870

In a GitHub repository you can see “language statistics”, which displays the percentage of the project that’s written in a language. It doesn’t, however, display how many lines of code the project consists of. Often, I want to quickly get an impression of the scale and complexity of a project, and the count of lines of code can give a good first impression. 500 lines of code implies a relatively simple project, 100,000 lines of code implies a very large/complicated project.

So, is it possible to get the lines of code written in the various languages from a GitHub repository, preferably without cloning it?


The question “Count number of lines in a git repository” asks how to count the lines of code in a local Git repository, but:

  1. You have to clone the project, which could be massive. Cloning a project like Wine, for example, takes ages.
  2. You would count lines in files that wouldn’t necessarily be code, like i13n files.
  3. If you count just (for example) Ruby files, you’d potentially miss massive amount of code in other languages, like JavaScript. You’d have to know beforehand which languages the project uses. You’d also have to repeat the count for every language the project uses.

All in all, this is potentially far too time-intensive for “quickly checking the scale of a project”.

11
  • 4
    @Schwern: Didn't really think about that. The latest commit of the master branch, I suppose.
    – Hubro
    Nov 12, 2014 at 7:30
  • 17
    @Abizern: Is that a valid reason for closing a question? I'm trying to find that in the guidelines. My plan was to ask on SO first. If that proved futile, I'd ask Github customer support and post their information as an answer here.
    – Hubro
    Nov 12, 2014 at 7:41
  • 10
    @Abizern: See on-topic. It says you can ask questions about "software tools commonly used by programmers".
    – Hubro
    Nov 12, 2014 at 7:46
  • 1
    @Hubro 1 I've solved with git clone --depth 1. As for 2 and 3, I suspect there is software out there which can do the analysis for you, and you can do a lot of guessing based on file extensions, but I'm having a hell of a time coming up with a good search term to find said software. Maybe you need to ask another question.
    – Schwern
    Nov 12, 2014 at 7:53
  • 5
    There's an online tool at codetabs.com/count-loc/count-loc-online.html, haven't tried if it's any good.
    – Tgr
    Apr 14, 2020 at 19:48

23 Answers 23

708

You can run something like

git ls-files | xargs wc -l

Which will give you the total count!

lines of code

You can also add more instructions. Like just looking at the JavaScript files.

git ls-files | grep '\.js' | xargs wc -l
24
  • 14
    The short answer to the question (finding this number using github) is No. Your approach is the second best alternative, specially since we can filter out whatever files we need to count out.
    – Bernard
    Sep 12, 2018 at 0:47
  • 88
    If you want to filter, e.g., Python code: git ls-files | grep '\.py' | xargs wc -l. Sep 13, 2018 at 20:58
  • 4
    I was doing xargs to wc -l all files manually then use awk to sum the column, OMG this is so much easier.
    – user3905644
    Oct 1, 2018 at 3:26
  • 2
    Well, documentation is a huge part of code. Where would you draw the line really if you kick out comments. What about comments that contain code info like params, what about comments that disable ESLint for the next line — what about lines which are 80% comments after some code. See where I am going with this. Feb 12, 2019 at 20:07
  • 17
    This method does not work. xargs wc -l does not pass the entire file list to a single wc invocation - for a large repository, it will split the list of files into smaller lists (to avoid exceeding maximum command length restrictions), and the last "total" will only be the total of the last wc. If you scroll up you'll see other "total" lines. From man xargs: "-n number Set the maximum number of arguments taken from standard input for each invocation of utility...The current default value for number is 5000." So if you have more than 5000 files, the result will be incorrect. Jul 2, 2020 at 12:44
458

A shell script, cloc-git

You can use this shell script to count the number of lines in a remote Git repository with one command:

#!/usr/bin/env bash
git clone --depth 1 "$1" temp-linecount-repo &&
  printf "('temp-linecount-repo' will be deleted automatically)\n\n\n" &&
  cloc temp-linecount-repo &&
  rm -rf temp-linecount-repo

Installation

This script requires CLOC (“Count Lines of Code”) to be installed. cloc can probably be installed with your package manager – for example, brew install cloc with Homebrew. There is also a docker image published under mribeiro/cloc.

