Filtering

git2prompt automatically ignores certain common file types and directories to keep the output clean.

These are automatically ignored:

  • The .git directory and its contents.
  • Binary file extensions: png, jpg, jpeg, gif, zip, tar, gz, bin, o, so, dll

To ignore additional files or directories, create a file named .git2promptignore in the same directory as the binary. The format is a simple list, with one file or folder per line.

For example, a .git2promptignore file might look like this:

assets/
docs/  
README.md

The paths are relative to the repository. In the example above, the assets and docs folders within the repository root folder and the README.md file would be excluded.

Alternatively, you can specify a custom ignore file using the --ignore-file flag:

git2prompt --ignore-file my-custom-ignore.txt <owner/repo>

Rust reminders

As I am starting my journey with Rust, here it goes a few reminders so I don't have to Google them all the time:

  • To create a new project, run cargo new <project-name>.
  • To build the project, run cargo build.
  • To run the project in dev mode, run cargo run.
  • To run the project in release mode, run cargo run --release.
  • To check the code without building the final library, run cargo check.
  • To run tests, run cargo test.
  • To run Rust built-in linters, run cargo clippy (run with --fix to automatically fix the issues).
  • To run the tests with a specific test file, run cargo test <test-file>.
  • To run the tests with a specific test function, run cargo test <test-function>.

Before pushing to crates.io, run the following:

  1. cargo fmt
  2. cargo build
  3. cargo test
  4. cargo clippy

If all good, cargo package and then cargo publish.