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This is ghub.info, produced by makeinfo version 6.5 from ghub.texi.
Copyright (C) 2017-2018 Jonas Bernoulli <jonas@bernoul.li>
You can redistribute this document and/or modify it under the terms
of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software
Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option)
any later version.
This document is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
General Public License for more details.
INFO-DIR-SECTION Emacs
START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
* Ghub: (ghub). Minuscule client library for the Github API.
END-INFO-DIR-ENTRY

File: ghub.info, Node: Top, Next: Introduction, Up: (dir)
Ghub User and Developer Manual
******************************
Ghub provides basic support for using the APIs of various Git forges
from Emacs packages. Originally it only supported the Github REST API,
but now it also supports the Github GraphQL API as well as the REST APIs
of Gitlab, Gitea, Gogs and Bitbucket.
Ghub abstracts access to API resources using only a handful of basic
functions such as ghub-get. These are convenience wrappers around
ghub-request. Additional forge-specific wrappers like glab-put,
gtea-put, gogs-post and buck-delete are also available. Ghub does
not provide any resource-specific functions, with the exception of
FORGE-repository-id.
When accessing Github, then Ghub handles the creation and storage of
access tokens using a setup wizard to make it easier for users to get
started. The tokens for other forges have to be created manually.
Ghub is intentionally limited to only provide these two essential
features — basic request functions and guided setup — to avoid being too
opinionated, which would hinder wide adoption. It is assumed that wide
adoption would make life easier for users and maintainers alike, because
then all packages that talk to forge APIs could be configured the same
way.
This manual is for Ghub version 2.0.1 (v2.0.1-48-g87701ea+1).
Copyright (C) 2017-2018 Jonas Bernoulli <jonas@bernoul.li>
You can redistribute this document and/or modify it under the terms
of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software
Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option)
any later version.
This document is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
General Public License for more details.
* Menu:
* Introduction::
* Getting Started::
* Using Ghub in Personal Scripts::
* Using Ghub in a Package::
* API::
* GraphQL Support::
* Support for Other Forges::
— The Detailed Node Listing —
Getting Started
* Setting the Username::
* Interactively Creating and Storing a Token::
* Manually Creating and Storing a Token::
* How Ghub uses Auth-Source::
API
* Making Requests::
* Authentication::
* Configuration Variables::
Support for Other Forges
* Forge Functions and Variables::
* Forge Limitations and Notes::

File: ghub.info, Node: Introduction, Next: Getting Started, Prev: Top, Up: Top
1 Introduction
**************
Ghub provides basic support for using the APIs of various Git forges
from Emacs packages. Originally it only supported the Github REST API,
but now it also supports the Github GraphQL API as well as the REST APIs
of Gitlab, Gitea, Gogs and Bitbucket.
Ghub abstracts access to API resources using only a handful of basic
functions such as ghub-get. These are convenience wrappers around
ghub-request. Additional forge-specific wrappers like glab-put,
gtea-put, gogs-post and buck-delete are also available. Ghub does
not provide any resource-specific functions, with the exception of
FORGE-repository-id.
When accessing Github, then Ghub handles the creation and storage of
access tokens using a setup wizard to make it easier for users to get
started. The tokens for other forges have to be created manually.
Ghub is intentionally limited to only provide these two essential
features — basic request functions and guided setup — to avoid being too
opinionated, which would hinder wide adoption. It is assumed that wide
adoption would make life easier for users and maintainers alike, because
then all packages that talk to forge APIs could be configured the same
way.
Fancier interfaces can be implemented on top of Ghub, and one such
wrapper — named simply Ghub+ — has already been implemented. The
benefit of basing various opinionated interfaces on top of a single
library that provides only the core functionality is that choosing the
programming interface no longer dictates how access tokens are handled.
Users can then use multiple packages that access the Github API without
having to learn the various incompatible ways packages expect the
appropriate token to be made available to them.
Ghub uses the built-in auth-source library to store access tokens.
That library is very flexible and supports multiple backends, which
means that it is up to the user how secrets are stored. They can, among
other things, choose between storing secrets in plain text for ease of
use, or encrypted for better security.
Previously (as in until this library is widely adopted) it was up to
package authors to decide if things should be easy or secure. (Note
that auth-source defaults to "easy" — you have been warned.)
Ghub expects package authors to use a dedicated access token instead
of sharing a single token between all packages that rely on it. That
means that users cannot configure Ghub once and later start using a new
package without any additional setup. But Ghub helps with that.
When the user invokes some command that ultimately results in
ghub-request being called and the appropriate token is not available
yet, then the user is guided through the process of creating and storing
a new token, and at the end of that process the request is carried out
as if the token had been available to begin with.