You can install the script by saving its code to a file cloc-git, running chmod +x cloc-git, and then moving the file to a folder in your $PATH such as /usr/local/bin.

Usage

The script takes one argument, which is any URL that git clone will accept. Examples are https://github.com/evalEmpire/perl5i.git (HTTPS) or [email protected]:evalEmpire/perl5i.git (SSH). You can get this URL from any GitHub project page by clicking “Clone or download”.

Example output:

$ cloc-git https://github.com/evalEmpire/perl5i.git
Cloning into 'temp-linecount-repo'...
remote: Counting objects: 200, done.
remote: Compressing objects: 100% (182/182), done.
remote: Total 200 (delta 13), reused 158 (delta 9), pack-reused 0
Receiving objects: 100% (200/200), 296.52 KiB | 110.00 KiB/s, done.
Resolving deltas: 100% (13/13), done.
Checking connectivity... done.
('temp-linecount-repo' will be deleted automatically)


     171 text files.
     166 unique files.                                          
      17 files ignored.

http://cloc.sourceforge.net v 1.62  T=1.13 s (134.1 files/s, 9764.6 lines/s)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Language                     files          blank        comment           code
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Perl                           149           2795           1425           6382
JSON                             1              0              0            270
YAML                             2              0              0            198
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SUM:                           152           2795           1425           6850
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Alternatives

Run the commands manually

If you don’t want to bother saving and installing the shell script, you can run the commands manually. An example:

$ git clone --depth 1 https://github.com/evalEmpire/perl5i.git
$ cloc perl5i
$ rm -rf perl5i

Linguist

If you want the results to match GitHub’s language percentages exactly, you can try installing Linguist instead of CLOC. According to its README, you need to gem install linguist and then run linguist. I couldn’t get it to work (issue #2223).

10
  • 16
    The original question specified without cloning the repo.
    – linuxdan
    Oct 21, 2015 at 21:34
  • 31
    @linuxdan My script doesn’t clone the whole repo; it passes --depth 1 to only download the most recent commit. For most repos, this avoids the original question’s concern about cloning taking too long. Oct 21, 2015 at 23:12
  • @RoryO'Kane can we use cloc to get the lines of code in a github repository with out cloning the repo to our machine ( through online ). the above given cloc-git aslo first clones to project before starts counting the no of lines Nov 22, 2016 at 6:23
  • @KasunSiyambalapitiya Sorry, I don’t know of any online website that runs cloc for you. In order for cloc to count lines in code, your computer has to download that code, though only temporarily. Note that even web browsers are technically downloading web pages when you visit them; they just save them to memory instead of to disk. Nov 22, 2016 at 18:45
  • 1
    Might seem obvious, but if you have the code on your local computer already, there is no need to clone again and you can just run cloc on the repo.
    – Adam Reis
    Dec 23, 2019 at 0:49
222

I created an extension for Google Chrome browser - GLOC which works for public and private repos.

Counts the number of lines of code of a project from:

  • project detail page
  • user's repositories
  • organization page
  • search results page
  • trending page
  • explore page

enter image description here enter image description here enter image description here enter image description here enter image description here enter image description here

25
  • 5
    upvoted although it doesn't seem to work for private repositories Feb 27, 2017 at 15:00
  • 5
    @MichailMichailidis Thank you for your suggestion. I'll fix it. Feb 28, 2017 at 8:13
  • 4
    @Taurus my comment was not meant as a CR - from a usability standpoint the gradient does the job (for the reason you mentioned) I meant that I am not a fan of the chosen colors but that's just my (subjective) opinion. Cheers :)
    – tech4242
    Jul 23, 2017 at 14:52
  • 4
    I guess this just count lines, not lines of code. Compared to SonarQubes counting of loc, this is factor 2-3 bigger... Feb 22, 2018 at 13:27
  • 3
    @ShihabShahriarKhan Hi man. By the end of the Sept. it will be released. You can subscrube to this issue github.com/artem-solovev/gloc/issues/104 Aug 2, 2020 at 10:08
100

If you go to the graphs/contributors page, you can see a list of all the contributors to the repo and how many lines they've added and removed.

