git-repo/project.py

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2008-10-21 14:00:00 +00:00
# Copyright (C) 2008 The Android Open Source Project
#
# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
# you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
# You may obtain a copy of the License at
#
# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
#
# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
# WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
# See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
# limitations under the License.
import errno
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import filecmp
import glob
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import os
import random
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import re
import shutil
import stat
import subprocess
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import sys
import tarfile
Represent git-submodule as nested projects, take 2 (Previous submission of this change broke Android buildbot due to incorrect regular expression for parsing git-config output. During investigation, we also found that Android, which pulls Chromium, has a workaround for Chromium's submodules; its manifest includes Chromium's submodules. This new change, in addition to fixing the regex, also take this type of workarounds into consideration; it adds a new attribute that makes repo not fetch submodules unless submodules have a project element defined in the manifest, or this attribute is overridden by a parent project element or by the default element.) We need a representation of git-submodule in repo; otherwise repo will not sync submodules, and leave workspace in a broken state. Of course this will not be a problem if all projects are owned by the owner of the manifest file, who may simply choose not to use git-submodule in all projects. However, this is not possible in practice because manifest file owner is unlikely to own all upstream projects. As git submodules are simply git repositories, it is natural to treat them as plain repo projects that live inside a repo project. That is, we could use recursively declared projects to denote the is-submodule relation of git repositories. The behavior of repo remains the same to projects that do not have a sub-project within. As for parent projects, repo fetches them and their sub-projects as normal projects, and then checks out subprojects at the commit specified in parent's commit object. The sub-project is fetched at a path relative to parent project's working directory; so the path specified in manifest file should match that of .gitmodules file. If a submodule is not registered in repo manifest, repo will derive its properties from itself and its parent project, which might not always be correct. In such cases, the subproject is called a derived subproject. To a user, a sub-project is merely a git-submodule; so all tips of working with a git-submodule apply here, too. For example, you should not run `repo sync` in a parent repository if its submodule is dirty. Change-Id: I4b8344c1b9ccad2f58ad304573133e5d52e1faef
2012-01-11 03:28:42 +00:00
import tempfile
import time
import urllib.parse
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from color import Coloring
from git_command import GitCommand, git_require
from git_config import GitConfig, IsId, GetSchemeFromUrl, GetUrlCookieFile, \
ID_RE
from error import GitError, UploadError, DownloadError
from error import ManifestInvalidRevisionError, ManifestInvalidPathError
from error import NoManifestException
import platform_utils
sync: improve output with intermingled progress bars and status When displaying progress bars, we use \r to reset the cursor to the start of the line before showing the new update. This assumes the new line will fully erase whatever was displayed there previously. The "done" codepath tries to handle this by including a few extra spaces at the end of the message to "white out" what was there. Lets replace that hack with the standard ECMA escape sequence that clears the current line completely. This is the CSI "erase in line" sequence that the terminal will use to delete all content. The \r is still needed to move the cursor to the start of the line. Using this sequence should be OK since we're already assuming the terminal is ECMA compliant with our use of coloring sequences. We also put the \r after the CSI sequence on the off chance the terminal can't process it and displays a few bytes of garbage. The other improvement is to the syncbuffer API. When it dumps its status information, it almost always comes after a progress bar update which leads to confusing comingled output. Something like: Fetching projects: 100% (2/2) error: src/platform2/: branch ... Since the progress bar is "throw away", have the syncbuffer reset the current output to the start of the line before showing whatever messages it has queued. Bug: https://crbug.com/gerrit/11293 Change-Id: I6544d073fe993d98ee7e91fca5e501ba5fecfe4c Reviewed-on: https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/c/git-repo/+/236615 Reviewed-by: David Pursehouse <dpursehouse@collab.net> Tested-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@google.com>
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import progress
from repo_trace import IsTrace, Trace
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from git_refs import GitRefs, HEAD, R_HEADS, R_TAGS, R_PUB, R_M, R_WORKTREE_M
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# Maximum sleep time allowed during retries.
MAXIMUM_RETRY_SLEEP_SEC = 3600.0
# +-10% random jitter is added to each Fetches retry sleep duration.
RETRY_JITTER_PERCENT = 0.1
def _lwrite(path, content):
lock = '%s.lock' % path
# Maintain Unix line endings on all OS's to match git behavior.
with open(lock, 'w', newline='\n') as fd:
fd.write(content)
try:
platform_utils.rename(lock, path)
except OSError:
platform_utils.remove(lock)
raise
def _error(fmt, *args):
msg = fmt % args
print('error: %s' % msg, file=sys.stderr)
def _warn(fmt, *args):
msg = fmt % args
print('warn: %s' % msg, file=sys.stderr)
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def not_rev(r):
return '^' + r
def sq(r):
return "'" + r.replace("'", "'\''") + "'"
_project_hook_list = None
def _ProjectHooks():
"""List the hooks present in the 'hooks' directory.
These hooks are project hooks and are copied to the '.git/hooks' directory
of all subprojects.
This function caches the list of hooks (based on the contents of the
'repo/hooks' directory) on the first call.
Returns:
A list of absolute paths to all of the files in the hooks directory.
"""
global _project_hook_list
if _project_hook_list is None:
d = platform_utils.realpath(os.path.abspath(os.path.dirname(__file__)))
d = os.path.join(d, 'hooks')
_project_hook_list = [os.path.join(d, x) for x in platform_utils.listdir(d)]
return _project_hook_list
class DownloadedChange(object):
_commit_cache = None
def __init__(self, project, base, change_id, ps_id, commit):
self.project = project
self.base = base
self.change_id = change_id
self.ps_id = ps_id
self.commit = commit
@property
def commits(self):
if self._commit_cache is None:
self._commit_cache = self.project.bare_git.rev_list('--abbrev=8',
'--abbrev-commit',
'--pretty=oneline',
'--reverse',
'--date-order',
not_rev(self.base),
self.commit,
'--')
return self._commit_cache
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class ReviewableBranch(object):
_commit_cache = None
_base_exists = None
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def __init__(self, project, branch, base):
self.project = project
self.branch = branch
self.base = base
@property
def name(self):
return self.branch.name
@property
def commits(self):
if self._commit_cache is None:
args = ('--abbrev=8', '--abbrev-commit', '--pretty=oneline', '--reverse',
'--date-order', not_rev(self.base), R_HEADS + self.name, '--')
try:
self._commit_cache = self.project.bare_git.rev_list(*args)
except GitError:
# We weren't able to probe the commits for this branch. Was it tracking
# a branch that no longer exists? If so, return no commits. Otherwise,
# rethrow the error as we don't know what's going on.
if self.base_exists:
raise
self._commit_cache = []
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return self._commit_cache
@property
def unabbrev_commits(self):
r = dict()
for commit in self.project.bare_git.rev_list(not_rev(self.base),
R_HEADS + self.name,
'--'):
r[commit[0:8]] = commit
return r
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@property
def date(self):
return self.project.bare_git.log('--pretty=format:%cd',
'-n', '1',
R_HEADS + self.name,
'--')
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@property
def base_exists(self):
"""Whether the branch we're tracking exists.
Normally it should, but sometimes branches we track can get deleted.
"""
if self._base_exists is None:
try:
self.project.bare_git.rev_parse('--verify', not_rev(self.base))
# If we're still here, the base branch exists.
self._base_exists = True
except GitError:
# If we failed to verify, the base branch doesn't exist.
self._base_exists = False
return self._base_exists
def UploadForReview(self, people,
dryrun=False,
auto_topic=False,
hashtags=(),
labels=(),
private=False,
notify=None,
wip=False,
dest_branch=None,
validate_certs=True,
push_options=None):
self.project.UploadForReview(branch=self.name,
people=people,
dryrun=dryrun,
auto_topic=auto_topic,
hashtags=hashtags,
labels=labels,
private=private,
notify=notify,
wip=wip,
dest_branch=dest_branch,
validate_certs=validate_certs,
push_options=push_options)
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def GetPublishedRefs(self):
refs = {}
output = self.project.bare_git.ls_remote(
self.branch.remote.SshReviewUrl(self.project.UserEmail),
'refs/changes/*')
for line in output.split('\n'):
try:
(sha, ref) = line.split()
refs[sha] = ref
except ValueError:
pass
return refs
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class StatusColoring(Coloring):
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def __init__(self, config):
super().__init__(config, 'status')
self.project = self.printer('header', attr='bold')
self.branch = self.printer('header', attr='bold')
self.nobranch = self.printer('nobranch', fg='red')
self.important = self.printer('important', fg='red')
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self.added = self.printer('added', fg='green')
self.changed = self.printer('changed', fg='red')
self.untracked = self.printer('untracked', fg='red')
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class DiffColoring(Coloring):
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def __init__(self, config):
super().__init__(config, 'diff')
self.project = self.printer('header', attr='bold')
self.fail = self.printer('fail', fg='red')
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class _Annotation(object):
def __init__(self, name, value, keep):
self.name = name
self.value = value
self.keep = keep
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def _SafeExpandPath(base, subpath, skipfinal=False):
"""Make sure |subpath| is completely safe under |base|.
We make sure no intermediate symlinks are traversed, and that the final path
is not a special file (e.g. not a socket or fifo).
NB: We rely on a number of paths already being filtered out while parsing the
manifest. See the validation logic in manifest_xml.py for more details.
"""
# Split up the path by its components. We can't use os.path.sep exclusively
# as some platforms (like Windows) will convert / to \ and that bypasses all
# our constructed logic here. Especially since manifest authors only use
# / in their paths.
resep = re.compile(r'[/%s]' % re.escape(os.path.sep))
components = resep.split(subpath)
if skipfinal:
# Whether the caller handles the final component itself.
finalpart = components.pop()
path = base
for part in components:
if part in {'.', '..'}:
raise ManifestInvalidPathError(
'%s: "%s" not allowed in paths' % (subpath, part))
path = os.path.join(path, part)
if platform_utils.islink(path):
raise ManifestInvalidPathError(
'%s: traversing symlinks not allow' % (path,))
if os.path.exists(path):
if not os.path.isfile(path) and not platform_utils.isdir(path):
raise ManifestInvalidPathError(
'%s: only regular files & directories allowed' % (path,))
if skipfinal:
path = os.path.join(path, finalpart)
return path
class _CopyFile(object):
"""Container for <copyfile> manifest element."""
def __init__(self, git_worktree, src, topdir, dest):
"""Register a <copyfile> request.
Args:
git_worktree: Absolute path to the git project checkout.
src: Relative path under |git_worktree| of file to read.
topdir: Absolute path to the top of the repo client checkout.
dest: Relative path under |topdir| of file to write.