File: ghub.info, Node: Getting Started, Next: Using Ghub in Personal Scripts, Prev: Introduction, Up: Top
2 Getting Started
*****************
Each package that uses Ghub uses its own token. Despite that, chances
are good that after successfully configuring one package you can just
start using another package pretty much instantly.
If the necessary token to access a Github instance is not available
when a package makes an API request, then a setup wizard pops up, and
after answering a few questions you are good to go. Even the request
that caused the wizard to be summoned should succeed and for most users
this should be true even when configuring the very first token.
However, in some situations some manual configuration is necessary
*before* using the wizard, or the wizard cannot be used at all:
• If you dont want to use the wizard then you dont have to and can
create tokens manually as described in *note Manually Creating and
Storing a Token::.
• Unfortunately only Github supports the creation of tokens by using
the API. If you want to access another forge, then you have to
create the token manually as describe in *note Manually Creating
and Storing a Token::. Also see *note Support for Other Forges::.
• If you want to access a Github Enterprise instance, then you have
to tell Ghub about that before the wizard makes its appearance by
setting the Git variable github.host. You also have to tell Ghub
your username for that instance using the variable
github.HOST.user even if it is the same as on Github.com.
• If the variable github.user (or github.HOST.user for an
Enterprise instance) is unset when the wizard is first summoned,
then you are asked to provide your username. That value is then
stored *globally* to avoid having to ask you that question once per
repository. If you have multiple accounts on Github.com (or a
Github Enterprise instance), then you have to explicitly tell Ghub
about that. This can be done by setting the repository-local
values of the appropriate variable *before* the wizard is invoked.
• You might forget to do the above, which is why it is important to
carefully read the output of the wizard. If it turns out that you
forgot to set a variable, then you must abort, set the variable,
and repeat the request to trigger the wizard again.
• The setup wizard should work even if you have enabled two-factor
authentication. However if your Github Enterprise instance
enforces Single Sign-On as an additional security measure, then you
are out of luck and have to create the token manually as described
in *note Manually Creating and Storing a Token::.
The variables mentioned above — and others — are documented in *note
Configuration Variables:: and the setup wizard is documented in *note
Interactively Creating and Storing a Token::.
* Menu:
* Setting the Username::
* Interactively Creating and Storing a Token::
* Manually Creating and Storing a Token::
* How Ghub uses Auth-Source::

File: ghub.info, Node: Setting the Username, Next: Interactively Creating and Storing a Token, Up: Getting Started
2.1 Setting the Username
========================
If you havent set the Git variable github.user yet when making a
request, then you will be asked:
Git variable `github.user' is unset. Set to:
You are expected to provide your Github username here. The provided
value will be saved globally (using git config --global github.user
USERNAME).
If you need to identify as another user in a particular repository,
then you have to set that variable locally, *before* making a request:
cd /path/to/repo
git config github.user USERNAME
For Github Enterprise instances you have to specify where the API can
be accessed *before* you try to access it and a different variable has
to be used to set the username. For example if the API is available at
https://example.com/api/v3, then you should do this:
# Do this once
git config --global github.example.com/api/v3.user EMPLOYEE
# Do this for every corporate repository
cd /path/to/repo
git config github.host example.com/api/v3
If you do not set github.example.com/api/v3.user, then you will be
asked to provide the value when trying to make a request, but you do
have to manually set github.host, or Ghub assumes that you are trying
to access api.github.com.

File: ghub.info, Node: Interactively Creating and Storing a Token, Next: Manually Creating and Storing a Token, Prev: Setting the Username, Up: Getting Started
2.2 Interactively Creating and Storing a Token
==============================================
Ghub uses a different token for every package as well as for every
machine from which you access the Github API (and obviously also for
every Github instance and user). This allows packages to only request
the scopes that they actually need and also gives users the opportunity
to refuse access to certain scopes if they expect to not use the
features that need them.
Usually you dont have to worry about creating and storing a token
yourself and can just make a request. Note however that you dont have
to use the setup wizard described below. Alternatively you can perform
the setup manually as described in the next section.
If you make a request and the required token is not available yet,
then the setup wizard will first ask you something like this:
Such a Github API token is not available:
Host: api.github.com
User: USERNAME
Package: PACKAGE
Scopes requested in `PACKAGE-github-token-scopes':
repo
Store on Github as:
"Emacs package PACKAGE @ LOCAL-MACHINE"
Store locally according to option `auth-sources':
("~/.authinfo" "~/.authinfo.gpg" "~/.netrc")
If in doubt, then abort and first view the section of the Ghub
documentation called "Manually Creating and Storing a Token".
Create and store such a token? (yes or no)
If you dont have any doubts, then answer "yes". Lets address some
of the doubts that you might have:
Host usually is "api.github.com" and that is usually what you
want. If you are trying to access a Github Enterprise instance,
then it should be something else and you have to set the value
manually before the setup wizard is summoned, as described in the
parent section.
User should be your Github.com (or Github Enterprise instance)
username. If it is something else and it doesnt look like a
simple typo, then you should read the parent section again. In
either case you have to abort.
Package should be the name of the package you are using to access
the Github API.
If it is ghub, then the package author disregarded that
convention and you should probably report a bug in the issue
tracker of that package.
Or you yourself are using ghub-request or one of its wrappers
directly, in which case this is expected and perfectly fine. In
that case you might however want to abort and change the value of
the variable ghub-github-token-scopes before triggering the
wizard again.
• Each PACKAGE has to specify the tokens that it needs using a
variable named PACKAGE-github-token-scopes. The doc-string of
that variable should document why the various scopes are needed.
The meaning of the various scopes are documented at
<https://magit.vc/goto/f63aeb0a>.
• The value of auth-sources is shown. The default value causes
secrets to be stored in plain text. Because this might be
unexpected, Ghub additionally displays a warning when appropriate.
WARNING: The token will be stored unencrypted in "~/.authinfo".
If you don't want that, you have to abort and customize
the `auth-sources' option.
Whether that is something that needs fixing, is up to you. If your
answer is yes, then you should abort and see *note How Ghub uses
Auth-Source:: for instructions on how to save the token more
securely.
• When creating a token it is necessary to provide a token
description. Ghub uses descriptions that have the form "Emacs
package PACKAGE @ LOCAL-MACHINE".
Github uses the token description to identify the token, not merely
as something useful to humans. Token descriptions therefore have
to be unique and in rare cases you get an additional prompt, asking
you something like:
A token named "Emacs package PACKAGE @ LOCAL-MACHINE"
already exists on Github. Replace it?
You might see this message when you have lost the old token and
want to replace it with a new one, in which case you should
obviously just proceed.
Or two of your computers have the same hostname, which is bad
practice because it gains you nothing but leads to issues such as
this. Or you are dual-booting on this machine and use the same
hostname in all operating systems, which is a somewhat reasonable
thing to do, but never-the-less leads to issues like this.
In either case you will have to use something other than the value
returned by system-name to identify the current machine or
operating system. Or you can continue to identify different things
using the same identifier, in which case you have to manually
distribute the token.
The former is recommended and also easier to do, using the variable
ghub-override-system-name. See *note Configuration Variables::
for details.
After the above prompt you are also asked for you username and
password. If you have enabled two-factor authentication, then you also
have to provide the authentication code at least twice. If you make
sure the code is still good for a while when asked for it first, then
you can just press RET at the later prompt(s).