Unless I'm missing something, subtracting the aggregate number of lines deleted from the aggregate number of lines added among all contributors should yield the total number of lines of code in the repo. (EDIT: it turns out I was missing something after all. Take a look at orbitbot's comment for details.)

UPDATE:

This data is also available in GitHub's API. So I wrote a quick script to fetch the data and do the calculation:

'use strict';

async function countGithub(repo) {
    const response = await fetch(`https://api.github.com/repos/${repo}/stats/contributors`)
    const contributors = await response.json();
    const lineCounts = contributors.map(contributor => (
        contributor.weeks.reduce((lineCount, week) => lineCount + week.a - week.d, 0)
    ));
    const lines = lineCounts.reduce((lineTotal, lineCount) => lineTotal + lineCount);
    window.alert(lines);
}

countGithub('jquery/jquery'); // or count anything you like

Just paste it in a Chrome DevTools snippet, change the repo and click run.

Disclaimer (thanks to lovasoa):

Take the results of this method with a grain of salt, because for some repos (sorich87/bootstrap-tour) it results in negative values, which might indicate there's something wrong with the data returned from GitHub's API.

UPDATE:

Looks like this method to calculate total line numbers isn't entirely reliable. Take a look at orbitbot's comment for details.

9
  • Right. But in some cases where the project is a large open-source community project, this sort of count isn't feasible.
    – franklin
    Dec 15, 2015 at 17:10
  • 1
    @franklin Definitely. However, this data is also available in GitHub's API, so you can write a script to calculate the total number of lines pretty easily. I updated my answer with a quick script that I just wrote up.
    – Lewis
    Dec 15, 2015 at 21:35
  • 3
    It would be more simple to use the code_frequecy API. Giving: fetch("https://api.github.com/repos/jquery/jquery/stats/code_frequency").then(x=>x.json()).then(x=>alert(x.reduce((total,changes)=>total+changes[1]+changes[2],0)))
    – lovasoa
    Jan 11, 2016 at 17:49
  • 1
    Hmmm... Interesting: test your code on sorich87/bootstrap-tour . The result is negative.
    – lovasoa
    Jan 11, 2016 at 20:01
  • 8
    @Lewis I think you're disregarding that lines added/removed in one commit can be the same as other commits, f.e. when merging branches etc. which still count towards the same total. Additionally, f.e. the Github contributions stats for user profiles are only counted from the default branch or gh-pages, so there might be something similar going on for the commit/line stats: help.github.com/articles/… . Also note that the user profile stats only count the previous year, but I think that the commit stats on the graph page are permanent.
    – orbitbot
    Jun 23, 2016 at 8:18
50

You can clone just the latest commit using git clone --depth 1 <url> and then perform your own analysis using Linguist, the same software Github uses. That's the only way I know you're going to get lines of code.

Another option is to use the API to list the languages the project uses. It doesn't give them in lines but in bytes. For example...

$ curl https://api.github.com/repos/evalEmpire/perl5i/languages
{
  "Perl": 274835
}

Though take that with a grain of salt, that project includes YAML and JSON which the web site acknowledges but the API does not.

Finally, you can use code search to ask which files match a given language. This example asks which files in perl5i are Perl. https://api.github.com/search/code?q=language:perl+repo:evalEmpire/perl5i. It will not give you lines, and you have to ask for the file size separately using the returned url for each file.