"""
self.git_worktree = git_worktree
self.topdir = topdir
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self.src = src
self.dest = dest
def _Copy(self):
src = _SafeExpandPath(self.git_worktree, self.src)
dest = _SafeExpandPath(self.topdir, self.dest)
if platform_utils.isdir(src):
raise ManifestInvalidPathError(
'%s: copying from directory not supported' % (self.src,))
if platform_utils.isdir(dest):
raise ManifestInvalidPathError(
'%s: copying to directory not allowed' % (self.dest,))
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# copy file if it does not exist or is out of date
if not os.path.exists(dest) or not filecmp.cmp(src, dest):
try:
# remove existing file first, since it might be read-only
if os.path.exists(dest):
platform_utils.remove(dest)
else:
dest_dir = os.path.dirname(dest)
if not platform_utils.isdir(dest_dir):
os.makedirs(dest_dir)
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shutil.copy(src, dest)
# make the file read-only
mode = os.stat(dest)[stat.ST_MODE]
mode = mode & ~(stat.S_IWUSR | stat.S_IWGRP | stat.S_IWOTH)
os.chmod(dest, mode)
except IOError:
_error('Cannot copy file %s to %s', src, dest)
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class _LinkFile(object):
"""Container for <linkfile> manifest element."""
def __init__(self, git_worktree, src, topdir, dest):
"""Register a <linkfile> request.
Args:
git_worktree: Absolute path to the git project checkout.
src: Target of symlink relative to path under |git_worktree|.
topdir: Absolute path to the top of the repo client checkout.
dest: Relative path under |topdir| of symlink to create.
"""
self.git_worktree = git_worktree
self.topdir = topdir
self.src = src
self.dest = dest
def __linkIt(self, relSrc, absDest):
# link file if it does not exist or is out of date
if not platform_utils.islink(absDest) or (platform_utils.readlink(absDest) != relSrc):
try:
# remove existing file first, since it might be read-only
if os.path.lexists(absDest):
platform_utils.remove(absDest)
else:
dest_dir = os.path.dirname(absDest)
if not platform_utils.isdir(dest_dir):
os.makedirs(dest_dir)
platform_utils.symlink(relSrc, absDest)
except IOError:
_error('Cannot link file %s to %s', relSrc, absDest)
def _Link(self):
"""Link the self.src & self.dest paths.
Handles wild cards on the src linking all of the files in the source in to
the destination directory.
"""
# Some people use src="." to create stable links to projects. Lets allow
# that but reject all other uses of "." to keep things simple.
if self.src == '.':
src = self.git_worktree
else:
src = _SafeExpandPath(self.git_worktree, self.src)
if not glob.has_magic(src):
# Entity does not contain a wild card so just a simple one to one link operation.
dest = _SafeExpandPath(self.topdir, self.dest, skipfinal=True)
# dest & src are absolute paths at this point. Make sure the target of
# the symlink is relative in the context of the repo client checkout.
relpath = os.path.relpath(src, os.path.dirname(dest))
self.__linkIt(relpath, dest)
else:
dest = _SafeExpandPath(self.topdir, self.dest)
# Entity contains a wild card.
if os.path.exists(dest) and not platform_utils.isdir(dest):
_error('Link error: src with wildcard, %s must be a directory', dest)
else:
for absSrcFile in glob.glob(src):
# Create a releative path from source dir to destination dir
absSrcDir = os.path.dirname(absSrcFile)
relSrcDir = os.path.relpath(absSrcDir, dest)
# Get the source file name
srcFile = os.path.basename(absSrcFile)
# Now form the final full paths to srcFile. They will be
# absolute for the desintaiton and relative for the srouce.
absDest = os.path.join(dest, srcFile)
relSrc = os.path.join(relSrcDir, srcFile)
self.__linkIt(relSrc, absDest)
class RemoteSpec(object):
def __init__(self,
name,
url=None,
pushUrl=None,
review=None,
revision=None,
orig_name=None,
fetchUrl=None):
self.name = name
self.url = url
self.pushUrl = pushUrl
self.review = review
self.revision = revision
self.orig_name = orig_name
self.fetchUrl = fetchUrl
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class Project(object):
# These objects can be shared between several working trees.
shareable_files = ['description', 'info']
shareable_dirs = ['hooks', 'objects', 'rr-cache', 'svn']
# These objects can only be used by a single working tree.
working_tree_files = ['config', 'packed-refs', 'shallow']
working_tree_dirs = ['logs', 'refs']
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def __init__(self,
manifest,
name,
remote,
gitdir,
objdir,
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worktree,
relpath,
revisionExpr,
revisionId,
rebase=True,
groups=None,
sync_c=False,
sync_s=False,
sync_tags=True,
clone_depth=None,
upstream=None,
parent=None,
use_git_worktrees=False,
is_derived=False,
dest_branch=None,
optimized_fetch=False,
retry_fetches=0,
old_revision=None):
Represent git-submodule as nested projects, take 2 (Previous submission of this change broke Android buildbot due to incorrect regular expression for parsing git-config output. During investigation, we also found that Android, which pulls Chromium, has a workaround for Chromium's submodules; its manifest includes Chromium's submodules. This new change, in addition to fixing the regex, also take this type of workarounds into consideration; it adds a new attribute that makes repo not fetch submodules unless submodules have a project element defined in the manifest, or this attribute is overridden by a parent project element or by the default element.) We need a representation of git-submodule in repo; otherwise repo will not sync submodules, and leave workspace in a broken state. Of course this will not be a problem if all projects are owned by the owner of the manifest file, who may simply choose not to use git-submodule in all projects. However, this is not possible in practice because manifest file owner is unlikely to own all upstream projects. As git submodules are simply git repositories, it is natural to treat them as plain repo projects that live inside a repo project. That is, we could use recursively declared projects to denote the is-submodule relation of git repositories. The behavior of repo remains the same to projects that do not have a sub-project within. As for parent projects, repo fetches them and their sub-projects as normal projects, and then checks out subprojects at the commit specified in parent's commit object. The sub-project is fetched at a path relative to parent project's working directory; so the path specified in manifest file should match that of .gitmodules file. If a submodule is not registered in repo manifest, repo will derive its properties from itself and its parent project, which might not always be correct. In such cases, the subproject is called a derived subproject. To a user, a sub-project is merely a git-submodule; so all tips of working with a git-submodule apply here, too. For example, you should not run `repo sync` in a parent repository if its submodule is dirty. Change-Id: I4b8344c1b9ccad2f58ad304573133e5d52e1faef
2012-01-11 03:28:42 +00:00
"""Init a Project object.
Args:
manifest: The XmlManifest object.
name: The `name` attribute of manifest.xml's project element.
remote: RemoteSpec object specifying its remote's properties.
gitdir: Absolute path of git directory.
objdir: Absolute path of directory to store git objects.
Represent git-submodule as nested projects, take 2 (Previous submission of this change broke Android buildbot due to incorrect regular expression for parsing git-config output. During investigation, we also found that Android, which pulls Chromium, has a workaround for Chromium's submodules; its manifest includes Chromium's submodules. This new change, in addition to fixing the regex, also take this type of workarounds into consideration; it adds a new attribute that makes repo not fetch submodules unless submodules have a project element defined in the manifest, or this attribute is overridden by a parent project element or by the default element.) We need a representation of git-submodule in repo; otherwise repo will not sync submodules, and leave workspace in a broken state. Of course this will not be a problem if all projects are owned by the owner of the manifest file, who may simply choose not to use git-submodule in all projects. However, this is not possible in practice because manifest file owner is unlikely to own all upstream projects. As git submodules are simply git repositories, it is natural to treat them as plain repo projects that live inside a repo project. That is, we could use recursively declared projects to denote the is-submodule relation of git repositories. The behavior of repo remains the same to projects that do not have a sub-project within. As for parent projects, repo fetches them and their sub-projects as normal projects, and then checks out subprojects at the commit specified in parent's commit object. The sub-project is fetched at a path relative to parent project's working directory; so the path specified in manifest file should match that of .gitmodules file. If a submodule is not registered in repo manifest, repo will derive its properties from itself and its parent project, which might not always be correct. In such cases, the subproject is called a derived subproject. To a user, a sub-project is merely a git-submodule; so all tips of working with a git-submodule apply here, too. For example, you should not run `repo sync` in a parent repository if its submodule is dirty. Change-Id: I4b8344c1b9ccad2f58ad304573133e5d52e1faef
2012-01-11 03:28:42 +00:00
worktree: Absolute path of git working tree.
relpath: Relative path of git working tree to repo's top directory.
revisionExpr: The `revision` attribute of manifest.xml's project element.
revisionId: git commit id for checking out.
rebase: The `rebase` attribute of manifest.xml's project element.
groups: The `groups` attribute of manifest.xml's project element.
sync_c: The `sync-c` attribute of manifest.xml's project element.
sync_s: The `sync-s` attribute of manifest.xml's project element.
sync_tags: The `sync-tags` attribute of manifest.xml's project element.
Represent git-submodule as nested projects, take 2 (Previous submission of this change broke Android buildbot due to incorrect regular expression for parsing git-config output. During investigation, we also found that Android, which pulls Chromium, has a workaround for Chromium's submodules; its manifest includes Chromium's submodules. This new change, in addition to fixing the regex, also take this type of workarounds into consideration; it adds a new attribute that makes repo not fetch submodules unless submodules have a project element defined in the manifest, or this attribute is overridden by a parent project element or by the default element.) We need a representation of git-submodule in repo; otherwise repo will not sync submodules, and leave workspace in a broken state. Of course this will not be a problem if all projects are owned by the owner of the manifest file, who may simply choose not to use git-submodule in all projects. However, this is not possible in practice because manifest file owner is unlikely to own all upstream projects. As git submodules are simply git repositories, it is natural to treat them as plain repo projects that live inside a repo project. That is, we could use recursively declared projects to denote the is-submodule relation of git repositories. The behavior of repo remains the same to projects that do not have a sub-project within. As for parent projects, repo fetches them and their sub-projects as normal projects, and then checks out subprojects at the commit specified in parent's commit object. The sub-project is fetched at a path relative to parent project's working directory; so the path specified in manifest file should match that of .gitmodules file. If a submodule is not registered in repo manifest, repo will derive its properties from itself and its parent project, which might not always be correct. In such cases, the subproject is called a derived subproject. To a user, a sub-project is merely a git-submodule; so all tips of working with a git-submodule apply here, too. For example, you should not run `repo sync` in a parent repository if its submodule is dirty. Change-Id: I4b8344c1b9ccad2f58ad304573133e5d52e1faef
2012-01-11 03:28:42 +00:00
upstream: The `upstream` attribute of manifest.xml's project element.
parent: The parent Project object.
use_git_worktrees: Whether to use `git worktree` for this project.
