This is a fork of LibGit2Sharp.NativeBinaries, modified to support SSH on .NET Standard
Preparation: In powershell, run the following:
.\UpdateLibgit2ToSha.ps1 master
rm -Recurse .\nuget.package\runtimes\*
Build Windows binaries: In powershell, run the following:
.\build.libgit2.ps1 15
(change 15 to your version of Visual Studio. Version 15 corresponds to Visual Studio 2017)
Build Linux binaries (requires Docker for Windows): In git bash, run the following:
./dockerbuild-all.sh
Build the Nuget package (change the 1.0.251 to the desired version number)
.\buildpackage.ps1 1.0.251
Note that on alpine linux the native binaries have a dependency on libcurl
The original readme for this package is included below:
Libgit2Sharp is a managed wrapper around libgit2, and as such requires compilation of libgit2 for your platform.
LibGit2Sharp makes this easy by distributing, and leveraging as a dependency, the LibGit2Sharp.NativeBinaries NuGet package.
This package contains the compiled versions of the libgit2 native library for the following platforms:
- Windows (x86/amd64)
- Mac OS X (x86/amd64)
- Linux (amd64)
Note: Due to the large number of distributions, the Linux support is currently experimental. Would you encounter any issue with it, please open an issue.
If you need to build your own native binaries for some reason, you can do so easily with the scripts in this repository:
-
Clone the
LibGit2Sharp.NativeBinaries
repository. Do so recursively to ensure that thelibgit2
submodule is initialized automatically:git clone --recursive https://github.com/libgit2/libgit2sharp.nativebinaries
(If you have already cloned this repository (which seems quite likely since you are reading this file!) then you can simply run
git submodule init
followed bygit submodule update
.) -
Update the included libgit2 sources and configuration files to the version of libgit2 you want to build. For example, to build commit
1a2b3c4
:UpdateLibgit2ToSha.ps1 1a2b3c4
Or you can specify references. To build the remote's
master
branch:UpdateLibgit2ToSha.ps1 master
-
Build the libgit2 binaries. For Windows, this requires a Visual Studio installation, and will compile both x86 and amd64 variants. (See "Notes on Visual Studio", below). Run the build PowerShell script, specifying the version number of Visual Studio as the first argument. For example, to build with Visual Studio 2013 (aka "Visual Studio 12.0"):
build.libgit2.ps1 12
For Linux, this will build only the architecture that you're running (x86 or amd64). For Mac OS X, this will build a fat library that includes both x86 and amd64. Run the shell script:
build.libgit2.sh
-
Create the NuGet package from the built binaries. You will need to specify the version number of the resultant NuGet package that you want to generate. Note that you may wish to provide a suffix to disambiguate your custom package from the official, published NuGet packages. For example, if you are building a product called
fooproduct
then that may be a helpful suffix.To build a NuGet package at version
1.2.3-foo
:buildpackage.ps1 1.2.3-foo
And the result will be a NuGet package in the current directory:
LibGit2Sharp.NativeBinaries.1.2.3-foo.nupkg
Note that the
-foo
suffix technically makes this a "prerelease" package, according to NuGet, which may be further help in avoiding any mixups with the official packages, but may also require you to opt-in to prerelease packages in your NuGet package manager.
If you want to redistribute a LibGit2Sharp that uses a custom libgit2, you may want to change the name of the libgit2 shared library file to disambiguate it from other installations. This may be useful if you are running as a plugin inside a larger process and wish to avoid conflicting with other plugins who may wish to use LibGit2Sharp and want to ensure that your version of libgit2 is loaded into memory and available to you.
For example, if your plugin names if fooplugin
, you may wish to
distribute a DLL named git2-fooplugin.dll
. You can specify the
custom DLL name as the second argument to the update and build scripts:
UpdateLibgit2ToSha.ps1 1a2b3c4 git2-fooplugin
build.libgit2.sh 14 git2-fooplugin
Then build the NuGet package as described above, making sure to provide a helpful suffix to ensure that your NuGet package will not be confused with the official packages.
Visual Studio is required to build the native binaries, however you do not need to install a paid version of Visual Studio. libgit2 can be compiled using Visual Studio Community, which is free for building open source applications.
You need to specify the actual version number (not the marketing name) of Visual Studio. (For example, "Visual Studio 2013" is the name of the product, but its actual version number is "12.0".) A handy guide:
Marketing Name | Version Number |
---|---|
Visual Studio 2010 | 10 |
Visual Studio 2012 | 11 |
Visual Studio 2013 | 12 |
Visual Studio 2015 | 14 |
Visual Studio 2017 | 15 |