8
  • Cool, didn't know about that. Can you confirm that it can't be done on the Github website, though?
    – Hubro
    Nov 12, 2014 at 7:33
  • I can't confirm it, but I don't see anything in the API or on the Github web site that will give you lines. It's all bytes or percentages. What's your rationale for doing it through the API instead of cloning?
    – Schwern
    Nov 12, 2014 at 7:48
  • Ok, thanks for the info though. I'll ask Github support.
    – Hubro
    Nov 12, 2014 at 7:50
  • Linguist looks cool, but how do you get it to show you lines of code though? It looks like it shows bytes by default, just like the API.
    – Hubro
    Nov 12, 2014 at 8:11
  • 1
    @RoryO'Kane Since everyone's coding style is different, some's lines are longer, while others' are shorter. It's not very accurate to do that.
    – xiaoyu2006
    Jul 26, 2020 at 1:25
47

Not currently possible on Github.com or their API-s

I have talked to customer support and confirmed that this can not be done on github.com. They have passed the suggestion along to the Github team though, so hopefully it will be possible in the future. If so, I'll be sure to edit this answer.

Meanwhile, Rory O'Kane's answer is a brilliant alternative based on cloc and a shallow repo clone.

1
  • 2
    Not directly, but their Statistics API has all the data you need to calculate it yourself. See my answer below for a quick script that does this.
    – Lewis
    Dec 15, 2015 at 21:39
40

From the @Tgr's comment, there is an online tool : https://codetabs.com/count-loc/count-loc-online.html

LOC counting example for strimzi/strimzi-kafka-operator repository

1
  • 1
    Too bad it doesn't work for big repositories like Git.
    – sigod
    Oct 21, 2022 at 0:30
25

You can use tokei:

cargo install tokei
git clone --depth 1 https://github.com/XAMPPRocky/tokei
tokei tokei/

Output:

===============================================================================
 Language            Files        Lines         Code     Comments       Blanks
===============================================================================
 BASH                    4           48           30           10            8
 JSON                    1         1430         1430            0            0
 Shell                   1           49           38            1           10
 TOML                    2           78           65            4            9
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Markdown                4         1410            0         1121          289
 |- JSON                 1           41           41            0            0
 |- Rust                 1           47           38            5            4
 |- Shell                1           19           16            0            3
 (Total)                           1517           95         1126          296
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Rust                   19         3750         3123          119          508
 |- Markdown            12          358            5          302           51
 (Total)                           4108         3128          421          559
===============================================================================
 Total                  31         6765         4686         1255          824
===============================================================================

Tokei has support for badges:

Count Lines

[![](https://tokei.rs/b1/github/XAMPPRocky/tokei)](https://github.com/XAMPPRocky/tokei)

By default the badge will show the repo's LoC(Lines of Code), you can also specify for it to show a different category, by using the ?category= query string. It can be either code, blanks, files, lines, comments.

Count Files

[![](https://tokei.rs/b1/github/XAMPPRocky/tokei?category=files)](https://github.com/XAMPPRocky/tokei)

1
  • 1
    or once tokei is istalled u can simply navigate to the folder directory and find it out too. Example:- $ tokei ./src /*this would give you the number of lines in the src folder*/
    – danu
    Aug 9, 2022 at 5:14
17

Hey all this is ridiculously easy...

  1. Create a new branch from your first commit
  2. When you want to find out your stats, create a new PR from main
  3. The PR will show you the number of changed lines - as you're doing a PR from the first commit all your code will be counted as new lines

And the added benefit is that if you don't approve the PR and just leave it in place, the stats (No of commits, files changed and total lines of code) will simply keep up-to-date as you merge changes into main. :) Enjoy.

enter image description here

3
  • but what if the first commit contains 10000lines, then this number doesn't show that 10000lines right?
    – Luk Aron
    Dec 9, 2020 at 19:24
  • 2
    If you can afford to ignore first commit then this is a great quick way to check. +1
    – Vishal
    Apr 18, 2022 at 21:29
  • 2
    If you do this backwards and open a PR deleting all your code, then the number of lines deleted will be the total lines in the project (minus ignored files). Just do yourself a favor and don't merge it.
    – johnrom
    Jan 23, 2023 at 18:11
14

You can use GitHub API to get the sloc like the following function

function getSloc(repo, tries) {

    //repo is the repo's path
    if (!repo) {
        return Promise.reject(new Error("No repo provided"));
    }

