# Bitbucket Server Command Line Tools [ ![Build Status](https://codeship.com/projects/813f7dc0-2924-0133-5117-3e546cad586a/status?branch=master)](https://codeship.com/projects/97914) ## Installing this tool This command line helper for Bitbucket Server is written in Ruby and is deployed as a [Ruby Gem](https://rubygems.org/gems/atlassian-stash/). Installation is easy, simply run the following command ``` #!text $> gem install atlassian-stash ``` (Protip: you might need to `sudo`) Once the gem is installed, the command `stash` will be in your `$PATH` ## Configuration and usage Run `stash configure`. This will prompt for details about your Bitbucket Server instance. If no password is provided, then you will be prompted for a password when executing commands to Bitbucket Server. The global configuration file lives at `$HOME/.stashconfig.yml` and any options in a similarly named `.stashconfig.yml` file in the root of a git repository will take precedence. ### Passwords There are currently two ways to store your password in the configuration file. You may store it as plain text with the key `password`, for example: ``` password: s3cre7 ``` Or you may store a command string with the `passwordeval` key which allows you to use any encrypted method you like in order to store your password. For example, if using gpg: ``` passwordeval: gpg --no-tty --quiet --decrypt ~/.secret.gpg ``` The `stash configure` utility will not prompt you for this. If you wish to use `passwordeval`, omit a password during the configuration and add it to `~/.stashconfig.yml` afterwards. ### Creating a pull request Use the `pull-request` command to create a pull request in Bitbucket Server. For example: ``` #!text $> stash pull-request topicBranch master @michael Create a pull request from branch 'topicBranch' into 'master' with 'michael' added as a reviewer ``` See the usage for command details ``` #!text $> stash help pull-request ``` ### Opening the Bitbucket Server web UI Use the `browse` command to open the Bitbucket Server UI for your repository in the browser. ``` #!text $> stash browse -b develop Open the browser at the Bitbucket Server repository page for the branch 'develop' ``` For more options, see the help ``` #!text stash help browse ``` ## Configuration options Running `stash configure` will prepopulate `~/.stashconfig.yml` with a variety of options. Complete options are: ``` #!yaml username: seb # username to connect to Bitbucket Server server. password: s3cr3t # password for user. If ommitted, you will be prompted at the terminal when making a request to Bitbucket Server stash_url: https://bitbucket.server.com # fully qualified Bitbucket Server url remote: upstream # Pull requests will be created in the Bitbucket Server repository specified by this remote open: true # opens newly created pull requests in the browser ssl_no_verify: true # do not check ssl certificates for the configured Bitbucket Server server ``` ## Troubleshooting Q: I installed the gem, but the `stash` command doesn't work. A: Do you have another command called `stash` or do you have an alias? Have a look where the command maps to ``` #!text $> which -a stash ``` Then check the value of your $PATH ## I want to contribute Thanks! Please [fork this project](https://bitbucket.org/atlassian/stash-command-line-tools/fork) and create a pull request to submit changes back to the original project. ### Build instructions Building this gem is easy. To get started, run the following commands: ``` #!text $> gem install bundler $> bundle install ``` Now start hacking, and run the stash command by invoking `./bin/stash command` ### Testing Easy: ``` $> rake test ``` ### Releasing #### Bumping versions Use `rake version`: ``` version -- displays the current version version:bump:major -- bump the major version by 1 version:bump:minor -- bump the a minor version by 1 version:bump:patch -- bump the patch version by 1 version:write -- writes out an explicit version ``` #### Releasing ``` $> rake release ```