Represent git-submodule as nested projects, take 2 (Previous submission of this change broke Android buildbot due to incorrect regular expression for parsing git-config output. During investigation, we also found that Android, which pulls Chromium, has a workaround for Chromium's submodules; its manifest includes Chromium's submodules. This new change, in addition to fixing the regex, also take this type of workarounds into consideration; it adds a new attribute that makes repo not fetch submodules unless submodules have a project element defined in the manifest, or this attribute is overridden by a parent project element or by the default element.) We need a representation of git-submodule in repo; otherwise repo will not sync submodules, and leave workspace in a broken state. Of course this will not be a problem if all projects are owned by the owner of the manifest file, who may simply choose not to use git-submodule in all projects. However, this is not possible in practice because manifest file owner is unlikely to own all upstream projects. As git submodules are simply git repositories, it is natural to treat them as plain repo projects that live inside a repo project. That is, we could use recursively declared projects to denote the is-submodule relation of git repositories. The behavior of repo remains the same to projects that do not have a sub-project within. As for parent projects, repo fetches them and their sub-projects as normal projects, and then checks out subprojects at the commit specified in parent's commit object. The sub-project is fetched at a path relative to parent project's working directory; so the path specified in manifest file should match that of .gitmodules file. If a submodule is not registered in repo manifest, repo will derive its properties from itself and its parent project, which might not always be correct. In such cases, the subproject is called a derived subproject. To a user, a sub-project is merely a git-submodule; so all tips of working with a git-submodule apply here, too. For example, you should not run `repo sync` in a parent repository if its submodule is dirty. Change-Id: I4b8344c1b9ccad2f58ad304573133e5d52e1faef
2012-01-11 03:28:42 +00:00
is_derived: False if the project was explicitly defined in the manifest;
True if the project is a discovered submodule.
dest_branch: The branch to which to push changes for review by default.
optimized_fetch: If True, when a project is set to a sha1 revision, only
fetch from the remote if the sha1 is not present locally.
retry_fetches: Retry remote fetches n times upon receiving transient error
with exponential backoff and jitter.
old_revision: saved git commit id for open GITC projects.
Represent git-submodule as nested projects, take 2 (Previous submission of this change broke Android buildbot due to incorrect regular expression for parsing git-config output. During investigation, we also found that Android, which pulls Chromium, has a workaround for Chromium's submodules; its manifest includes Chromium's submodules. This new change, in addition to fixing the regex, also take this type of workarounds into consideration; it adds a new attribute that makes repo not fetch submodules unless submodules have a project element defined in the manifest, or this attribute is overridden by a parent project element or by the default element.) We need a representation of git-submodule in repo; otherwise repo will not sync submodules, and leave workspace in a broken state. Of course this will not be a problem if all projects are owned by the owner of the manifest file, who may simply choose not to use git-submodule in all projects. However, this is not possible in practice because manifest file owner is unlikely to own all upstream projects. As git submodules are simply git repositories, it is natural to treat them as plain repo projects that live inside a repo project. That is, we could use recursively declared projects to denote the is-submodule relation of git repositories. The behavior of repo remains the same to projects that do not have a sub-project within. As for parent projects, repo fetches them and their sub-projects as normal projects, and then checks out subprojects at the commit specified in parent's commit object. The sub-project is fetched at a path relative to parent project's working directory; so the path specified in manifest file should match that of .gitmodules file. If a submodule is not registered in repo manifest, repo will derive its properties from itself and its parent project, which might not always be correct. In such cases, the subproject is called a derived subproject. To a user, a sub-project is merely a git-submodule; so all tips of working with a git-submodule apply here, too. For example, you should not run `repo sync` in a parent repository if its submodule is dirty. Change-Id: I4b8344c1b9ccad2f58ad304573133e5d52e1faef
2012-01-11 03:28:42 +00:00
"""
self.client = self.manifest = manifest
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self.name = name
self.remote = remote
self.gitdir = gitdir.replace('\\', '/')
self.objdir = objdir.replace('\\', '/')
if worktree:
self.worktree = os.path.normpath(worktree).replace('\\', '/')
else:
self.worktree = None
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self.relpath = relpath
self.revisionExpr = revisionExpr
if revisionId is None \
and revisionExpr \
and IsId(revisionExpr):
self.revisionId = revisionExpr
else:
self.revisionId = revisionId
self.rebase = rebase
self.groups = groups
self.sync_c = sync_c
Represent git-submodule as nested projects, take 2 (Previous submission of this change broke Android buildbot due to incorrect regular expression for parsing git-config output. During investigation, we also found that Android, which pulls Chromium, has a workaround for Chromium's submodules; its manifest includes Chromium's submodules. This new change, in addition to fixing the regex, also take this type of workarounds into consideration; it adds a new attribute that makes repo not fetch submodules unless submodules have a project element defined in the manifest, or this attribute is overridden by a parent project element or by the default element.) We need a representation of git-submodule in repo; otherwise repo will not sync submodules, and leave workspace in a broken state. Of course this will not be a problem if all projects are owned by the owner of the manifest file, who may simply choose not to use git-submodule in all projects. However, this is not possible in practice because manifest file owner is unlikely to own all upstream projects. As git submodules are simply git repositories, it is natural to treat them as plain repo projects that live inside a repo project. That is, we could use recursively declared projects to denote the is-submodule relation of git repositories. The behavior of repo remains the same to projects that do not have a sub-project within. As for parent projects, repo fetches them and their sub-projects as normal projects, and then checks out subprojects at the commit specified in parent's commit object. The sub-project is fetched at a path relative to parent project's working directory; so the path specified in manifest file should match that of .gitmodules file. If a submodule is not registered in repo manifest, repo will derive its properties from itself and its parent project, which might not always be correct. In such cases, the subproject is called a derived subproject. To a user, a sub-project is merely a git-submodule; so all tips of working with a git-submodule apply here, too. For example, you should not run `repo sync` in a parent repository if its submodule is dirty. Change-Id: I4b8344c1b9ccad2f58ad304573133e5d52e1faef
2012-01-11 03:28:42 +00:00
self.sync_s = sync_s
self.sync_tags = sync_tags
self.clone_depth = clone_depth
self.upstream = upstream
Represent git-submodule as nested projects, take 2 (Previous submission of this change broke Android buildbot due to incorrect regular expression for parsing git-config output. During investigation, we also found that Android, which pulls Chromium, has a workaround for Chromium's submodules; its manifest includes Chromium's submodules. This new change, in addition to fixing the regex, also take this type of workarounds into consideration; it adds a new attribute that makes repo not fetch submodules unless submodules have a project element defined in the manifest, or this attribute is overridden by a parent project element or by the default element.) We need a representation of git-submodule in repo; otherwise repo will not sync submodules, and leave workspace in a broken state. Of course this will not be a problem if all projects are owned by the owner of the manifest file, who may simply choose not to use git-submodule in all projects. However, this is not possible in practice because manifest file owner is unlikely to own all upstream projects. As git submodules are simply git repositories, it is natural to treat them as plain repo projects that live inside a repo project. That is, we could use recursively declared projects to denote the is-submodule relation of git repositories. The behavior of repo remains the same to projects that do not have a sub-project within. As for parent projects, repo fetches them and their sub-projects as normal projects, and then checks out subprojects at the commit specified in parent's commit object. The sub-project is fetched at a path relative to parent project's working directory; so the path specified in manifest file should match that of .gitmodules file. If a submodule is not registered in repo manifest, repo will derive its properties from itself and its parent project, which might not always be correct. In such cases, the subproject is called a derived subproject. To a user, a sub-project is merely a git-submodule; so all tips of working with a git-submodule apply here, too. For example, you should not run `repo sync` in a parent repository if its submodule is dirty. Change-Id: I4b8344c1b9ccad2f58ad304573133e5d52e1faef