    //GitHub's API may return an empty object the first time it is accessed
    //We can try several times then stop
    if (tries === 0) {
        return Promise.reject(new Error("Too many tries"));
    }

    let url = "https://api.github.com/repos" + repo + "/stats/code_frequency";

    return fetch(url)
        .then(x => x.json())
        .then(x => x.reduce((total, changes) => total + changes[1] + changes[2], 0))
        .catch(err => getSloc(repo, tries - 1));
}

Personally I made an chrome extension which shows the number of SLOC on both github project list and project detail page. You can also set your personal access token to access private repositories and bypass the api rate limit.

You can download from here https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/github-sloc/fkjjjamhihnjmihibcmdnianbcbccpnn

Source code is available here https://github.com/martianyi/github-sloc

4
  • For the chrome extension how is SLOC determined? All file types? Exclude specific directories? Oct 13, 2017 at 3:41
  • @BrettReinhard It's based on the number of additions and deletions per week, I think it includes all files.
    – Yi Kai
    Oct 13, 2017 at 5:14
  • Doesn't that just return the number of changes in the last week? Nov 14, 2017 at 17:09
  • @Johannes'fish'Ziemke No, it returns every week
    – Yi Kai
    Nov 15, 2017 at 0:29
13

Open terminal and run the following:

curl -L "https://api.codetabs.com/v1/loc?github=username/reponame"
3
  • 1
    Unfortunately, this does not work for private repos.
    – tsalaroth
    Dec 17, 2020 at 19:21
  • 3
    Does not work any longer. API responds with "Moved Permanently" for any repo.
    – Magne
    Jun 14, 2021 at 7:59
  • @Magne it's still working for me. Mind you repo has to be public. You can try their UI(codetabs.com/count-loc/count-loc-online.html) to be sure Jul 2, 2022 at 18:45
12

Firefox add-on Github SLOC

I wrote a small firefox addon that prints the number of lines of code on github project pages: Github SLOC

4
  • Great plugin, very helpful! Do you know if it's possible to make it work with private repos? It seems to be only showing LOC on public repos.
    – rococo
    Jan 28, 2017 at 20:57
  • 1
    The link is dead and after searching manually, it seems, that sadly this plugin doesn't exist anymore.
    – dCSeven
    Sep 8, 2019 at 10:34
  • 1
    There's a request up for making GLOC available for Firefox too, and the developer seems open to the idea: github.com/artem-solovev/gloc/issues/23
    – miyalys
    Nov 16, 2019 at 3:25
  • 2
    @miyalys It's done now: addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/gloc Jun 9, 2020 at 19:13
11
npm install sloc -g
git clone --depth 1 https://github.com/vuejs/vue/
sloc ".\vue\src" --format cli-table
rm -rf ".\vue\"

Instructions and Explanation

  1. Install sloc from npm, a command line tool (Node.js needs to be installed).
npm install sloc -g
  1. Clone shallow repository (faster download than full clone).
git clone --depth 1 https://github.com/facebook/react/
  1. Run sloc and specifiy the path that should be analyzed.
sloc ".\react\src" --format cli-table

sloc supports formatting the output as a cli-table, as json or csv. Regular expressions can be used to exclude files and folders (Further information on npm).

  1. Delete repository folder (optional)

Powershell: rm -r -force ".\react\" or on Mac/Unix: rm -rf ".\react\"

Screenshots of the executed steps (cli-table):

sloc output as acli-table

sloc output (no arguments):

sloc output without arguments

It is also possible to get details for every file with the --details option:

sloc ".\react\src" --format cli-table --details     
3
10

You could use ghloc.vercel.app - it allows to count lines in any public Github repository.

1
  • Just what I was looking for. Easy to use with quick LOC count. Bonus that it also provides info on existence of common repo items (aka "health")
    – Bryan P
    Jan 27 at 15:51
8

If the question is "can you quickly get NUMBER OF LINES of a github repo", the answer is no as stated by the other answers.

