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FAQ
- Where does ghi look for issues?
By default, ghi looks for GitHub issues by resolving the current working
directory's repository: first it looks for an upstream
remote, then it
looks at origin
.
You can override the repository ghi uses by setting the local ghi.repo
git configuration variable:
$ git config ghi.repo username/reponame
$ ghi list
# username/reponame open issues
...
- How do I specify a GitHub enterprise host?
Just run the following inside your terminal and you'll be good to go:
git config github.host address_of_your_enterprise_host
- How do I enable the pretty colored output?
Make sure your terminal is configured to display 256 colors. You can
check this by running tput colors
, which should return 256
.
In case it doesn't you need to set the environmental variable TERM
:
export TERM=xterm-256color # or screen-256color
Ideally you'll want to add this to one of your shell configuration files (e.g. ~/.bashrc
).
echo "export TERM=xterm-256color" >> ~/.bashrc
If for whatever reason you cannot set the TERM
variable globally, it
is recommended to set an alias:
alias ghi='TERM=xterm-256color ghi'
This runs ghi
with full color support, but leaves the rest of your
terminal untouched.
Ubuntu users of a version prior to 12.04, beware! Your terminal will not
support 256 colors by default. You need to get an additional library
before before setting the TERM
variable.
sudo apt-get install ncurses-term
Don't forget to reload your config file (e.g. source ~/.bashrc
) or
just reopen your terminal.
FreeBSD users will need the package devel/ncurses
.
- What about cygwin‽
less
can be problematic... you can use less -R
.
git config --global ghi.pager "less -X -F -R"
- Can I have syntax highlighting of fenced code blocks?
Yes, you can - if you are using a terminal with 256 colors!
To enable this feature you just need to install the ruby wrapper for pygments:
gem install pygments.rb
Additionally you can specify the used colorset through your gitconfig
file(s).
git config --global ghi.highlight.style colorful
Fire up an irb/pry
session with the following to see a list of available
colorsets:
require 'pygments'
Pygments.styles
- Can I use a custom $EDITOR for ghi?
You can define a custom editor by specifying ghi.editor
in your git
config (or export $GHI_EDITOR
in your environment).
git config --global ghi.editor vim