credit
is a fast tool for measuring Github contributions.
Use credit
to find out:
- Who the most productive developers are in a given country.
- Who has the most Pull Requests merged to a project.
- Who engages in the most discussion in Issues and PRs.
- How long it takes maintainers to respond to and solve Issues.
- How long it takes to get PRs merged.
- If a library would be a safe long-term (i.e. maintained) dependency.
Table of Contents
With an AUR-compatible package manager like
aura
:
sudo aura -A credit-bin
cargo install credit
To use credit
, you'll need a Github Personal Access
Token with public_repo
permissions. See
here for an additional example.
💡 Note:
credit
calls the GraphQL-based Github v4 API, which has a much higher rate limit than the REST-based v3 API. This allowscredit
to run quickly and work on projects with a long development history.You can use
credit limit
to check your current API query allowance.
By default, credit
outputs text to stdout that can be piped into a .md
file
and displayed as you wish:
> credit repo --token=<token> rust-lang/rustfmt
# Project Report for rustfmt
## Issues
2462 issues found, 2189 of which are now closed (88.9%).
- 1899 (77.1%) of these received a response.
- 1553 (63.1%) have an official response from a repo Owner or organization Member.
Response Times (any):
- Median: 10 hours
- Average: 34 days
Response Times (official):
- Median: 13 hours
- Average: 39 days
## Pull Requests
1821 Pull Requests found, 1650 of which are now merged (90.6%).
168 have been closed without merging (9.2%).
- 1505 (82.6%) of these received a response.
- 1379 (75.7%) have an official response from a repo Owner or organization Member.
Response Times (any):
- Median: 8 hours
- Average: 2 days
Response Times (official):
- Median: 12 hours
- Average: 2 days
Time-to-Merge:
- Median: 17 hours
- Average: 3 days
## Contributors
Top 10 Commentors (Issues and PRs):
1. nrc: 2772
2. topecongiro: 1526
3. marcusklaas: 718
4. calebcartwright: 461
5. scampi: 331
6. kamalmarhubi: 120
7. rchaser53: 103
8. cassiersg: 100
9. gnzlbg: 79
10. otavio: 63
Top 10 Code Contributors (by merged PRs):
1. topecongiro: 513
2. marcusklaas: 125
3. calebcartwright: 74
4. nrc: 72
5. scampi: 64
6. rchaser53: 57
7. davidalber: 34
8. kamalmarhubi: 31
9. ayazhafiz: 28
10. sinkuu: 24
💡 Tip: You can pass multiple repos at once to the
repo
command. The results will be aggregated, which can give a good view of contributions across an organization.
You can also output the raw results as --json
, which could then be piped to
tools like jq
or manipulated as you wish:
> credit repo --token=<token> rust-lang/rustfmt --json
By default, credit
queries for Issues and Pull Requests at the same time,
which is fast and works well for most projects. For very large projects,
however, this can make the Github API unhappy.
If you notice credit
failing on projects ones with many thousands of Issues
and Pull Requests, consider the --serial
flag. This will pull Issues first,
and then Pull Requests. --serial
allows credit
to even work on the Rust
compiler itself!
> credit repo --token=<token> rust-lang/rust --serial
credit users
can be used to determine a rough list of the most productive Open
Source programmers in a given country. This reports a similar number to the one
seen on a "Contribution Calendar", although contributions to private
repositories have been subtracted.
> credit users --token=<token> --location=Switzerland
💡 Note: Due to the nature of the query made to Github, the data fetching will take several minutes to complete.
# Top 100 Open Source Contributors in Switzerland
There are currently 18518 Github users in Switzerland.
1. oleg-nenashev (7331 contributions)
2. cclauss (6378 contributions)
3. dpryan79 (5604 contributions)
4. peterpeterparker (4869 contributions)
5. ReneNyffenegger (4722 contributions)
6. eregon (4415 contributions)
7. jeremytammik (3864 contributions)
8. liufengyun (3787 contributions)
9. swissspidy (3775 contributions)
10. pvizeli (3706 contributions)
... and so on
As with repo
, the --json
flag can be used to output JSON data instead.
A configuration file can be specified at your XDG_CONFIG_HOME
, which by
default is $HOME/.config/credit.toml
.
# Your Github Access Token. With this set, you need not pass `--token` on the command line.
token = "abc123"
The numbers given by credit
are not perfect measures of developer productivity
nor maintainer responsiveness. Please use its results in good faith.
Response Times: Particularly in the Open Source world, volunteer developers are under no obligation to respond in a time frame that is most convenient for us the users.
Merged PRs: Without human eyes to judge a code contribution, its importance
can be difficult to measure. Some PRs are long, but do little. Some PRs are only
a single commit, but save the company. credit
takes the stance that, over
time, with a large enough sample size, general trends of "who's doing the work"
will emerge. Expect weird results for one-man projects or projects that
otherwise have a long history of pushing directly to master
without using PRs.
User Rankings: What is a "Top Developer" anyway? Since it is possible to
artificially inflates one's contribution numbers, credit
uses the following
assumption to filter out false positives:
Users with both high contribution counts and somewhat high follower counts must be working on something of value.
So, at first only the top 1,000 most followed developers are considered. Afterward, other metrics are applied to arrive at a fair list of the Top 100.
Yes! Pass --commits
to the repo
command. Keep in mind that this requires
more data from Github, and so will take longer to complete.
Given the presence of outliers in a data set, it can sometimes be more accurate to consider the Median and not the Mean.
In the case of maintainer response times, consider a developer who usually responds to all new Issues within 10 minutes. Then he goes on vacation, and misses a few until his return 2 weeks later. His Average would be skewed in this case, but the Median would remain accurate.
credit
doesn't attempt to remove outliers, but might in the future.