2012-01-11 03:28:42 +00:00
self.parent = parent
# NB: Do not use this setting in __init__ to change behavior so that the
# manifest.git checkout can inspect & change it after instantiating. See
# the XmlManifest init code for more info.
self.use_git_worktrees = use_git_worktrees
Represent git-submodule as nested projects, take 2 (Previous submission of this change broke Android buildbot due to incorrect regular expression for parsing git-config output. During investigation, we also found that Android, which pulls Chromium, has a workaround for Chromium's submodules; its manifest includes Chromium's submodules. This new change, in addition to fixing the regex, also take this type of workarounds into consideration; it adds a new attribute that makes repo not fetch submodules unless submodules have a project element defined in the manifest, or this attribute is overridden by a parent project element or by the default element.) We need a representation of git-submodule in repo; otherwise repo will not sync submodules, and leave workspace in a broken state. Of course this will not be a problem if all projects are owned by the owner of the manifest file, who may simply choose not to use git-submodule in all projects. However, this is not possible in practice because manifest file owner is unlikely to own all upstream projects. As git submodules are simply git repositories, it is natural to treat them as plain repo projects that live inside a repo project. That is, we could use recursively declared projects to denote the is-submodule relation of git repositories. The behavior of repo remains the same to projects that do not have a sub-project within. As for parent projects, repo fetches them and their sub-projects as normal projects, and then checks out subprojects at the commit specified in parent's commit object. The sub-project is fetched at a path relative to parent project's working directory; so the path specified in manifest file should match that of .gitmodules file. If a submodule is not registered in repo manifest, repo will derive its properties from itself and its parent project, which might not always be correct. In such cases, the subproject is called a derived subproject. To a user, a sub-project is merely a git-submodule; so all tips of working with a git-submodule apply here, too. For example, you should not run `repo sync` in a parent repository if its submodule is dirty. Change-Id: I4b8344c1b9ccad2f58ad304573133e5d52e1faef
2012-01-11 03:28:42 +00:00
self.is_derived = is_derived
self.optimized_fetch = optimized_fetch
self.retry_fetches = max(0, retry_fetches)
Represent git-submodule as nested projects, take 2 (Previous submission of this change broke Android buildbot due to incorrect regular expression for parsing git-config output. During investigation, we also found that Android, which pulls Chromium, has a workaround for Chromium's submodules; its manifest includes Chromium's submodules. This new change, in addition to fixing the regex, also take this type of workarounds into consideration; it adds a new attribute that makes repo not fetch submodules unless submodules have a project element defined in the manifest, or this attribute is overridden by a parent project element or by the default element.) We need a representation of git-submodule in repo; otherwise repo will not sync submodules, and leave workspace in a broken state. Of course this will not be a problem if all projects are owned by the owner of the manifest file, who may simply choose not to use git-submodule in all projects. However, this is not possible in practice because manifest file owner is unlikely to own all upstream projects. As git submodules are simply git repositories, it is natural to treat them as plain repo projects that live inside a repo project. That is, we could use recursively declared projects to denote the is-submodule relation of git repositories. The behavior of repo remains the same to projects that do not have a sub-project within. As for parent projects, repo fetches them and their sub-projects as normal projects, and then checks out subprojects at the commit specified in parent's commit object. The sub-project is fetched at a path relative to parent project's working directory; so the path specified in manifest file should match that of .gitmodules file. If a submodule is not registered in repo manifest, repo will derive its properties from itself and its parent project, which might not always be correct. In such cases, the subproject is called a derived subproject. To a user, a sub-project is merely a git-submodule; so all tips of working with a git-submodule apply here, too. For example, you should not run `repo sync` in a parent repository if its submodule is dirty. Change-Id: I4b8344c1b9ccad2f58ad304573133e5d52e1faef
2012-01-11 03:28:42 +00:00
self.subprojects = []
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self.snapshots = {}
self.copyfiles = []
self.linkfiles = []
self.annotations = []
self.config = GitConfig.ForRepository(gitdir=self.gitdir,
defaults=self.client.globalConfig)
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if self.worktree:
self.work_git = self._GitGetByExec(self, bare=False, gitdir=gitdir)
else:
self.work_git = None
self.bare_git = self._GitGetByExec(self, bare=True, gitdir=gitdir)
self.bare_ref = GitRefs(gitdir)
self.bare_objdir = self._GitGetByExec(self, bare=True, gitdir=objdir)
self.dest_branch = dest_branch
self.old_revision = old_revision
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Support repo-level pre-upload hook and prep for future hooks. All repo-level hooks are expected to live in a single project at the top level of that project. The name of the hooks project is provided in the manifest.xml. The manifest also lists which hooks are enabled to make it obvious if a file somehow failed to sync down (or got deleted). Before running any hook, we will prompt the user to make sure that it is OK. A user can deny running the hook, allow once, or allow "forever" (until hooks change). This tries to keep with the git spirit of not automatically running anything on the user's computer that got synced down. Note that individual repo commands can add always options to avoid these prompts as they see fit (see below for the 'upload' options). When hooks are run, they are loaded into the current interpreter (the one running repo) and their main() function is run. This mechanism is used (instead of using subprocess) to make it easier to expand to a richer hook interface in the future. During loading, the interpreter's sys.path is updated to contain the directory containing the hooks so that hooks can be split into multiple files. The upload command has two options that control hook behavior: - no-verify=False, verify=False (DEFAULT): If stdout is a tty, can prompt about running upload hooks if needed. If user denies running hooks, the upload is cancelled. If stdout is not a tty and we would need to prompt about upload hooks, upload is cancelled. - no-verify=False, verify=True: Always run upload hooks with no prompt. - no-verify=True, verify=False: Never run upload hooks, but upload anyway (AKA bypass hooks). - no-verify=True, verify=True: Invalid Sample bit of manifest.xml code for enabling hooks (assumes you have a project named 'hooks' where hooks are stored): <repo-hooks in-project="hooks" enabled-list="pre-upload" /> Sample main() function in pre-upload.py in hooks directory: def main(project_list, **kwargs): print ('These projects will be uploaded: %s' % ', '.join(project_list)) print ('I am being a good boy and ignoring anything in kwargs\n' 'that I don\'t understand.') print 'I fail 50% of the time. How flaky.' if random.random() <= .5: raise Exception('Pre-upload hook failed. Have a nice day.') Change-Id: I5cefa2cd5865c72589263cf8e2f152a43c122f70
2011-03-04 19:54:18 +00:00
# This will be filled in if a project is later identified to be the
# project containing repo hooks.
self.enabled_repo_hooks = []
Represent git-submodule as nested projects, take 2 (Previous submission of this change broke Android buildbot due to incorrect regular expression for parsing git-config output. During investigation, we also found that Android, which pulls Chromium, has a workaround for Chromium's submodules; its manifest includes Chromium's submodules. This new change, in addition to fixing the regex, also take this type of workarounds into consideration; it adds a new attribute that makes repo not fetch submodules unless submodules have a project element defined in the manifest, or this attribute is overridden by a parent project element or by the default element.) We need a representation of git-submodule in repo; otherwise repo will not sync submodules, and leave workspace in a broken state. Of course this will not be a problem if all projects are owned by the owner of the manifest file, who may simply choose not to use git-submodule in all projects. However, this is not possible in practice because manifest file owner is unlikely to own all upstream projects. As git submodules are simply git repositories, it is natural to treat them as plain repo projects that live inside a repo project. That is, we could use recursively declared projects to denote the is-submodule relation of git repositories. The behavior of repo remains the same to projects that do not have a sub-project within. As for parent projects, repo fetches them and their sub-projects as normal projects, and then checks out subprojects at the commit specified in parent's commit object. The sub-project is fetched at a path relative to parent project's working directory; so the path specified in manifest file should match that of .gitmodules file. If a submodule is not registered in repo manifest, repo will derive its properties from itself and its parent project, which might not always be correct. In such cases, the subproject is called a derived subproject. To a user, a sub-project is merely a git-submodule; so all tips of working with a git-submodule apply here, too. For example, you should not run `repo sync` in a parent repository if its submodule is dirty. Change-Id: I4b8344c1b9ccad2f58ad304573133e5d52e1faef
2012-01-11 03:28:42 +00:00
@property
def Derived(self):
return self.is_derived
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@property
def Exists(self):
return platform_utils.isdir(self.gitdir) and platform_utils.isdir(self.objdir)
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@property
def CurrentBranch(self):
"""Obtain the name of the currently checked out branch.
The branch name omits the 'refs/heads/' prefix.
None is returned if the project is on a detached HEAD, or if the work_git is
otheriwse inaccessible (e.g. an incomplete sync).
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"""
try:
b = self.work_git.GetHead()
except NoManifestException:
# If the local checkout is in a bad state, don't barf. Let the callers
# process this like the head is unreadable.
return None
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if b.startswith(R_HEADS):
return b[len(R_HEADS):]
return None
def IsRebaseInProgress(self):
return (os.path.exists(self.work_git.GetDotgitPath('rebase-apply')) or
os.path.exists(self.work_git.GetDotgitPath('rebase-merge')) or
os.path.exists(os.path.join(self.worktree, '.dotest')))
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def IsDirty(self, consider_untracked=True):
"""Is the working directory modified in some way?
"""
self.work_git.update_index('-q',
'--unmerged',
'--ignore-missing',
'--refresh')
if self.work_git.DiffZ('diff-index', '-M', '--cached', HEAD):
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return True
if self.work_git.DiffZ('diff-files'):
return True
if consider_untracked and self.work_git.LsOthers():
return True
return False
_userident_name = None
_userident_email = None
@property
def UserName(self):
"""Obtain the user's personal name.
"""
if self._userident_name is None:
self._LoadUserIdentity()
return self._userident_name
@property
def UserEmail(self):
"""Obtain the user's email address. This is very likely
to be their Gerrit login.
"""
if self._userident_email is None:
self._LoadUserIdentity()
return self._userident_email
def _LoadUserIdentity(self):
u = self.bare_git.var('GIT_COMMITTER_IDENT')
m = re.compile("^(.*) <([^>]*)> ").match(u)
if m:
self._userident_name = m.group(1)
self._userident_email = m.group(2)
else:
self._userident_name = ''
self._userident_email = ''
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def GetRemote(self, name):
"""Get the configuration for a single remote.
"""
return self.config.GetRemote(name)
def GetBranch(self, name):
"""Get the configuration for a single branch.
"""
return self.config.GetBranch(name)
def GetBranches(self):
"""Get all existing local branches.
"""
current = self.CurrentBranch
all_refs = self._allrefs
heads = {}
for name, ref_id in all_refs.items():
if name.startswith(R_HEADS):
name = name[len(R_HEADS):]
b = self.GetBranch(name)
b.current = name == current
b.published = None
b.revision = ref_id
heads[name] = b
for name, ref_id in all_refs.items():
if name.startswith(R_PUB):
name = name[len(R_PUB):]
b = heads.get(name)
if b:
b.published = ref_id
return heads
def MatchesGroups(self, manifest_groups):
"""Returns true if the manifest groups specified at init should cause
this project to be synced.
Prefixing a manifest group with "-" inverts the meaning of a group.
All projects are implicitly labelled with "all".
labels are resolved in order. In the example case of
project_groups: "all,group1,group2"
manifest_groups: "-group1,group2"
the project will be matched.
The special manifest group "default" will match any project that
does not have the special project group "notdefault"
"""
expanded_manifest_groups = manifest_groups or ['default']
expanded_project_groups = ['all'] + (self.groups or [])
if 'notdefault' not in expanded_project_groups:
expanded_project_groups += ['default']
matched = False
for group in expanded_manifest_groups:
if group.startswith('-') and group[1:] in expanded_project_groups:
matched = False
elif group in expanded_project_groups:
matched = True
return matched
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# Status Display ##
def UncommitedFiles(self, get_all=True):
"""Returns a list of strings, uncommitted files in the git tree.
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Args:
get_all: a boolean, if True - get information about all different
uncommitted files. If False - return as soon as any kind of
uncommitted files is detected.
"""
details = []
self.work_git.update_index('-q',
'--unmerged',
'--ignore-missing',
'--refresh')
if self.IsRebaseInProgress():
details.append("rebase in progress")
if not get_all:
return details
changes = self.work_git.DiffZ('diff-index', '--cached', HEAD).keys()
if changes:
details.extend(changes)
if not get_all:
return details
changes = self.work_git.DiffZ('diff-files').keys()
if changes:
details.extend(changes)
if not get_all:
return details
changes = self.work_git.LsOthers()
if changes:
details.extend(changes)
return details
def HasChanges(self):
"""Returns true if there are uncommitted changes.
"""
if self.UncommitedFiles(get_all=False):
return True
else:
return False
def PrintWorkTreeStatus(self, output_redir=None, quiet=False):
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"""Prints the status of the repository to stdout.
Args:
output_redir: If specified, redirect the output to this object.
quiet: If True then only print the project name. Do not print
the modified files, branch name, etc.
