degit makes copies of git repositories. When you run degit some-user/some-repo, it will find the latest commit on https://github.com/some-user/some-repo and download the associated tar file to the platform-appropriate cache directory if it doesn't already exist locally. On Linux/BSD this follows XDG_CACHE_HOME when set and otherwise uses ~/.cache/degit; on macOS it uses ~/Library/Caches/degit; on Windows it uses %LOCALAPPDATA%\degit. (This is much quicker than using git clone, because you're not downloading the entire git history.)
degit resolves refs through an internal git backend, downloads tar snapshots by default, and falls back to SSH cloning when tarball fetches or extraction fail. Public HTTPS sources do not need a local git binary on your PATH, but SSH/private repositories still do.
engines in package.json)packageManager in package.json)End users can still install the published package with npm (npm install -g degit). For a dev clone of this repo, use Bun so the lockfile and bunfig.toml apply; minimumReleaseAge is set to 14 days so installs skip very fresh publishes.
git clone https://github.com/Rich-Harris/degit.git
cd degit
bun install
bun run build
See docs/CONTRIBUTING.md for how to contribute. docs/SECURITY.md explains how to report vulnerabilities. AGENTS.md summarizes setup and commands for tooling and coding agents. When verifying production CLI bugs, reproduce with the published package (for example npx degit@latest ...) rather than running the raw repository source directly. When you change development workflow, CI, or contributor-facing instructions, update README.md, docs/CONTRIBUTING.md, and AGENTS.md together so they stay consistent.
bun run test runs the unit tests in test/unit/**/*.test.ts and the public integration tests in test/integration/public.test.ts, excluding test/integration/private.test.ts. Use bun run test:integration for the integration suite.
bun run perf:ci runs the fixture-backed performance gate that CI uses to catch clone regressions.
A small proof-of-concept docs-sync workflow also runs on PRs that change src/**/*.ts or assets/help.md, using OpenRouter through Claude Code Action. It expects OPENROUTER_API_KEY and OPENROUTER_ANTHROPIC_BASE_URL repository secrets.
npm install -g degit
The simplest use of degit is to download the default branch of a repo from GitHub to the current working directory:
degit user/repo
# these commands are equivalent
degit github:user/repo
degit git@github.com:user/repo
degit https://github.com/user/repo
Or you can download from GitLab and BitBucket:
# download from GitLab
degit gitlab:user/repo
degit git@gitlab.com:user/repo
degit https://gitlab.com/user/repo
# download from BitBucket
degit bitbucket:user/repo
degit git@bitbucket.org:user/repo
degit https://bitbucket.org/user/repo
# download from Sourcehut
degit git.sr.ht/user/repo
degit git@git.sr.ht:user/repo
degit https://git.sr.ht/user/repo
When you omit a ref, degit uses the repository's default branch.
degit user/repo#dev # branch
degit user/repo#v1.2.3 # release tag
degit user/repo#1234abcd # commit hash
If the second argument is omitted, the repo will be cloned to the current directory.
degit user/repo my-new-project
To clone a specific subdirectory instead of the entire repo, just add it to the argument:
degit user/repo/subdirectory
If you have an https_proxy environment variable, Degit will use it.
Private repositories are handled automatically. degit uses the tarball path by default for HTTPS sources and falls back to SSH cloning when it cannot fetch or extract a snapshot.
SSH/private repositories still require git on your PATH.
If you still pass --mode=git, degit keeps working and prints a notice that the flag is no longer needed. --mode=tar is the default path.
degit --help
Pull requests are very welcome!
git clone --depth 1?A few salient differences:
git clone, you get a .git folder that pertains to the project template, rather than your project. You can easily forget to re-init the repository, and end up confusing yourself.tar.gz file for a specific commit, you don't need to fetch it again).degit user/repo instead of git clone --depth 1 ssh://git@github.com/user/repo)You can also use degit inside a Node script:
import degit from 'degit';
const emitter = degit('user/repo', {
cache: true,
force: true,
verbose: true,
});
emitter.on('info', (info) => {
console.log(info.message);
});
emitter.clone('path/to/dest').then(() => {
console.log('done');
});
You can manipulate repositories after they have been cloned with actions, specified in a degit.json file that lives at the top level of the working directory. Currently, there are two actions — clone and remove. Additional actions may be added in future.
// degit.json
[
{
"action": "clone",
"src": "user/another-repo"
}
]
This will clone user/another-repo, preserving the contents of the existing working directory. This allows you to, say, add a new README.md or starter file to a repo that you do not control. The cloned repo can contain its own degit.json actions.
// degit.json
[
{
"action": "remove",
"files": ["LICENSE"]
}
]
Remove a file at the specified path.
$ claude mcp add degit \
-- python -m otcore.mcp_server <graph>