File: ghub.info, Node: Manually Creating and Storing a Token, Next: How Ghub uses Auth-Source, Prev: Interactively Creating and Storing a Token, Up: Getting Started
2.3 Manually Creating and Storing a Token
=========================================
If you cannot or dont want to use the wizard then you have to (1)
figure out what scopes a package wants, (2) create such a token using
the web interface and (3) store the token where Ghub expects to find it.
A package named PACKAGE has to specify the scopes that it wants in
the variable named PACKAGE-ghub-token-scopes. The doc-string of such
variables should document what the various scopes are needed for.
To create or edit a token go to <https://github.com/settings/tokens>.
For Gitlab.com use <https://gitlab.com/profile/personal_access_tokens>.
Finally store the token in a place where Ghub looks for it, as
described in *note How Ghub uses Auth-Source::.
If you store the token in a file like ~/.authinfo, then note that
auth-sources parsing of that file is brittle. Make sure the file
ends with a newline character, that there are no empty or invalid lines,
and that all comments are prefixed with #.

File: ghub.info, Node: How Ghub uses Auth-Source, Prev: Manually Creating and Storing a Token, Up: Getting Started
2.4 How Ghub uses Auth-Source
=============================
Please see *note (auth)Top:: for all the gory details about Auth-Source.
Some Ghub-specific information and important notes follow.
The variable auth-sources controls how and where Auth-Source stores
new secrets and where it looks for known secrets. The default value is
("~/.authinfo" "~/.authinfo.gpg" "~/.netrc"), which means that it
looks in all of these files in order to find secrets and that it stores
new secrets in ~/.authinfo because that is the first element of the
list. It doesnt matter which files already do or dont exist when
storing a new secret, the first file is always used.
Secrets are stored in ~/.authinfo in plain text. If you dont want
that (good choice), then you have to customize auth-sources, e.g. by
flipping the positions of the first two elements.
Auth-Source also supports storing secrets in various key-chains.
Refer to its documentation for more information.
Some Auth-Source backends only support storing three values per
entry, the "machine", the "login" and the "password". Because Ghub uses
separate tokens for each package, it has to squeeze four values into
those three slots, and it does that by using "USERNAME^PACKAGE" as the
"login".
Assuming your username is "ziggy",the package is named "stardust",
and you want to access *Github.com* an entry in one of the three
mentioned files would then look like this:
machine api.github.com login ziggy^stardust password 012345abcdef...
Assuming your username is "ziggy",the package is named "stardust",
and you want to access *Gitlab.com* an entry in one of the three
mentioned files would then look like this:
machine gitlab.com/api/v4 login ziggy^stardust password 012345abcdef...

File: ghub.info, Node: Using Ghub in Personal Scripts, Next: Using Ghub in a Package, Prev: Getting Started, Up: Top
3 Using Ghub in Personal Scripts
********************************
You can use ghub-request and its wrapper functions in your personal
scripts, of course. Unlike when you use Ghub from a package that you
distribute for others to use, you dont have to specify a package in
personal scripts.
;; This is perfectly acceptable in personal scripts ...
(ghub-get "/user")
;; ... and actually equal to
(ghub-get "/user" nil :auth 'ghub)
;; In packages you have to specify the package using AUTH.
(ghub-get "/user" nil :auth 'foobar)
When you do not specify the AUTH argument, then a request is made
on behalf of the ghub package itself. Like for any package that uses
Ghub, ghub has to declare what scopes it needs, using, in this case,
the variable ghub-github-token-scopes.
The default value of that variable is (repo) and you might want to
add additional scopes. You can later add additional scopes to an
existing token, using the web interface at
<https://github.com/settings/tokens>.
If you do that, then you might want to also set the variable
accordingly, but note that Ghub only consults that when *creating* a new
token. If you want to know a tokens effective scopes use the command
ghub-token-scopes, described in the next section.

