This library was causing numerous issues related to git operations. The
straw that broke the camel's back is that it does not do automatic
garbage collection (`git gc --auto`). So a user's repo directory
continues to grow in size.
The replacement is CliWrap, which is just a simple wrapper library that
allows easy execution of shell commands. Specifically, `git` commands.
BREAKING CHANGE: This change now requires the `git` executable to be
installed by the user if run on a host system. The git executable will
be provided automatically for the docker image.
Reason: Exception would be thrown when no config files are found when
invoking the various `--list` arguments. No configuration should not
prevent these from working.
- Get rid of `IServiceLocatorProxy`
- Get rid of `ICompositionRoot`
In addition, all unit tests avoid using `BaseCommand` directly, as it
does its own composition root setup and overrides the IntegrationFixture
test setup.
The introduction of lifetime scopes inside of configuration processing
in the Command classes introduced issues with the way resolution
overrides happened especially with integration test fixtures.
Simplify the factory pattern so that it creates settings more directly
instead of using a silly setter method.
Also implemented `IntegrationFixture` for easier integration testing.
Initialization logic has been completely overhauled. The previous
implementation was based on an approach that prioritized keeping the
composition root in the Program class. However, I wasn't happy with
this. CliFx inevitably wants to be the effective entry point to the
application. This means that the Program class should be as dumb as
possible.
The motivation for all this rework is the Recyclarr GUI. I need to be
able to share more initialization code between the projects.
Along with the initialization logic changes, I unintentionally
interleaved in another, completely unrelated refactoring. The IAppPaths
class now uses `IFileInfo` / `IDirectoryInfo` instead of `string` for
everything. This greatly simplified the implementation of that interface
and reduced dependencies and complexity across the code base. However,
those changes were vast and required rewriting/fixing a lot of unit
tests.