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hub is a command line tool that wraps git in order to extend it with extra features and commands that make working with GitHub easier.

For an official, potentially more user-friendly command-line interface to GitHub, see cli.github.com and this comparison.

This repository and its issue tracker is not for reporting problems with GitHub.com web interface. If you have a problem with GitHub itself, please contact Support.

Usage

$ hub clone rtomayko/tilt
#=> git clone https://github.com/rtomayko/tilt.git

# or, if you prefer the SSH protocol:
$ git config --global hub.protocol ssh
$ hub clone rtomayko/tilt
#=> git clone git@github.com:rtomayko/tilt.git

See usage examples or the full reference documentation to see all available commands and flags.

hub can also be used to make shell scripts that directly interact with the GitHub API.

hub can be safely aliased as git, so you can type $ git <command> in the shell and have it expanded with hub features.

Installation

The hub executable has no dependencies, but since it was designed to wrap git, it's recommended to have at least git 1.7.3 or newer.

platformmanagercommand to run
macOS, LinuxHomebrewbrew install hub
macOS, LinuxNixnix-env -i hub
WindowsScoopscoop install hub
WindowsChocolateychoco install hub
Fedora LinuxDNFsudo dnf install hub
Arch Linuxpacmansudo pacman -S hub
FreeBSDpkg(8)pkg install hub
Debian, Ubuntuapt(8)sudo apt install hub
UbuntuSnapWe do not recommend installing the snap anymore.
openSUSEZyppersudo zypper install hub
Void Linuxxbpssudo xbps-install -S hub
GentooPortagesudo emerge dev-vcs/hub
anycondaconda install -c conda-forge hub

Packages other than Homebrew are community-maintained (thank you!) and they are not guaranteed to match the latest hub release. Check hub version after installing a community package.

Standalone

hub can be easily installed as an executable. Download the latest binary for your system and put it anywhere in your executable path.

GitHub Actions

hub is ready to be used in your GitHub Actions workflows:

steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v2

- name: List open pull requests
  run: hub pr list
  env:
    GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}

Note that the default secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN will only work for API operations scoped to the repository that runs this workflow. If you need to interact with other repositories, generate a Personal Access Token with at least the repo scope and add it to your repository secrets.

Source

Prerequisites for building from source are:

Clone this repository and run make install:

git clone \
  --config transfer.fsckobjects=false \
  --config receive.fsckobjects=false \
  --config fetch.fsckobjects=false \
  https://github.com/github/hub.git

cd hub
make install prefix=/usr/local

Aliasing

Some hub features feel best when it's aliased as git. This is not dangerous; your normal git commands will all work. hub merely adds some sugar.

hub alias displays instructions for the current shell. With the -s flag, it outputs a script suitable for eval.

You should place this command in your .bash_profile or other startup script:

eval "$(hub alias -s)"

PowerShell

If you're using PowerShell, you can set an alias for hub by placing the following in your PowerShell profile (usually ~/Documents/WindowsPowerShell/Microsoft.PowerShell_profile.ps1):

Set-Alias git hub

A simple way to do this is to run the following from the PowerShell prompt:

Add-Content $PROFILE "`nSet-Alias git hub"

Note: You'll need to restart your PowerShell console in order for the changes to be picked up.

If your PowerShell profile doesn't exist, you can create it by running the following:

New-Item -Type file -Force $PROFILE

Shell tab-completion

hub repository contains tab-completion scripts for bash, zsh and fish. These scripts complement existing completion scripts that ship with git.

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