File: ghub.info, Node: Using Ghub in a Package, Next: API, Prev: Using Ghub in Personal Scripts, Up: Top
4 Using Ghub in a Package
*************************
Every package should use its own token. This allows you as the author
of some package to only request access to API scopes that are actually
needed, which in turn might make it easier for users to trust your
package not to do unwanted things.
The scopes used by PACKAGE have to be defined using the variable
PACKAGE-github-token-scopes, and you have to tell ghub-request on
behalf of which package a request is being made by passing the symbol
PACKAGE as the value of its AUTH argument.
(ghub-request "GET" "/user" nil :auth 'PACKAGE)
-- Variable: PACKAGE-github-token-scopes
This variable defines the token scopes requested by the package
named PACKAGE. The doc-string should explain what the various
scopes are needed for to prevent users from giving PACKAGE fewer
permissions than it absolutely needs and also to give them greater
confidence that PACKAGE is only requesting the permissions that
it actually needs.
The value of this variable does not necessarily correspond to the
scopes that the respective token actually gives access to. There
is nothing that prevents users from changing the value *after*
creating the token or from editing the tokens scopes later on.
So it is pointless to check the value of this variable before
making a request. You also should not query the API to reliably
determine the supported tokens before making a query. Doing the
latter would mean that every request becomes two requests and that
the first request would have to be done using the users password
instead of a token.
-- Command: ghub-token-scopes
Because we cannot be certain that the user hasnt messed up the
scopes, Ghub provides this command to make it easy to debug such
issues without having to rely on users being thoughtful enough to
correctly determine the used scopes manually.
Just tell users to run M-x ghub-token-scopes and to provide the
correct values for the HOST, USERNAME and PACKAGE when
prompted, and to then post the output.
It is to be expected that users will occasionally mess that up so
this command outputs not only the scopes but also the user input so
that you can have greater confidence in the validity of the users
answer.
Scopes for USERNAME^PACKAGE@HOST: (SCOPE...)

File: ghub.info, Node: API, Next: GraphQL Support, Prev: Using Ghub in a Package, Up: Top
5 API
*****
This section describes the Ghub API. In other words it describes the
public functions and variables provided by the Ghub package and not the
APIs of the supported forges, which can be accessed by using those
functions. The forge APIs are documented at:
• Github: <https://developer.github.com/v3>
• Gitlab: <https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/api/README.html>
• Gitea: <https://docs.gitea.io/en-us/api-usage> and
<https://try.gitea.io/api/swagger>
• Gogs: <https://github.com/gogs/go-gogs-client/wiki>
• Bitbucket:
<https://developer.atlassian.com/bitbucket/api/2/reference>
* Menu:
* Making Requests::
* Authentication::
* Configuration Variables::