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"""
if not platform_utils.isdir(self.worktree):
if output_redir is None:
output_redir = sys.stdout
print(file=output_redir)
print('project %s/' % self.relpath, file=output_redir)
print(' missing (run "repo sync")', file=output_redir)
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return
self.work_git.update_index('-q',
'--unmerged',
'--ignore-missing',
'--refresh')
rb = self.IsRebaseInProgress()
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di = self.work_git.DiffZ('diff-index', '-M', '--cached', HEAD)
df = self.work_git.DiffZ('diff-files')
do = self.work_git.LsOthers()
if not rb and not di and not df and not do and not self.CurrentBranch:
return 'CLEAN'
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out = StatusColoring(self.config)
if output_redir is not None:
out.redirect(output_redir)
out.project('project %-40s', self.relpath + '/ ')
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if quiet:
out.nl()
return 'DIRTY'
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branch = self.CurrentBranch
if branch is None:
out.nobranch('(*** NO BRANCH ***)')
else:
out.branch('branch %s', branch)
out.nl()
if rb:
out.important('prior sync failed; rebase still in progress')
out.nl()
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paths = list()
paths.extend(di.keys())
paths.extend(df.keys())
paths.extend(do)
for p in sorted(set(paths)):
try:
i = di[p]
except KeyError:
i = None
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try:
f = df[p]
except KeyError:
f = None
if i:
i_status = i.status.upper()
else:
i_status = '-'
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if f:
f_status = f.status.lower()
else:
f_status = '-'
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if i and i.src_path:
line = ' %s%s\t%s => %s (%s%%)' % (i_status, f_status,
i.src_path, p, i.level)
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else:
line = ' %s%s\t%s' % (i_status, f_status, p)
if i and not f:
out.added('%s', line)
elif (i and f) or (not i and f):
out.changed('%s', line)
elif not i and not f:
out.untracked('%s', line)
else:
out.write('%s', line)
out.nl()
return 'DIRTY'
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def PrintWorkTreeDiff(self, absolute_paths=False, output_redir=None):
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"""Prints the status of the repository to stdout.
"""
out = DiffColoring(self.config)
if output_redir:
out.redirect(output_redir)
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cmd = ['diff']
if out.is_on:
cmd.append('--color')
cmd.append(HEAD)
if absolute_paths:
cmd.append('--src-prefix=a/%s/' % self.relpath)
cmd.append('--dst-prefix=b/%s/' % self.relpath)
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cmd.append('--')
try:
p = GitCommand(self,
cmd,
capture_stdout=True,
capture_stderr=True)
p.Wait()
except GitError as e:
out.nl()
out.project('project %s/' % self.relpath)
out.nl()
out.fail('%s', str(e))
out.nl()
return False
if p.stdout:
out.nl()
out.project('project %s/' % self.relpath)
out.nl()
out.write('%s', p.stdout)
return p.Wait() == 0
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# Publish / Upload ##
def WasPublished(self, branch, all_refs=None):
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"""Was the branch published (uploaded) for code review?
If so, returns the SHA-1 hash of the last published
state for the branch.
"""
key = R_PUB + branch
if all_refs is None:
try:
return self.bare_git.rev_parse(key)
except GitError:
return None
else:
try:
return all_refs[key]
except KeyError:
return None
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def CleanPublishedCache(self, all_refs=None):
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"""Prunes any stale published refs.
"""
if all_refs is None:
all_refs = self._allrefs
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heads = set()
canrm = {}
for name, ref_id in all_refs.items():
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if name.startswith(R_HEADS):
heads.add(name)
elif name.startswith(R_PUB):
canrm[name] = ref_id
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for name, ref_id in canrm.items():
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n = name[len(R_PUB):]
if R_HEADS + n not in heads:
self.bare_git.DeleteRef(name, ref_id)
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def GetUploadableBranches(self, selected_branch=None):
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"""List any branches which can be uploaded for review.
"""
heads = {}
pubed = {}
for name, ref_id in self._allrefs.items():
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if name.startswith(R_HEADS):
heads[name[len(R_HEADS):]] = ref_id
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elif name.startswith(R_PUB):
pubed[name[len(R_PUB):]] = ref_id
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ready = []
for branch, ref_id in heads.items():
if branch in pubed and pubed[branch] == ref_id:
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continue
if selected_branch and branch != selected_branch:
continue
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rb = self.GetUploadableBranch(branch)
if rb:
ready.append(rb)
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return ready
def GetUploadableBranch(self, branch_name):
"""Get a single uploadable branch, or None.
"""
branch = self.GetBranch(branch_name)
base = branch.LocalMerge
if branch.LocalMerge:
rb = ReviewableBranch(self, branch, base)
if rb.commits:
return rb
return None
def UploadForReview(self, branch=None,
people=([], []),
dryrun=False,
auto_topic=False,
hashtags=(),
labels=(),
private=False,
notify=None,
wip=False,
dest_branch=None,
validate_certs=True,
push_options=None):
2008-10-21 14:00:00 +00:00
"""Uploads the named branch for code review.
"""
if branch is None:
branch = self.CurrentBranch
if branch is None:
raise GitError('not currently on a branch')
branch = self.GetBranch(branch)
if not branch.LocalMerge:
raise GitError('branch %s does not track a remote' % branch.name)
if not branch.remote.review:
raise GitError('remote %s has no review url' % branch.remote.name)
if dest_branch is None:
dest_branch = self.dest_branch
if dest_branch is None:
dest_branch = branch.merge
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if not dest_branch.startswith(R_HEADS):
dest_branch = R_HEADS + dest_branch
if not branch.remote.projectname:
branch.remote.projectname = self.name
branch.remote.Save()
url = branch.remote.ReviewUrl(self.UserEmail, validate_certs)
if url is None:
raise UploadError('review not configured')
cmd = ['push']
if dryrun:
cmd.append('-n')
if url.startswith('ssh://'):
cmd.append('--receive-pack=gerrit receive-pack')
for push_option in (push_options or []):
cmd.append('-o')
cmd.append(push_option)
cmd.append(url)
if dest_branch.startswith(R_HEADS):
dest_branch = dest_branch[len(R_HEADS):]
ref_spec = '%s:refs/for/%s' % (R_HEADS + branch.name, dest_branch)
opts = []
if auto_topic:
opts += ['topic=' + branch.name]
opts += ['t=%s' % p for p in hashtags]
opts += ['l=%s' % p for p in labels]
opts += ['r=%s' % p for p in people[0]]
opts += ['cc=%s' % p for p in people[1]]
if notify:
opts += ['notify=' + notify]
if private:
opts += ['private']
if wip:
opts += ['wip']
if opts:
ref_spec = ref_spec + '%' + ','.join(opts)
cmd.append(ref_spec)
if GitCommand(self, cmd, bare=True).Wait() != 0:
raise UploadError('Upload failed')
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if not dryrun:
msg = "posted to %s for %s" % (branch.remote.review, dest_branch)
self.bare_git.UpdateRef(R_PUB + branch.name,
R_HEADS + branch.name,
message=msg)
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# Sync ##
def _ExtractArchive(self, tarpath, path=None):
"""Extract the given tar on its current location
Args:
- tarpath: The path to the actual tar file
"""
try:
with tarfile.open(tarpath, 'r') as tar:
tar.extractall(path=path)
return True
except (IOError, tarfile.TarError) as e:
_error("Cannot extract archive %s: %s", tarpath, str(e))
return False
def Sync_NetworkHalf(self,
quiet=False,
verbose=False,
output_redir=None,
is_new=None,
current_branch_only=False,
force_sync=False,
clone_bundle=True,
tags=True,
archive=False,
optimized_fetch=False,
retry_fetches=0,
prune=False,
submodules=False,
init: Added --partial-clone-exclude option. partial-clone-exclude option excludes projects during partial clone. This is a comma-delimited project names (from manifest.xml). This option is persisted and it is used by the sync command. A project that has been unparital'ed will remain unpartial if that project's name is specified in the --partial-clone-exclude option. The project name should match exactly. Added $ ./run_tests -v Bug: [google internal] b/175712967 "I can't "unpartial" my androidx-main checkout" $ rm -rf androidx-main/ $ mkdir androidx-main/ $ cd androidx-main/ $ repo_dev init -u https://android.googlesource.com/platform/manifest -b androidx-main --partial-clone --clone-filter=blob:limit=10M -m default.xml $ repo_dev sync -c -j8 + Verify a project is partial $ cd frameworks/support/ $ git config -l | grep 'partial' + Unpartial a project. $ /google/bin/releases/android/git_repack/git_unpartial + Verify project is unpartial $ git config -l | grep 'partial' $ cd ../.. + Exclude the project from being unparial'ed after init and sync. $ repo_dev init -u https://android.googlesource.com/platform/manifest -b androidx-main --partial-clone --clone-filter=blob:limit=10M --partial-clone-exclude="platform/frameworks/support,platform/frameworks/support-golden" -m default.xml + Verify project is unpartial $ cd frameworks/support/ $ git config -l | grep 'partial' $ cd ../.. $ repo_dev sync -c -j8 $ cd frameworks/support/ $ git config -l | grep 'partial' $ cd ../.. + Remove the project from exclude list and verify that project is partially cloned. $ repo_dev init -u https://android.googlesource.com/platform/manifest -b androidx-main --partial-clone --clone-filter=blob:limit=10M --partial-clone-exclude= -m default.xml $ repo_dev sync -c -j8 $ cd frameworks/support/ $ git config -l | grep 'partial' Change-Id: Id5dba418eba1d3f54b54e826000406534c0ec196 Reviewed-on: https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/c/git-repo/+/303162 Reviewed-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@google.com> Tested-by: Raman Tenneti <rtenneti@google.com>
2021-04-13 03:57:25 +00:00
clone_filter=None,
partial_clone_exclude=set()):
2008-10-21 14:00:00 +00:00
"""Perform only the network IO portion of the sync process.
Local working directory/branch state is not affected.
"""
if archive and not isinstance(self, MetaProject):
if self.remote.url.startswith(('http://', 'https://')):
_error("%s: Cannot fetch archives from http/https remotes.", self.name)
return False
name = self.relpath.replace('\\', '/')
name = name.replace('/', '_')
tarpath = '%s.tar' % name
topdir = self.manifest.topdir
try:
self._FetchArchive(tarpath, cwd=topdir)
except GitError as e:
_error('%s', e)
return False
# From now on, we only need absolute tarpath
tarpath = os.path.join(topdir, tarpath)
if not self._ExtractArchive(tarpath, path=topdir):
return False
try:
platform_utils.remove(tarpath)
except OSError as e:
_warn("Cannot remove archive %s: %s", tarpath, str(e))
self._CopyAndLinkFiles()
