gh-api - Make an authenticated GitHub API request
gh api <endpoint> [flags]
Makes an authenticated HTTP request to the GitHub API and prints the response.
The endpoint argument should either be a path of a GitHub API v3 endpoint, or "graphql" to access the GitHub API v4.
Placeholder values "{owner}", "{repo}", and "{branch}" in the endpoint argument will get replaced with values from the repository of the current directory or the repository specified in the GH_REPO environment variable. Note that in some shells, for example PowerShell, you may need to enclose any value that contains "{...}" in quotes to prevent the shell from applying special meaning to curly braces.
The default HTTP request method is "GET" normally and "POST" if any parameters were added. Override the method with --method
.
Pass one or more -f/--raw-field
values in "key=value" format to add static string parameters to the request payload. To add non-string or placeholder-determined values, see --field
below. Note that adding request parameters will automatically switch the request method to POST. To send the parameters as a GET query string instead, use --method GET
.
The -F/--field
flag has magic type conversion based on the format of the value:
literal values "true", "false", "null", and integer numbers get converted to appropriate JSON types;
placeholder values "{owner}", "{repo}", and "{branch}" get populated with values from the repository of the current directory;
if the value starts with "@", the rest of the value is interpreted as a filename to read the value from. Pass "-" to read from standard input.
For GraphQL requests, all fields other than "query" and "operationName" are interpreted as GraphQL variables.
To pass nested parameters in the request payload, use "key[subkey]=value" syntax when declaring fields. To pass nested values as arrays, declare multiple fields with the syntax "key[]=value1", "key[]=value2". To pass an empty array, use "key[]" without a value.
To pass pre-constructed JSON or payloads in other formats, a request body may be read from file specified by --input
. Use "-" to read from standard input. When passing the request body this way, any parameters specified via field flags are added to the query string of the endpoint URL.
In --paginate
mode, all pages of results will sequentially be requested until there are no more pages of results. For GraphQL requests, this requires that the original query accepts an $endCursor: String
variable and that it fetches the pageInfo{ hasNextPage, endCursor }
set of fields from a collection.
--cache
<duration>
Cache the response, e.g. "3600s", "60m", "1h"
-F
, --field
<key=value>
Add a typed parameter in key=value format
-H
, --header
<key:value>
Add a HTTP request header in key:value format
--hostname
<string>
The GitHub hostname for the request (default "github.com")
-i
, --include
Include HTTP response status line and headers in the output
--input
<file>
The file to use as body for the HTTP request (use "-" to read from standard input)
-q
, --jq
<string>
Query to select values from the response using jq syntax
-X
, --method
<string>
The HTTP method for the request
--paginate
Make additional HTTP requests to fetch all pages of results
-p
, --preview
<names>
GitHub API preview names to request (without the "-preview" suffix)
-f
, --raw-field
<key=value>
Add a string parameter in key=value format
--silent
Do not print the response body
-t
, --template
<string>
Format JSON output using a Go template; see "gh help formatting"
# list releases in the current repository $ gh api repos/{owner}/{repo}/releases # post an issue comment $ gh api repos/{owner}/{repo}/issues/123/comments -f body='Hi from CLI' # post nested parameter read from a file $ gh api gists -F 'files[myfile.txt][content]=@myfile.txt' # add parameters to a GET request $ gh api -X GET search/issues -f q='repo:cli/cli is:open remote' # set a custom HTTP header $ gh api -H 'Accept: application/vnd.github.v3.raw+json' ... # opt into GitHub API previews $ gh api --preview baptiste,nebula ... # print only specific fields from the response $ gh api repos/{owner}/{repo}/issues --jq '.[].title' # use a template for the output $ gh api repos/{owner}/{repo}/issues --template \ '{{range .}}{{.title}} ({{.labels | pluck "name" | join ", " | color "yellow"}}){{"\n"}}{{end}}' # list releases with GraphQL $ gh api graphql -F owner='{owner}' -F name='{repo}' -f query=' query($name: String!, $owner: String!) { repository(owner: $owner, name: $name) { releases(last: 3) { nodes { tagName } } } } # list all repositories for a user $ gh api graphql --paginate -f query=' query($endCursor: String) { viewer { repositories(first: 100, after: $endCursor) { nodes { nameWithOwner } pageInfo { hasNextPage endCursor } } } }
gh(1)