File: ghub.info, Node: Making Requests, Next: Authentication, Up: API
5.1 Making Requests
===================
-- Function: ghub-request method resource &optional params &key query
payload headers unpaginate noerror reader username auth host
callback errorback url value error extra method*
This function makes a request for RESOURCE using METHOD.
PARAMS, QUERY, PAYLOAD and/or HEADERS are alists holding
additional request data. The response body is returned and the
response header is stored in the variable ghub-response-headers.
METHOD is the HTTP method, given as a string.
RESOURCE is the resource to access, given as a string
beginning with a slash.
PARAMS, QUERY, PAYLOAD and HEADERS are alists and are
used to specify request data. All these arguments are alists
that resemble the JSON expected and returned by the Github
API. The keys are symbols and the values stored in the cdr
(not the cadr) can be strings, integers, or lists of strings
and integers.
The Github API documentation is vague on how data has to be
transmitted and for a particular resource usually just talks
about "parameters". Generally speaking when the METHOD is
"HEAD" or "GET", then they have to be transmitted as a query,
otherwise as a payload.
• Use PARAMS to automatically transmit like QUERY or
PAYLOAD would depending on METHOD.
• Use QUERY to explicitly transmit data as a query.
• Use PAYLOAD to explicitly transmit data as a payload.
Instead of an alist, PAYLOAD may also be a string, in
which case it gets encoded as UTF-8 but is otherwise
transmitted as-is.
• Use HEADERS for those rare resources that require that
the data is transmitted as headers instead of as a query
or payload. When that is the case, then the Github API
documentation usually mentions it explicitly.
• If SILENT is non-nil, then progress reports and the like are
not messaged.
• If UNPAGINATE is t, then this function make as many requests
as necessary to get all values. If UNPAGINATE is a natural
number, then it gets at most that many pages. For any other
non-nil value it raises an error.
• If NOERROR is non-nil, then no error is raised if the
request fails and nil is returned instead. If NOERROR is
return, then the error payload is returned instead of nil.
• If READER is non-nil, then it is used to read and return
from the response buffer. The default is
ghub--read-json-payload. For the very few resources that do
not return JSON, you might want to use ghub--decode-payload.
• If USERNAME is non-nil, then the request is made on behalf
of that user. It is better to specify the user using the Git
variable github.user for "api.github.com", or
github.HOST.user if connecting to a Github Enterprise
instance.
• Each package that uses Ghub should use its own token. If
AUTH is nil or unspecified, then the generic ghub token
is used instead. This is only acceptable for personal
utilities. A packages that is distributed to other users
should always use this argument to identify itself, using a
symbol matching its name.
Package authors who find this inconvenient should write a
wrapper around this function and possibly for the
method-specific functions as well.
Beside nil, some other symbols have a special meaning too.
none means to make an unauthorized request. basic means
to make a password based request. If the value is a string,
then it is assumed to be a valid token. basic and an
explicit token string are only intended for internal and
debugging uses.
If AUTH is a package symbol, then the scopes are specified
using the variable AUTH-github-token-scopes. It is an error
if that is not specified. See ghub-github-token-scopes for
an example.
• If HOST is non-nil, then connect to that Github instance.
This defaults to "api.github.com". When a repository is
connected to a Github Enterprise instance, then it is better
to specify that using the Git variable github.host instead
of using this argument.
• If FORGE is gitlab, then connect to Gitlab.com or,
depending on HOST, to another Gitlab instance. This is only
intended for internal use. Instead of using this argument you
should use function glab-request and other glab-*
functions.
• If CALLBACK and/or ERRORBACK is non-nil, then this
function makes one or more asynchronous requests and calls
CALLBACK or ERRORBACK when finished. If an error
occurred, then it calls ERRORBACK, or if that is nil, then
CALLBACK. When no error occurred then it calls CALLBACK.
When making asynchronous requests, then no errors are
signaled, regardless of the value of NOERROR.
Both callbacks are called with four arguments.
• For CALLBACK, the combined value of the retrieved
pages. For ERRORBACK, the error that occured when
retrieving the last page.
• The headers of the last page as an alist.
• Status information provided by url-retrieve. Its
:error property holds the same information as the first
argument to ERRORBACK.
• A ghub--req struct, which can be passed to
ghub-continue (which see) to retrieve the next page, if
any.
-- Function: ghub-continue args
If there is a next page, then this function retrieves that.
This function is only intended to be called from callbacks. If
there is a next page, then that is retrieve and the buffer that the
result will be loaded into is returned, or t if the process has
already completed. If there is no next page, then return nil.
Callbacks are called with four arguments (see ghub-request). The
forth argument is a ghub--req struct, intended to be passed to
this function. A callback may use the structs extra slot to
pass additional information to the callback that will be called
after the next request. Use the function ghub-req-extra to get
and set the value of that slot.
As an example, using ghub-continue in a callback like so:
(ghub-get "/users/tarsius/repos" nil
:callback (lambda (value _headers _status req)
(unless (ghub-continue req)
(setq my-value value))))
is equivalent to:
(ghub-get "/users/tarsius/repos" nil
:unpaginate t
:callback (lambda (value _headers _status _req)
(setq my-value value)))
To demonstrate how to pass information from one callback to the
next, here we record when we start fetching each page:
(ghub-get "/users/tarsius/repos" nil
:extra (list (current-time))
:callback (lambda (value _headers _status req)
(push (current-time) (ghub-req-extra req))
(unless (ghub-continue req)
(setq my-times (ghub-req-extra req))
(setq my-value value))))
-- Variable: ghub-response-headers
A select few Github API resources respond by transmitting data in
the response header instead of in the response body. Because there
are so few of these inconsistencies, ghub-request always returns
the response body.
To access the response headers use this variable after
ghub-request has returned.
-- Function: ghub-response-link-relations req headers payload
This function returns an alist of the link relations in HEADERS,
or if optional HEADERS is nil, then those in
ghub-response-headers.
When accessing a Bitbucket instance then the link relations are in
PAYLOAD instead of HEADERS, making their API merely RESTish and
forcing this function to append those relations to the value of
ghub-response-headers, for later use when this function is called
with nil for PAYLOAD.
-- Variable: ghub-override-system-name
If non-nil, the value of this variable is used to override the
value returned by system-name for the purpose of identifying the
local machine, which is necessary because Ghub uses separate tokens
for each machine. Also see *note Configuration Variables::.
-- Variable: ghub-github-token-scopes
-- Variable: PACKAGE-github-token-scopes
Such a variable defines the token scopes requested by the
respective package PACKAGE given by the first word in the
variable name. ghub itself is treated like any other package.
Also see *note Using Ghub in a Package::.
-- Function: ghub-head resource &optional params &key query payload
headers unpaginate noerror reader username auth host callback
errorback
-- Function: ghub-get resource &optional params &key query payload
headers unpaginate noerror reader username auth host callback
errorback
These functions are simple wrappers around ghub-request. Their
signature is identical to that of the latter, except that they do
not have an argument named METHOD. The HTTP method is instead
given by the second word in the function name.
As described in the documentation for ghub-request, it depends on
the used method whether the value of the PARAMS argument is used
as the query or the payload. For the "HEAD" and "GET" methods it
is used as the query.
-- Function: ghub-put resource &optional params &key query payload
headers unpaginate noerror reader username auth host callback
errorback
-- Function: ghub-post resource &optional params &key query payload
headers unpaginate noerror reader username auth host callback
errorback
-- Function: ghub-patch resource &optional params &key query payload
headers unpaginate noerror reader username auth host callback
errorback
-- Function: ghub-delete resource &optional params &key query payload
headers unpaginate noerror reader username auth host callback
errorback
These functions are simple wrappers around ghub-request. Their
signature is identical to that of the latter, except that they do
not have an argument named METHOD. The HTTP method is instead
given by the second word in the function name.
As described in the documentation for ghub-request, it depends on
the used method whether the value of the PARAMS argument is used
as the query or the payload. For the "PUT", "POST", "PATCH" and
"DELETE" methods it is used as the payload.
-- Function: ghub-wait resource &optional duration &key username auth
host
Some API requests result in an immediate successful response even
when the requested action has not actually been carried out yet.
An example is the request for the creation of a new repository,
which doesnt cause the repository to immediately become available.
The Github API documentation usually mentions this when describing
an affected resource.
If you want to do something with some resource right after making a
request for its creation, then you might have to wait for it to
actually be created. This function can be used to do so. It
repeatedly tries to access the resource until it becomes available
or until the timeout exceeds. In the latter case it signals
ghub-error.
RESOURCE specifies the resource that this function waits for.
DURATION specifies the maximum number of seconds to wait for,
defaulting to 64 seconds. Emacs will block during that time, but
the user can abort using C-g.
The first attempt is made immediately and will often succeed. If
not, then another attempt is made after two seconds, and each
subsequent attempt is made after waiting as long as we already
waited between all preceding attempts combined.
See ghub-requests documentation above for information about the
other arguments.
-- Function: ghub-graphql graphql &optional variables &key username
auth host callback
This function makes a GraphQL request using GRAPHQL and
VARIABLES as inputs. GRAPHQL is a GraphQL string. VARIABLES
is a JSON-like alist. The other arguments behave as for
ghub-request (which see).
The response is returned as a JSON-like alist. Even if the
response contains errors, this function does not raise an error.
Cursor-handling is likewise left to the caller.

