Look into d3.js. There are several examples of how you can take an array in JavaScript and turn it into a graph like that.
Here is one (more advance) example: http://mbostock.github.com/d3/ex/population.html
And here is another example that is closer to what you want: http://mbostock.github.com/d3/tutorial/bar-2.html
EDIT
The actual code that Git Hub uses to create the graphs looks something like this:
GitHub.ParticipationGraph = (function(){
function b(target){
this.el = target;
this.onSuccess = $.proxy(this.onSuccess, this);
this.canvas = this.el.getContext("2d");
this.refresh();
}
b.prototype.barWidth = 7;
b.prototype.barMaxHeight = 20;
b.prototype.getUrl = function(){
return $(this.el).data("source");
};
b.prototype.setData = function(data){
this.data = data;
if (data == null || data.all == null || data.owner == null) {
this.data = null;
}
this.scale = this.getScale(this.data);
};
b.prototype.getScale = function(data){
var mx, i;
if (data == null) return;
mx = data.all[0];
for(i = 0; i < data.all.length; i++) {
if (data.all[i] > mx) {
mx = data.all[i];
}
}
return mx >= this.barMaxHeight ? (this.barMaxHeight-.1)/mx : 1;
};
b.prototype.refresh = function(){
$.ajax({
url: this.getUrl(),
dataType: "json",
success: this.onSuccess
});
};
b.prototype.onSuccess = function(data){
this.setData(data);
this.draw();
};
b.prototype.draw = function(){
if (this.data == null) return;
this.drawCommits(this.data.all, "#cacaca");
this.drawCommits(this.data.owner, "#336699");
};
b.prototype.drawCommits = function(data, color){
var i, width, height, x, y;
for (i = 0; i < data.length; i++) {
width = this.barWidth;
height = data[i] * this.scale;
x = i * (this.barWidth + 1);
y = this.barMaxHeight - height;
this.canvas.fillStyle = color;
this.canvas.fillRect(x, y, width, height);
}
};
return b;
})();
Basically, they are calling the data-source tag located on the canvas, which returns some JSON that represents the amount of work/participation/watches (or whatever metric they are calculating) and then they go through each returned value and call this.canvas.fillRect with the predefined width ((Screensize.width/52) - (paddingLeft + paddingRight)) and the height from the JSON returned