return True
# If the shared object dir already exists, don't try to rebootstrap with a
# clone bundle download. We should have the majority of objects already.
if clone_bundle and os.path.exists(self.objdir):
clone_bundle = False
init: Added --partial-clone-exclude option. partial-clone-exclude option excludes projects during partial clone. This is a comma-delimited project names (from manifest.xml). This option is persisted and it is used by the sync command. A project that has been unparital'ed will remain unpartial if that project's name is specified in the --partial-clone-exclude option. The project name should match exactly. Added $ ./run_tests -v Bug: [google internal] b/175712967 "I can't "unpartial" my androidx-main checkout" $ rm -rf androidx-main/ $ mkdir androidx-main/ $ cd androidx-main/ $ repo_dev init -u https://android.googlesource.com/platform/manifest -b androidx-main --partial-clone --clone-filter=blob:limit=10M -m default.xml $ repo_dev sync -c -j8 + Verify a project is partial $ cd frameworks/support/ $ git config -l | grep 'partial' + Unpartial a project. $ /google/bin/releases/android/git_repack/git_unpartial + Verify project is unpartial $ git config -l | grep 'partial' $ cd ../.. + Exclude the project from being unparial'ed after init and sync. $ repo_dev init -u https://android.googlesource.com/platform/manifest -b androidx-main --partial-clone --clone-filter=blob:limit=10M --partial-clone-exclude="platform/frameworks/support,platform/frameworks/support-golden" -m default.xml + Verify project is unpartial $ cd frameworks/support/ $ git config -l | grep 'partial' $ cd ../.. $ repo_dev sync -c -j8 $ cd frameworks/support/ $ git config -l | grep 'partial' $ cd ../.. + Remove the project from exclude list and verify that project is partially cloned. $ repo_dev init -u https://android.googlesource.com/platform/manifest -b androidx-main --partial-clone --clone-filter=blob:limit=10M --partial-clone-exclude= -m default.xml $ repo_dev sync -c -j8 $ cd frameworks/support/ $ git config -l | grep 'partial' Change-Id: Id5dba418eba1d3f54b54e826000406534c0ec196 Reviewed-on: https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/c/git-repo/+/303162 Reviewed-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@google.com> Tested-by: Raman Tenneti <rtenneti@google.com>
2021-04-13 03:57:25 +00:00
if self.name in partial_clone_exclude:
clone_bundle = True
clone_filter = None
if is_new is None:
is_new = not self.Exists
if is_new:
self._InitGitDir(force_sync=force_sync, quiet=quiet)
else:
self._UpdateHooks(quiet=quiet)
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self._InitRemote()
if is_new:
alt = os.path.join(self.gitdir, 'objects/info/alternates')
try:
with open(alt) as fd:
# This works for both absolute and relative alternate directories.
alt_dir = os.path.join(self.objdir, 'objects', fd.readline().rstrip())
except IOError:
alt_dir = None
else:
alt_dir = None
if (clone_bundle
and alt_dir is None
and self._ApplyCloneBundle(initial=is_new, quiet=quiet, verbose=verbose)):
is_new = False
if not current_branch_only:
if self.sync_c:
current_branch_only = True
elif not self.manifest._loaded:
# Manifest cannot check defaults until it syncs.
current_branch_only = False
elif self.manifest.default.sync_c:
current_branch_only = True
if not self.sync_tags:
tags = False
if self.clone_depth:
depth = self.clone_depth
else:
depth = self.manifest.manifestProject.config.GetString('repo.depth')
# See if we can skip the network fetch entirely.
if not (optimized_fetch and
(ID_RE.match(self.revisionExpr) and
self._CheckForImmutableRevision())):
if not self._RemoteFetch(
initial=is_new,
quiet=quiet, verbose=verbose, output_redir=output_redir,
alt_dir=alt_dir, current_branch_only=current_branch_only,
tags=tags, prune=prune, depth=depth,
submodules=submodules, force_sync=force_sync,
clone_filter=clone_filter, retry_fetches=retry_fetches):
return False
mp = self.manifest.manifestProject
dissociate = mp.config.GetBoolean('repo.dissociate')
if dissociate:
alternates_file = os.path.join(self.gitdir, 'objects/info/alternates')
if os.path.exists(alternates_file):
cmd = ['repack', '-a', '-d']
p = GitCommand(self, cmd, bare=True, capture_stdout=bool(output_redir),
merge_output=bool(output_redir))
if p.stdout and output_redir:
output_redir.write(p.stdout)
if p.Wait() != 0:
return False
platform_utils.remove(alternates_file)
if self.worktree:
self._InitMRef()
else:
self._InitMirrorHead()
try:
platform_utils.remove(os.path.join(self.gitdir, 'FETCH_HEAD'))
except OSError:
pass
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return True
def PostRepoUpgrade(self):
self._InitHooks()
def _CopyAndLinkFiles(self):
if self.client.isGitcClient:
return
for copyfile in self.copyfiles:
copyfile._Copy()
for linkfile in self.linkfiles:
linkfile._Link()
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def GetCommitRevisionId(self):
"""Get revisionId of a commit.
Use this method instead of GetRevisionId to get the id of the commit rather
than the id of the current git object (for example, a tag)
"""
if not self.revisionExpr.startswith(R_TAGS):
return self.GetRevisionId(self._allrefs)
try:
return self.bare_git.rev_list(self.revisionExpr, '-1')[0]
except GitError:
raise ManifestInvalidRevisionError('revision %s in %s not found' %
(self.revisionExpr, self.name))
def GetRevisionId(self, all_refs=None):
if self.revisionId:
return self.revisionId
rem = self.GetRemote(self.remote.name)
rev = rem.ToLocal(self.revisionExpr)
if all_refs is not None and rev in all_refs:
return all_refs[rev]
try:
return self.bare_git.rev_parse('--verify', '%s^0' % rev)
except GitError:
raise ManifestInvalidRevisionError('revision %s in %s not found' %
(self.revisionExpr, self.name))
def SetRevisionId(self, revisionId):
if self.clone_depth or self.manifest.manifestProject.config.GetString('repo.depth'):
self.upstream = self.revisionExpr
self.revisionId = revisionId
def Sync_LocalHalf(self, syncbuf, force_sync=False, submodules=False):
2008-10-21 14:00:00 +00:00
"""Perform only the local IO portion of the sync process.
Network access is not required.
"""
if not os.path.exists(self.gitdir):
syncbuf.fail(self,
'Cannot checkout %s due to missing network sync; Run '
'`repo sync -n %s` first.' %
(self.name, self.name))
return
self._InitWorkTree(force_sync=force_sync, submodules=submodules)
all_refs = self.bare_ref.all
self.CleanPublishedCache(all_refs)
revid = self.GetRevisionId(all_refs)
# Special case the root of the repo client checkout. Make sure it doesn't
# contain files being checked out to dirs we don't allow.
if self.relpath == '.':
PROTECTED_PATHS = {'.repo'}
paths = set(self.work_git.ls_tree('-z', '--name-only', '--', revid).split('\0'))
bad_paths = paths & PROTECTED_PATHS
if bad_paths:
syncbuf.fail(self,
'Refusing to checkout project that writes to protected '
'paths: %s' % (', '.join(bad_paths),))
return
def _doff():
self._FastForward(revid)
self._CopyAndLinkFiles()
def _dosubmodules():
self._SyncSubmodules(quiet=True)
head = self.work_git.GetHead()
if head.startswith(R_HEADS):
branch = head[len(R_HEADS):]
try:
head = all_refs[head]
except KeyError:
head = None
else:
branch = None
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if branch is None or syncbuf.detach_head:
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# Currently on a detached HEAD. The user is assumed to
# not have any local modifications worth worrying about.
#
if self.IsRebaseInProgress():
syncbuf.fail(self, _PriorSyncFailedError())
return
if head == revid:
# No changes; don't do anything further.
# Except if the head needs to be detached
#
if not syncbuf.detach_head:
# The copy/linkfile config may have changed.
self._CopyAndLinkFiles()
return
else:
lost = self._revlist(not_rev(revid), HEAD)
if lost:
syncbuf.info(self, "discarding %d commits", len(lost))
2008-10-21 14:00:00 +00:00
try:
self._Checkout(revid, quiet=True)
if submodules:
self._SyncSubmodules(quiet=True)
except GitError as e:
syncbuf.fail(self, e)
return
self._CopyAndLinkFiles()
return
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if head == revid:
# No changes; don't do anything further.
#
# The copy/linkfile config may have changed.
self._CopyAndLinkFiles()
return
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branch = self.GetBranch(branch)
if not branch.LocalMerge:
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# The current branch has no tracking configuration.
# Jump off it to a detached HEAD.
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#
syncbuf.info(self,
"leaving %s; does not track upstream",
branch.name)
2008-10-21 14:00:00 +00:00
try:
self._Checkout(revid, quiet=True)
if submodules:
self._SyncSubmodules(quiet=True)
except GitError as e:
syncbuf.fail(self, e)
return
self._CopyAndLinkFiles()
return
2008-10-21 14:00:00 +00:00
upstream_gain = self._revlist(not_rev(HEAD), revid)
# See if we can perform a fast forward merge. This can happen if our
# branch isn't in the exact same state as we last published.
try:
self.work_git.merge_base('--is-ancestor', HEAD, revid)
# Skip the published logic.
pub = False
except GitError:
pub = self.WasPublished(branch.name, all_refs)
2008-10-21 14:00:00 +00:00
if pub:
not_merged = self._revlist(not_rev(revid), pub)
2008-10-21 14:00:00 +00:00
if not_merged:
if upstream_gain:
# The user has published this branch and some of those
# commits are not yet merged upstream. We do not want
# to rewrite the published commits so we punt.
#
syncbuf.fail(self,
"branch %s is published (but not merged) and is now "
"%d commits behind" % (branch.name, len(upstream_gain)))
return
elif pub == head:
# All published commits are merged, and thus we are a
# strict subset. We can fast-forward safely.
#
syncbuf.later1(self, _doff)
if submodules:
syncbuf.later1(self, _dosubmodules)
return
2008-10-21 14:00:00 +00:00
# Examine the local commits not in the remote. Find the
# last one attributed to this user, if any.
#
local_changes = self._revlist(not_rev(revid), HEAD, format='%H %ce')
last_mine = None
cnt_mine = 0
for commit in local_changes:
commit_id, committer_email = commit.split(' ', 1)
if committer_email == self.UserEmail:
last_mine = commit_id
cnt_mine += 1
if not upstream_gain and cnt_mine == len(local_changes):
return
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if self.IsDirty(consider_untracked=False):
syncbuf.fail(self, _DirtyError())
return
2008-10-21 14:00:00 +00:00
# If the upstream switched on us, warn the user.
#
if branch.merge != self.revisionExpr:
if branch.merge and self.revisionExpr:
syncbuf.info(self,
'manifest switched %s...%s',
branch.merge,
self.revisionExpr)
elif branch.merge:
syncbuf.info(self,
'manifest no longer tracks %s',
branch.merge)
if cnt_mine < len(local_changes):
2008-10-21 14:00:00 +00:00
# Upstream rebased. Not everything in HEAD
# was created by this user.
2008-10-21 14:00:00 +00:00
#
syncbuf.info(self,
"discarding %d commits removed from upstream",
len(local_changes) - cnt_mine)
2008-10-21 14:00:00 +00:00
branch.remote = self.GetRemote(self.remote.name)
if not ID_RE.match(self.revisionExpr):
# in case of manifest sync the revisionExpr might be a SHA1
branch.merge = self.revisionExpr
if not branch.merge.startswith('refs/'):
branch.merge = R_HEADS + branch.merge
2008-10-21 14:00:00 +00:00
branch.Save()
if cnt_mine > 0 and self.rebase:
def _docopyandlink():
self._CopyAndLinkFiles()
def _dorebase():
self._Rebase(upstream='%s^1' % last_mine, onto=revid)
syncbuf.later2(self, _dorebase)
if submodules:
syncbuf.later2(self, _dosubmodules)
syncbuf.later2(self, _docopyandlink)
elif local_changes:
2008-10-21 14:00:00 +00:00
try:
self._ResetHard(revid)
if submodules:
self._SyncSubmodules(quiet=True)
self._CopyAndLinkFiles()
except GitError as e:
syncbuf.fail(self, e)
return
2008-10-21 14:00:00 +00:00
else:
syncbuf.later1(self, _doff)
if submodules:
syncbuf.later1(self, _dosubmodules)
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def AddCopyFile(self, src, dest, topdir):
"""Mark |src| for copying to |dest| (relative to |topdir|).
