gh now shows the correct number of records in its progress bar when paginating (#147).
New .params
argument in gh()
to make it easier to pass parameters to it programmatically (#140).
gh_gql()
now passes all arguments to gh()
(#124).
gh now handles responses from pagination better, and tries to properly merge them (#136, @rundel).
gh can retrieve a PAT from the Git credential store, where the lookup is based on the targeted API URL. This now uses the gitcreds package. The environment variables consulted for URL-specific GitHub PATs have changed.
GITHUB_PAT_GITHUB_COM
now, instead of GITHUB_PAT_API_GITHUB_COM
GITHUB_PAT_GITHUB_ACME_COM
now, instead of GITHUB_PAT_GITHUB_ACME_COM_API_V3
See the documentation of the gitcreds package for details.
The keyring package is no longer used, in favor of the Git credential store.
The documentation for the GitHub REST API has moved to https://docs.github.com/rest and endpoints are now documented using the URI template style of RFC 6570:
GET /repos/:owner/:repo/issues
GET /repos/{owner}/{repo}/issues
gh accepts and prioritizes the new style. However, it still does parameter substitution for the old style.
Fixed an error that occurred when calling gh()
with .progress = FALSE
(@gadenbuie, #115).
gh()
accepts named NA
parameters that are destined for the request body (#139).
Raw responses from GitHub are now returned as raw vector.
Responses may be written to disk by providing a path in the .destfile
argument.
gh now sets .Last.error
to the error object after an uncaught error, and .Last.error.trace
to the stack trace of the error.
gh()
now silently drops named NULL
parameters, and throws an error for named NA
parameters (#21, #84).
gh()
now returns better values for empty responses, typically empty lists or dictionaries (#66).
gh()
now has an .accept
argument to make it easier to set the Accept
HTTP header (#91).
New gh_gql()
function to make it easier to work with the GitHub GraphQL API.
gh now supports separate personal access tokens for GitHub Enterprise sites. See ?gh_token
for details.
gh now supports storing your GitHub personal access tokens (PAT) in the system keyring, via the keyring package. See ?gh_token
for details.
gh()
can now POST raw data, which allows adding assets to releases (#56).
First public release.