commit | af1e5dea3511c7e01f9a0a31f6e254d63848bed5 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Mike Frysinger <vapier@google.com> | Mon Feb 17 14:58:37 2020 -0500 |
committer | David Pursehouse <dpursehouse@collab.net> | Tue Feb 18 06:28:12 2020 +0000 |
tree | ed30469d323af0213030345d1ce6a8f1220d29dc | |
parent | 3cceda535ddbe1dae417a45db64895da45e97520 [diff] |
resort a few module imports to follow PEP8 All the stdlib imports are supposed to come before any local imports. Change-Id: I10c0335ba2ff715fd34c9eb91bfe6560e904df08 Reviewed-on: https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/c/git-repo/+/255593 Tested-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@google.com> Reviewed-by: David Pursehouse <dpursehouse@collab.net>
Repo is a tool built on top of Git. Repo helps manage many Git repositories, does the uploads to revision control systems, and automates parts of the development workflow. Repo is not meant to replace Git, only to make it easier to work with Git. The repo command is an executable Python script that you can put anywhere in your path.
Many distros include repo, so you might be able to install from there.
# Debian/Ubuntu. $ sudo apt-get install repo # Gentoo. $ sudo emerge dev-vcs/repo
You can install it manually as well as it's a single script.
$ mkdir -p ~/.bin $ PATH="${HOME}/.bin:${PATH}" $ curl https://storage.googleapis.com/git-repo-downloads/repo > ~/.bin/repo $ chmod a+rx ~/.bin/repo