No filesystem changes occur here. Actual copying happens later on.
Paths should have basic validation run on them before being queued.
Further checking will be handled when the actual copy happens.
"""
self.copyfiles.append(_CopyFile(self.worktree, src, topdir, dest))
def AddLinkFile(self, src, dest, topdir):
"""Mark |dest| to create a symlink (relative to |topdir|) pointing to |src|.
No filesystem changes occur here. Actual linking happens later on.
Paths should have basic validation run on them before being queued.
Further checking will be handled when the actual link happens.
"""
self.linkfiles.append(_LinkFile(self.worktree, src, topdir, dest))
def AddAnnotation(self, name, value, keep):
self.annotations.append(_Annotation(name, value, keep))
def DownloadPatchSet(self, change_id, patch_id):
"""Download a single patch set of a single change to FETCH_HEAD.
"""
remote = self.GetRemote(self.remote.name)
cmd = ['fetch', remote.name]
cmd.append('refs/changes/%2.2d/%d/%d'
% (change_id % 100, change_id, patch_id))
if GitCommand(self, cmd, bare=True).Wait() != 0:
return None
return DownloadedChange(self,
self.GetRevisionId(),
change_id,
patch_id,
self.bare_git.rev_parse('FETCH_HEAD'))
def DeleteWorktree(self, quiet=False, force=False):
"""Delete the source checkout and any other housekeeping tasks.
This currently leaves behind the internal .repo/ cache state. This helps
when switching branches or manifest changes get reverted as we don't have
to redownload all the git objects. But we should do some GC at some point.
Args:
quiet: Whether to hide normal messages.
force: Always delete tree even if dirty.
Returns:
True if the worktree was completely cleaned out.
"""
if self.IsDirty():
if force:
print('warning: %s: Removing dirty project: uncommitted changes lost.' %
(self.relpath,), file=sys.stderr)
else:
print('error: %s: Cannot remove project: uncommitted changes are '
'present.\n' % (self.relpath,), file=sys.stderr)
return False
if not quiet:
print('%s: Deleting obsolete checkout.' % (self.relpath,))
# Unlock and delink from the main worktree. We don't use git's worktree
# remove because it will recursively delete projects -- we handle that
# ourselves below. https://crbug.com/git/48
if self.use_git_worktrees:
needle = platform_utils.realpath(self.gitdir)
# Find the git worktree commondir under .repo/worktrees/.
output = self.bare_git.worktree('list', '--porcelain').splitlines()[0]
assert output.startswith('worktree '), output
commondir = output[9:]
# Walk each of the git worktrees to see where they point.
configs = os.path.join(commondir, 'worktrees')
for name in os.listdir(configs):
gitdir = os.path.join(configs, name, 'gitdir')
with open(gitdir) as fp:
relpath = fp.read().strip()
# Resolve the checkout path and see if it matches this project.
fullpath = platform_utils.realpath(os.path.join(configs, name, relpath))
if fullpath == needle:
platform_utils.rmtree(os.path.join(configs, name))
# Delete the .git directory first, so we're less likely to have a partially
# working git repository around. There shouldn't be any git projects here,
# so rmtree works.
# Try to remove plain files first in case of git worktrees. If this fails
# for any reason, we'll fall back to rmtree, and that'll display errors if
# it can't remove things either.
try:
platform_utils.remove(self.gitdir)
except OSError:
pass
try:
platform_utils.rmtree(self.gitdir)
except OSError as e:
if e.errno != errno.ENOENT:
print('error: %s: %s' % (self.gitdir, e), file=sys.stderr)
print('error: %s: Failed to delete obsolete checkout; remove manually, '
'then run `repo sync -l`.' % (self.relpath,), file=sys.stderr)
return False
# Delete everything under the worktree, except for directories that contain
# another git project.
dirs_to_remove = []
failed = False
for root, dirs, files in platform_utils.walk(self.worktree):
for f in files:
path = os.path.join(root, f)
try:
platform_utils.remove(path)
except OSError as e:
if e.errno != errno.ENOENT:
print('error: %s: Failed to remove: %s' % (path, e), file=sys.stderr)
failed = True
dirs[:] = [d for d in dirs
if not os.path.lexists(os.path.join(root, d, '.git'))]
dirs_to_remove += [os.path.join(root, d) for d in dirs
if os.path.join(root, d) not in dirs_to_remove]
for d in reversed(dirs_to_remove):
if platform_utils.islink(d):
try:
platform_utils.remove(d)
except OSError as e:
if e.errno != errno.ENOENT:
print('error: %s: Failed to remove: %s' % (d, e), file=sys.stderr)
failed = True
elif not platform_utils.listdir(d):
try:
platform_utils.rmdir(d)
except OSError as e:
if e.errno != errno.ENOENT:
print('error: %s: Failed to remove: %s' % (d, e), file=sys.stderr)
failed = True
if failed:
print('error: %s: Failed to delete obsolete checkout.' % (self.relpath,),
file=sys.stderr)
print(' Remove manually, then run `repo sync -l`.', file=sys.stderr)
return False
# Try deleting parent dirs if they are empty.
path = self.worktree
while path != self.manifest.topdir:
try:
platform_utils.rmdir(path)
except OSError as e:
if e.errno != errno.ENOENT:
break
path = os.path.dirname(path)
return True
# Branch Management ##
def StartBranch(self, name, branch_merge='', revision=None):
2008-10-21 14:00:00 +00:00
"""Create a new branch off the manifest's revision.
"""
if not branch_merge:
branch_merge = self.revisionExpr
head = self.work_git.GetHead()
if head == (R_HEADS + name):
return True
all_refs = self.bare_ref.all
if R_HEADS + name in all_refs:
return GitCommand(self,
['checkout', name, '--'],
capture_stdout=True,
capture_stderr=True).Wait() == 0
branch = self.GetBranch(name)
branch.remote = self.GetRemote(self.remote.name)
branch.merge = branch_merge
if not branch.merge.startswith('refs/') and not ID_RE.match(branch_merge):
branch.merge = R_HEADS + branch_merge
if revision is None:
revid = self.GetRevisionId(all_refs)
else:
revid = self.work_git.rev_parse(revision)
if head.startswith(R_HEADS):
try:
head = all_refs[head]
except KeyError:
head = None
if revid and head and revid == head:
ref = R_HEADS + name
self.work_git.update_ref(ref, revid)
self.work_git.symbolic_ref(HEAD, ref)
branch.Save()
return True
if GitCommand(self,
['checkout', '-b', branch.name, revid],
capture_stdout=True,
capture_stderr=True).Wait() == 0:
branch.Save()
return True
return False
2008-10-21 14:00:00 +00:00
def CheckoutBranch(self, name):
"""Checkout a local topic branch.
Args:
name: The name of the branch to checkout.
Returns:
True if the checkout succeeded; False if it didn't; None if the branch
didn't exist.
"""
rev = R_HEADS + name
head = self.work_git.GetHead()
if head == rev:
# Already on the branch
#
return True
all_refs = self.bare_ref.all
try:
revid = all_refs[rev]
except KeyError:
# Branch does not exist in this project
#
return None
if head.startswith(R_HEADS):
try:
head = all_refs[head]
except KeyError:
head = None
if head == revid:
# Same revision; just update HEAD to point to the new
# target branch, but otherwise take no other action.
#
_lwrite(self.work_git.GetDotgitPath(subpath=HEAD),
'ref: %s%s\n' % (R_HEADS, name))
return True
return GitCommand(self,
['checkout', name, '--'],
capture_stdout=True,
capture_stderr=True).Wait() == 0
def AbandonBranch(self, name):
"""Destroy a local topic branch.
Args:
name: The name of the branch to abandon.
Returns:
True if the abandon succeeded; False if it didn't; None if the branch
didn't exist.
"""
rev = R_HEADS + name
all_refs = self.bare_ref.all
if rev not in all_refs:
# Doesn't exist
return None
head = self.work_git.GetHead()
if head == rev:
# We can't destroy the branch while we are sitting
# on it. Switch to a detached HEAD.
#
head = all_refs[head]
revid = self.GetRevisionId(all_refs)
if head == revid:
_lwrite(self.work_git.GetDotgitPath(subpath=HEAD), '%s\n' % revid)
else:
self._Checkout(revid, quiet=True)
return GitCommand(self,
['branch', '-D', name],
capture_stdout=True,
capture_stderr=True).Wait() == 0
2008-10-21 14:00:00 +00:00
def PruneHeads(self):
"""Prune any topic branches already merged into upstream.
