Provided by: analizo_1.25.5-1_all 

NAME
analizo-metrics-history - processes a Git repository collection metrics
USAGE
analizo metrics-history [OPTIONS] [<input>]
DESCRIPTION
Processes a Git repository collection metrics for every single revision.
analizo metrics-history will process input, a Git repository with a working copy of the source code (i.e.
not a bare git repository), checkout every relevant commit and run analizo metrics on it. The metrics for
all of the revisions will be accumulated in a file called metrics.csv inside input. If input is omitted,
the current directory (.) s assumed.
analizo metrics-history is part of the analizo suite.
RELEVANT COMMITS
analizo metrics-history considers as relevant the commits that changed at least one source code file.
Consequently, it skips all the commits where no source code file was changed, such as documentation,
translations, build system changes, etc.
Currently we support C, C++, Java and C# projects, and therefore files considered source code are the
ones terminated in .c, .h, .cpp, .cxx, .cc, .hh, .hpp, .java and .cs.
OPTIONS
--parallel N, -p N
Activates support for parallel processing, using N concurrent worker processes. Usually you will want
N to be less than or equal to the number of CPUs in your machine.
Note that analizo metrics extraction is a CPU-intensive process, so setting N as the exactly number
of CPUs you have may bring your machine to an unusable state.
--language LANGUAGE, --exclude DIRECTORY
Use programming language and directory exclusion filters. See analizo-metrics(1) for a description of
these options.
--output <file>, -o <file>
Make the output be written to file. The default value and valid values depend on the output format,
see "Output formats" below.
--format FORMAT, -f FORMAT
Specifies with output driver, and consequently the output format, to use. See "Output Formats" below
for a description of the available output drivers.
--list, -l
Instead of actually processing the history, just print out the ids of the commits that would be
processed.
--progressbar, -b
Displays a progress bar during the execution, so that you know approximately how long analizo is
going to take to finish.
Output formats
Using the --format option, you can use the following output drivers:
csv
This is the default output driver. By default, the output will be written to the standard output. If can
direct the output to a file using the --output option.
db
Stores the extracted data in a relational database.
When you use this driver, you can specify where exactly to store the data using the --output option. If
you do not specify an explicit target, analizo will write to a SQLite database in a file called
output.sqlite3 in the current directory. If you pass a filename, and analizo will store the data in a
SQLite database that will be created on that file. You can direct the output to any other database by
using --output DSN, where DSN is a DBI Data Source Name.
You can check DBI(3pm) for details. Note that if you a database other than SQLite, you must make sure
that you have the corresponding DBI driver installed.
Examples:
$ analizo metrics-history -f db -o history.db
Writes the output to a SQLite database called history.db.
$ analizo metrics-history -f db -o 'dbi:Pg:dbname=pgdb'
Writes the data to a PostgreSQL database called pgdb. This requires the DBI::Pg Perl module.
analizo was not tested with MySQL yet.
SEE ALSO
analizo-metrics(1)
COPYRIGHT AND AUTHORS
See analizo(1).
perl v5.40.0 2024-11-17 Analizo::Command::metrics_history(3pm)