However, if the question is "can you quickly check the SCALE of a project", I usually gauge a project by looking at its size. Of course the size will include deltas from all active commits, but it is a good metric as the order of magnitude is quite close.

E.g.

How big is the "docker" project?

In your browser, enter api.github.com/repos/ORG_NAME/PROJECT_NAME i.e. api.github.com/repos/docker/docker

In the response hash, you can find the size attribute:

{
    ...
    size: 161432,
    ...
}

This should give you an idea of the relative scale of the project. The number seems to be in KB, but when I checked it on my computer it's actually smaller, even though the order of magnitude is consistent. (161432KB = 161MB, du -s -h docker = 65MB)

7

Pipe the output from the number of lines in each file to sort to organize files by line count. git ls-files | xargs wc -l |sort -n

1
  • Even gives me a total at the bottom, this is by far the easiest and fastest way. Nov 17, 2020 at 12:19
7

A lot of answers here, some overly complicated. Here is a simple approach for 2023:

git ls-files > list.txt && cloc --list-file=list.txt

A text file called list.txt includes the filenames in your git repo, then cloc runs on the file list, respecting the gitignore.

You will need to to install cloc.

Note that this method requires the cloned repo on your system - not exactly what the original poster was asking for.

cloc

2
  • The premise of the original answer was without cloning the repository, i.e. without having it available locally. You've entirely skipped that part in your answer, assuming that the repository is already available locally.
    – Hubro
    May 17, 2023 at 14:36
  • Yup, I made a note about this. May 18, 2023 at 16:03
6

This is so easy if you are using Vscode and you clone the project first. Just install the Lines of Code (LOC) Vscode extension and then run LineCount: Count Workspace Files from the Command Pallete.

The extension shows summary statistics by file type and it also outputs result files with detailed information by each folder.

3

There in another online tool that counts lines of code for public and private repos without having to clone/download them - https://klock.herokuapp.com/

screenshot

2
  • Looked promising but very strange that you have to sign up for it. Nov 8, 2020 at 19:03
  • 3
    I think it is because it doesn't want to exceed the API request limit from one account, so it asks everyone to login so it's counted towards their own account. But "This application will be able to read and write all public and private repository data." is not a proportional risk to ask people to take.
    – Magne
    Jun 14, 2021 at 7:56
3

None of the answers here satisfied my requirements. I only wanted to use existing utilities. The following script will use basic utilities:

  • Git
  • GNU or BSD awk
  • GNU or BSD sed
  • Bash

Get total lines added to a repository (subtracts lines deleted from lines added).

#!/bin/bash
git diff --shortstat 4b825dc642cb6eb9a060e54bf8d69288fbee4904 HEAD | \
sed 's/[^0-9,]*//g' | \
awk -F, '!($2 > 0) {$2="0"};!($3 > 0) {$3="0"}; {print $2-$3}'

Get lines of code filtered by specified file types of known source code (e.g. *.py files or add more extensions, etc).

#!/bin/bash
git diff --shortstat 4b825dc642cb6eb9a060e54bf8d69288fbee4904 HEAD -- *.{py,java,js} | \
sed 's/[^0-9,]*//g' | \
awk -F, '!($2 > 0) {$2="0"};!($3 > 0) {$3="0"}; {print $2-$3}'

4b825dc642cb6eb9a060e54bf8d69288fbee4904 is the id of the "empty tree" in Git and it's always available in every repository.

Sources:

2

shields.io has a badge that can count up all the lines for you here. Here is an example of what it looks like counting the Raycast extensions repo:

https://img.shields.io/tokei/lines/github/raycast/extensions

1

You can use sourcegraph, an open source search engine for code. It can connect to your GitHub account, index the content, and then on the admin section you would see the number of lines of code indexed. enter image description here

0

I made an NPM package specifically for this usage, which allows you to call a CLI tool and providing the directory path and the folders/files to ignore

it goes like this:

npm i -g @quasimodo147/countlines

to get the $ countlines command in your terminal

then you can do countlines . node_modules build dist

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