File: ghub.info, Node: Authentication, Next: Configuration Variables, Prev: Making Requests, Up: API
5.2 Authentication
==================
-- Command: ghub-create-token
This command creates a new token using the values it reads from the
user and then stores it according to the variable auth-sources.
It can also be called non-interactively, but you shouldnt do that
yourself.
This is useful if you want to fully setup things before attempting
to make the initial request, if you want to provide fewer than the
requested scopes or customize auth-sources first, or if something
has gone wrong when using the wizard that is used when making a
request without doing this first. (Note that instead of using this
command you can also just repeat the initial request after making
the desired adjustments — that is easier.)
This command reads, in order, the HOST (Github instance), the
USERNAME, the PACKAGE, and the SCOPES in the minibuffer,
providing reasonable default choices. SCOPES defaults to the
scopes that PACKAGE requests using the variable
PACKAGE-github-token-scopes.
-- Command: ghub-token-scopes
Users are free to give a token access to fewer scopes than what the
respective package requested. That can, of course, lead to issues,
and package maintainers have to be able to quickly determine if
such a (mis-)configuration is the root cause when users report
issues.
This command reads the required values in the minibuffer and then
shows a message containing these values along with the scopes of
the respective token. It also returns the scopes (only) when
called non-interactively. Also see *note Using Ghub in a
Package::.

File: ghub.info, Node: Configuration Variables, Prev: Authentication, Up: API
5.3 Configuration Variables
===========================
The username and, unless you only use Github.com itself, the Github
Enterprise instance have to be configured using Git variables. In rare
cases it might also be necessary to specify the identity of the local
machine, which is done using a lisp variable.
-- Variable: github.user
The Github.com username. This should be set globally and if you
have multiple Github.com user accounts, then you should set this
locally only for those repositories that you want to access using
the secondary identity.
-- Variable: github.HOST.user
This variable serves the same purpose as github.user but for the
Github Enterprise instance identified by HOST.
The reason why separate variables are used is that this makes it
possible to set both values globally instead of having to set one
of the values locally in each and every repository that is
connected to the Github Enterprise instance, not Github.com.
-- Variable: github.host
This variable should only be set locally for a repository and
specifies the Github Enterprise edition that that repository is
connected to. You should not set this globally because then each
and every repository becomes connected to the specified Github
Enterprise instance, including those that should actually be
connected to Github.com.
When this is undefined, then "api.github.com" is used (defined in
the constant ghub-default-host, which you should never attempt to
change.)
-- Variable: ghub-override-system-name
Ghub uses a different token for each quadruple (USERNAME PACKAGE
HOST LOCAL-MACHINE). Theoretically it could reuse tokens to some
extent but that would be more difficult to implement, less
flexible, and less secure (though slightly more convenient).
A token is identified on the respective Github instance (Github.com
or a Github Enterprise instance) using the pair (PACKAGE .
LOCAL-MACHINE), or more precisely the string "Emacs package
PACKAGE @ LOCAL-MACHINE". USERNAME and HOST do not have to be
encoded because the token is stored for USERNAME on HOST and
cannot be used by another user and/or on another instance.
There is one potential problem though; for any given (PACKAGE .
LOCAL-MACHINE) there can only be one token identified by "Emacs
package PACKAGE @ LOCAL-MACHINE"; Github does not allow multiple
tokens with the same description because it uses the description as
the identifier (it could use some hash instead, but alas it does
not).
If you have multiple machines and some of them have the same name,
then you should probably change that as this is not how things
ought to be. However if you dual-boot, then it might make sense to
give that machine the same name regardless of what operating system
you have booted into.
You could use the same token on both operating systems, but setting
that up might be somewhat difficult because it is not possible to
download an existing token from Github. You could, of course,
locally copy the token, but that is inconvenient and would make it
harder to only revoke the token used on your infected Windows
installation without also revoking it for your totally safe *BSD
installation.
Alternatively you can set this variable to a unique value, that
will then be used to identify the local machine instead of the
value returned by system-name.

File: ghub.info, Node: GraphQL Support, Next: Support for Other Forges, Prev: API, Up: Top
6 GraphQL Support
*****************
-- Function: ghub-graphql graphql &optional variables &key username
auth host callback silent callback errorback value extra
This function makes a GraphQL request using GRAPHQL and
VARIABLES as inputs. GRAPHQL is a GraphQL string. VARIABLES
is a JSON-like alist. The other arguments behave as for
ghub-request (which see).
The response is returned as a JSON-like alist. Even if the
response contains errors, this function does not raise an error.
Cursor-handling is likewise left to the caller.
ghub-graphql is a thin convenience wrapper around ghub-request,
similar to ghub-post and friends. While the latter only hard-code the
value of the METHOD argument, the former also hard-codes RESOURCE
and constructs PAYLOAD from GRAPHEQL and VARIABLES. It also drops
UNPAGINATE, NOERROR, READER (internal functions expect alist-ified
JSON) and FORGE (only Github currently supports GraphQL).
ghub-graphql does not account for the fact that pagination works
differently in GraphQL than it does in REST, so users of this function
have to deal with that themselves. Likewise error handling works
differently and has to be done by the caller too.
An early attempt at implementing automatic unpaginating for GraphQL
can be found in the faithful-graphql branch, provided I havent
deleted that by now. On that branch I try to do things as intended by
the designers of GraphQL, using variables and fragments, and drowning in
a sea of boilerplate.
The problem with that approach is that it only works for applications
that fetch specific information on demand and actually want things to be
paginated. I am convinced that GraphQL is very nice for web apps.
However the Forge package for which I am implementing all of this has
very different needs. It wants to fetch "all the data" and "cache" it
locally, so that it is available even when there is no internet
connection. GraphQL was designed around the idea that you should be
able to "ask for what you need and get exactly that". But when that
boils down to "look, if I persist, then you are going to hand me over
all the data anyway, so just caught it up already", then things start to
fall apart. If Githubs GraphQL allowed pagination to be turned off
completely, then teaching ghub-graphql about error handling would be
enough.
But it doesnt and when doing things as intended, then that leads to
huge amounts of repetitive boilerplate, which is so boring to write that
doing it without introducing bugs left and right is near impossible; so
I decided to give up on GraphQL variables, fragments and conditions, and
instead implement something more powerful, though also more opinionated.
-- Function: ghub--graphql-vacuum query variables callback &optional
until &key narrow username auth host forge
This function is an opinionated alternative to ghub-graphql. It
relies and dark magic to get the job done.
It makes an initial request using QUERY. It then looks for
paginated edges in the returned data and makes more requests to
resolve them. In order to do so it automatically transforms the
initial QUERY into another query suitable for that particular
edge. The data retrieved by subsequent requests is then injected
into the data of the original request before that is returned or
passed to the callback. If subsequently retrieved data features
new paginated edges, then those are followed recursively.
The end result is essentially the same as using ghub-graphql, if
only it were possible to say "do not paginate anything". The
implementation is much more complicated because it is not possible
to do that.
QUERY is a GraphQL query expressed as an s-expression. The
graphql package is used to turn that into a GraphQL query string,
but the format is somewhat different than as documented for that
package. Also only a subset of the GraphQL features are supported;
fragments for example are not, and magical stuff happens to
variables. This is not documented yet, I am afraid. Look at
existing callers.
VARIABLES is a JSON-like alist as for ghub-graphql.
UNTIL is an alist ((EDGE-until . VALUE)...). When unpaginating
EDGE try not to fetch beyond the element whose first field has
the value VALUE and remove that element as well as all "lesser"
elements from the retrieved data if necessary. Look at
forge--pull-repository for an example. This is only useful if
you "cache" the response locally and want to avoid fetching data
again that you already have.
Other arguments behave as for ghub-graphql and ghub-request,
more or less.
Using ghub--graphql-vacuum, the following resource specific
functions are implemented. These functions are not part of the public
API yet and are very much subject to change.
-- Function: ghub-fetch-repository owner name callback &optional until
&key username auth host forge
This function asynchronously fetches forge data about the specified
repository. Once all data has been collected, CALLBACK is called
with the data as the only argument.
-- Function: ghub-fetch-issue owner name callback &optional until &key
username auth host forge
This function asynchronously fetches forge data about the specified
issue. Once all data has been collected, CALLBACK is called with
the data as the only argument.
-- Function: ghub-fetch-pullreq owner name callback &optional until
&key username auth host forge
This function asynchronously fetches forge data about the specified
pull-request. Once all data has been collected, CALLBACK is
called with the data as the only argument.
Note that in order to avoid duplication all of these functions base
their initial query on the query stored in ghub-fetch-repository. The
latter two pass that query through ghub--graphql-prepare-query, which
then used ghub--graphql-narrow-query to remove parts the caller is not
interested in. These two functions are also used internally, when
unpaginating, but as demonstrated here they can be useful even before
making an initial request.

File: ghub.info, Node: Support for Other Forges, Prev: GraphQL Support, Up: Top
7 Support for Other Forges
**************************
* Menu:
* Forge Functions and Variables::
* Forge Limitations and Notes::

File: ghub.info, Node: Forge Functions and Variables, Next: Forge Limitations and Notes, Up: Support for Other Forges
7.1 Forge Functions and Variables
=================================
Originally Ghub supported only Github but now it also supports Gitlab,
Gitea, Gogs and Bitbucket. The function ghub-request and all the
ghub-METHOD convenience wrappers default to acting on a Github forge
but can be told to act on another forge using their FORGE argument.
The FORGE argument only specifies what kind of forge to act on, not
which instance. The HOST argument can be used to select the instance.
For some forges a default instance is defined:
• Forge github defaults to host api.github.com.
• Forge gitlab defaults to host gitlab.com/api/v4.
• Forge bitbucket defaults to host api.bitbucket.org/2.0.
• No canonical host exists for the gitea and gogs forges and
localhost:3000/api/v1 is used as the default host in both cases.
Together the FORGE and HOST arguments specify the forge type and
instance. In addition to that, it is also necessary to specify on whose
behalf the request is being made, which can be done using the USERNAME
and AUTH arguments.
Having to specify these arguments for every request is inconvenient.
Additional variables and convenience functions can be used to make that
unnecessary in most cases.
These variables can be set globally and/or for a specific repository
as explained in *note Configuration Variables:: with a focus on Github
instances. To summarize:
• For <https://github.com> the Git variable github.user specifies
the user.
• For another github instance the Git variable github.HOST.user
specifies the user. The HOST in that variable name is the same as
the value of the HOST argument of the called function.
• Instead of specifying the HOST in every function call, the Git
variable github.host can be used. This should only be set
locally.
For gitlab and bitbucket forges similar variables are available:
gitlab.user specifies the <https://gitlab.com> user.
gitlab.HOST.user specifies the user for the HOST gitlab
instance.
gitlab.host specifies the gitlab host, unless the HOST argument
is non-nil
bitbucket.user specifies the <https://bitbucket.org> user.
bitbucket.HOST.user specifies the user for the HOST bitbucket
instance.
bitbucket.host specifies the bitbucket host, unless the HOST
argument is non-nil.
For gitea and gogs forges some similar variables are available,
however for some of the ghub.* variables no equivalent variable exist
for these two forges:
gitea.user is *not* used because no canonical gitea instance
exists.
gitea.HOST.user specifies the user for the HOST gitea instance.
gitea.host specifies the gitea host, unless the HOST argument
is non-nil
gogs.user is *not* used because no canonical gitea instance
exists.
gogs.HOST.user specifies the user for the HOST gogs instance.
gogs.host specifies the gogs host, unless the HOST argument is
non-nil
ghub-request and ghub-METHOD can be used to make a request for
any of the supported forge types, but except when making a request for a
github instance, then that requires the use of the FORGE argument.
To avoid that, functions named FORGE-request and FORGE-METHOD are
also available. The following forms are equivalent, for example:
(ghub-get ... :auth 'PACKAGE :forge 'gitlab)
(glab-get ... :auth 'PACKAGE)
These forms would remain equivalent even if you did not specify a
value for the AUTH arguments — but you should not do that if you plan to
share your code with others (see *note Using Ghub in a Package::). If
you do omit AUTH, then the request is made on behalf of the ghub
package, *regardless* of the symbol prefix of the function you use to do
so.
All FORGE-request and FORGE-METHOD functions, including but not
limited to ghub-METHOD, are very simple wrappers around
ghub-request. They take fewer arguments than ghub-request and
instead pass constant values for the arguments METHOD and/or FORGE.

File: ghub.info, Node: Forge Limitations and Notes, Prev: Forge Functions and Variables, Up: Support for Other Forges
7.2 Forge Limitations and Notes
===============================
• The token creation wizard is only available for github forges,
because all other forges do not support using the API to create an
API token. As a consequence, if the user makes a request and the
necessary token cannot be found, then that results in an error.
Tokens can be created at:
• Gitlab: <https://gitlab.com/profile/personal_access_tokens>
• Bitbucket:
<https://bitbucket.org/account/user/tarsius/app-passwords>
• Gitea: <https://localhost:3000/user/settings/applications>
• Gogs: <https://localhost:3000/user/settings/applications>
Also see *note Manually Creating and Storing a Token:: and *note
How Ghub uses Auth-Source::.
• As mentioned in the previous node, the variables gitea.host and
gogs.host are not taken into account.
• Gitea and Gogs do not support limiting a token to certain scopes.
• The Bitbucket API is fairly broken. Some resources only work if a
slash is appended while others only work if no slash is appended.
I am unable to access any private repositories and some resources
dont work for me at all. Also the API is only RESTish; pagination
information is part of the response body instead of the header.
Due to such issues it is possible that I will eventually have to
remove support for Bitbucket altogether.
• The Gitlab API documentation is not always accurate, though I dont
have an example at hand. It also isnt structured well, making it
occationally difficult to find the information one is looking for.
• Where one would use user/repo when accessing another forge, one
has to use user%2Frepo when accessing Gitlab, e.g.:
(glab-get "/projects/python-mode-devs%2Fpython-mode")

Tag Table:
Node: Top763
Node: Introduction3279
Node: Getting Started6321
Node: Setting the Username9481
Node: Interactively Creating and Storing a Token10906
Node: Manually Creating and Storing a Token16546
Node: How Ghub uses Auth-Source17769
Node: Using Ghub in Personal Scripts19702
Node: Using Ghub in a Package21158
Node: API23776
Node: Making Requests24573
Node: Authentication38612
Node: Configuration Variables40457
Node: GraphQL Support44177
Node: Support for Other Forges50842
Node: Forge Functions and Variables51059
Node: Forge Limitations and Notes55578

End Tag Table

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