"""
cb = self.CurrentBranch
kill = []
left = self._allrefs
for name in left.keys():
2008-10-21 14:00:00 +00:00
if name.startswith(R_HEADS):
name = name[len(R_HEADS):]
if cb is None or name != cb:
kill.append(name)
# Minor optimization: If there's nothing to prune, then don't try to read
# any project state.
if not kill and not cb:
return []
rev = self.GetRevisionId(left)
2008-10-21 14:00:00 +00:00
if cb is not None \
and not self._revlist(HEAD + '...' + rev) \
and not self.IsDirty(consider_untracked=False):
2008-10-21 14:00:00 +00:00
self.work_git.DetachHead(HEAD)
kill.append(cb)
if kill:
old = self.bare_git.GetHead()
2008-10-21 14:00:00 +00:00
try:
self.bare_git.DetachHead(rev)
b = ['branch', '-d']
b.extend(kill)
b = GitCommand(self, b, bare=True,
capture_stdout=True,
capture_stderr=True)
b.Wait()
finally:
if ID_RE.match(old):
self.bare_git.DetachHead(old)
else:
self.bare_git.SetHead(old)
left = self._allrefs
2008-10-21 14:00:00 +00:00
for branch in kill:
if (R_HEADS + branch) not in left:
self.CleanPublishedCache()
break
2008-10-21 14:00:00 +00:00
if cb and cb not in kill:
kill.append(cb)
kill.sort()
2008-10-21 14:00:00 +00:00
kept = []
for branch in kill:
if R_HEADS + branch in left:
2008-10-21 14:00:00 +00:00
branch = self.GetBranch(branch)
base = branch.LocalMerge
if not base:
base = rev
kept.append(ReviewableBranch(self, branch, base))
return kept
# Submodule Management ##
Represent git-submodule as nested projects, take 2 (Previous submission of this change broke Android buildbot due to incorrect regular expression for parsing git-config output. During investigation, we also found that Android, which pulls Chromium, has a workaround for Chromium's submodules; its manifest includes Chromium's submodules. This new change, in addition to fixing the regex, also take this type of workarounds into consideration; it adds a new attribute that makes repo not fetch submodules unless submodules have a project element defined in the manifest, or this attribute is overridden by a parent project element or by the default element.) We need a representation of git-submodule in repo; otherwise repo will not sync submodules, and leave workspace in a broken state. Of course this will not be a problem if all projects are owned by the owner of the manifest file, who may simply choose not to use git-submodule in all projects. However, this is not possible in practice because manifest file owner is unlikely to own all upstream projects. As git submodules are simply git repositories, it is natural to treat them as plain repo projects that live inside a repo project. That is, we could use recursively declared projects to denote the is-submodule relation of git repositories. The behavior of repo remains the same to projects that do not have a sub-project within. As for parent projects, repo fetches them and their sub-projects as normal projects, and then checks out subprojects at the commit specified in parent's commit object. The sub-project is fetched at a path relative to parent project's working directory; so the path specified in manifest file should match that of .gitmodules file. If a submodule is not registered in repo manifest, repo will derive its properties from itself and its parent project, which might not always be correct. In such cases, the subproject is called a derived subproject. To a user, a sub-project is merely a git-submodule; so all tips of working with a git-submodule apply here, too. For example, you should not run `repo sync` in a parent repository if its submodule is dirty. Change-Id: I4b8344c1b9ccad2f58ad304573133e5d52e1faef
2012-01-11 03:28:42 +00:00
def GetRegisteredSubprojects(self):
result = []
Represent git-submodule as nested projects, take 2 (Previous submission of this change broke Android buildbot due to incorrect regular expression for parsing git-config output. During investigation, we also found that Android, which pulls Chromium, has a workaround for Chromium's submodules; its manifest includes Chromium's submodules. This new change, in addition to fixing the regex, also take this type of workarounds into consideration; it adds a new attribute that makes repo not fetch submodules unless submodules have a project element defined in the manifest, or this attribute is overridden by a parent project element or by the default element.) We need a representation of git-submodule in repo; otherwise repo will not sync submodules, and leave workspace in a broken state. Of course this will not be a problem if all projects are owned by the owner of the manifest file, who may simply choose not to use git-submodule in all projects. However, this is not possible in practice because manifest file owner is unlikely to own all upstream projects. As git submodules are simply git repositories, it is natural to treat them as plain repo projects that live inside a repo project. That is, we could use recursively declared projects to denote the is-submodule relation of git repositories. The behavior of repo remains the same to projects that do not have a sub-project within. As for parent projects, repo fetches them and their sub-projects as normal projects, and then checks out subprojects at the commit specified in parent's commit object. The sub-project is fetched at a path relative to parent project's working directory; so the path specified in manifest file should match that of .gitmodules file. If a submodule is not registered in repo manifest, repo will derive its properties from itself and its parent project, which might not always be correct. In such cases, the subproject is called a derived subproject. To a user, a sub-project is merely a git-submodule; so all tips of working with a git-submodule apply here, too. For example, you should not run `repo sync` in a parent repository if its submodule is dirty. Change-Id: I4b8344c1b9ccad2f58ad304573133e5d52e1faef
2012-01-11 03:28:42 +00:00
def rec(subprojects):
if not subprojects:
return
result.extend(subprojects)
for p in subprojects:
rec(p.subprojects)
rec(self.subprojects)
return result
def _GetSubmodules(self):
# Unfortunately we cannot call `git submodule status --recursive` here
# because the working tree might not exist yet, and it cannot be used
# without a working tree in its current implementation.
def get_submodules(gitdir, rev):
# Parse .gitmodules for submodule sub_paths and sub_urls
sub_paths, sub_urls = parse_gitmodules(gitdir, rev)
if not sub_paths:
return []
# Run `git ls-tree` to read SHAs of submodule object, which happen to be
# revision of submodule repository
sub_revs = git_ls_tree(gitdir, rev, sub_paths)
submodules = []
for sub_path, sub_url in zip(sub_paths, sub_urls):
try:
sub_rev = sub_revs[sub_path]
except KeyError:
# Ignore non-exist submodules
continue
submodules.append((sub_rev, sub_path, sub_url))
return submodules
re_path = re.compile(r'^submodule\.(.+)\.path=(.*)$')
re_url = re.compile(r'^submodule\.(.+)\.url=(.*)$')
Represent git-submodule as nested projects, take 2 (Previous submission of this change broke Android buildbot due to incorrect regular expression for parsing git-config output. During investigation, we also found that Android, which pulls Chromium, has a workaround for Chromium's submodules; its manifest includes Chromium's submodules. This new change, in addition to fixing the regex, also take this type of workarounds into consideration; it adds a new attribute that makes repo not fetch submodules unless submodules have a project element defined in the manifest, or this attribute is overridden by a parent project element or by the default element.) We need a representation of git-submodule in repo; otherwise repo will not sync submodules, and leave workspace in a broken state. Of course this will not be a problem if all projects are owned by the owner of the manifest file, who may simply choose not to use git-submodule in all projects. However, this is not possible in practice because manifest file owner is unlikely to own all upstream projects. As git submodules are simply git repositories, it is natural to treat them as plain repo projects that live inside a repo project. That is, we could use recursively declared projects to denote the is-submodule relation of git repositories. The behavior of repo remains the same to projects that do not have a sub-project within. As for parent projects, repo fetches them and their sub-projects as normal projects, and then checks out subprojects at the commit specified in parent's commit object. The sub-project is fetched at a path relative to parent project's working directory; so the path specified in manifest file should match that of .gitmodules file. If a submodule is not registered in repo manifest, repo will derive its properties from itself and its parent project, which might not always be correct. In such cases, the subproject is called a derived subproject. To a user, a sub-project is merely a git-submodule; so all tips of working with a git-submodule apply here, too. For example, you should not run `repo sync` in a parent repository if its submodule is dirty. Change-Id: I4b8344c1b9ccad2f58ad304573133e5d52e1faef
2012-01-11 03:28:42 +00:00
def parse_gitmodules(gitdir, rev):
cmd = ['cat-file', 'blob', '%s:.gitmodules' % rev]
try:
p = GitCommand(None, cmd, capture_stdout=True, capture_stderr=True,
bare=True, gitdir=gitdir)
Represent git-submodule as nested projects, take 2 (Previous submission of this change broke Android buildbot due to incorrect regular expression for parsing git-config output. During investigation, we also found that Android, which pulls Chromium, has a workaround for Chromium's submodules; its manifest includes Chromium's submodules. This new change, in addition to fixing the regex, also take this type of workarounds into consideration; it adds a new attribute that makes repo not fetch submodules unless submodules have a project element defined in the manifest, or this attribute is overridden by a parent project element or by the default element.) We need a representation of git-submodule in repo; otherwise repo will not sync submodules, and leave workspace in a broken state. Of course this will not be a problem if all projects are owned by the owner of the manifest file, who may simply choose not to use git-submodule in all projects. However, this is not possible in practice because manifest file owner is unlikely to own all upstream projects. As git submodules are simply git repositories, it is natural to treat them as plain repo projects that live inside a repo project. That is, we could use recursively declared projects to denote the is-submodule relation of git repositories. The behavior of repo remains the same to projects that do not have a sub-project within. As for parent projects, repo fetches them and their sub-projects as normal projects, and then checks out subprojects at the commit specified in parent's commit object. The sub-project is fetched at a path relative to parent project's working directory; so the path specified in manifest file should match that of .gitmodules file. If a submodule is not registered in repo manifest, repo will derive its properties from itself and its parent project, which might not always be correct. In such cases, the subproject is called a derived subproject. To a user, a sub-project is merely a git-submodule; so all tips of working with a git-submodule apply here, too. For example, you should not run `repo sync` in a parent repository if its submodule is dirty. Change-Id: I4b8344c1b9ccad2f58ad304573133e5d52e1faef
2012-01-11 03:28:42 +00:00
except GitError:
return [], []
if p.Wait() != 0:
return [], []
gitmodules_lines = []
fd, temp_gitmodules_path = tempfile.mkstemp()
try:
os.write(fd, p.stdout.encode('utf-8'))
Represent git-submodule as nested projects, take 2 (Previous submission of this change broke Android buildbot due to incorrect regular expression for parsing git-config output. During investigation, we also found that Android, which pulls Chromium, has a workaround for Chromium's submodules; its manifest includes Chromium's submodules. This new change, in addition to fixing the regex, also take this type of workarounds into consideration; it adds a new attribute that makes repo not fetch submodules unless submodules have a project element defined in the manifest, or this attribute is overridden by a parent project element or by the default element.) We need a representation of git-submodule in repo; otherwise repo will not sync submodules, and leave workspace in a broken state. Of course this will not be a problem if all projects are owned by the owner of the manifest file, who may simply choose not to use git-submodule in all projects. However, this is not possible in practice because manifest file owner is unlikely to own all upstream projects. As git submodules are simply git repositories, it is natural to treat them as plain repo projects that live inside a repo project. That is, we could use recursively declared projects to denote the is-submodule relation of git repositories. The behavior of repo remains the same to projects that do not have a sub-project within. As for parent projects, repo fetches them and their sub-projects as normal projects, and then checks out subprojects at the commit specified in parent's commit object. The sub-project is fetched at a path relative to parent project's working directory; so the path specified in manifest file should match that of .gitmodules file. If a submodule is not registered in repo manifest, repo will derive its properties from itself and its parent project, which might not always be correct. In such cases, the subproject is called a derived subproject. To a user, a sub-project is merely a git-submodule; so all tips of working with a git-submodule apply here, too. For example, you should not run `repo sync` in a parent repository if its submodule is dirty. Change-Id: I4b8344c1b9ccad2f58ad304573133e5d52e1faef
2012-01-11 03:28:42 +00:00
os.close(fd)
cmd = ['config', '--file', temp_gitmodules_path, '--list']
p = GitCommand(None, cmd, capture_stdout=True, capture_stderr=True,
bare=True, gitdir=gitdir)
Represent git-submodule as nested projects, take 2 (Previous submission of this change broke Android buildbot due to incorrect regular expression for parsing git-config output. During investigation, we also found that Android, which pulls Chromium, has a workaround for Chromium's submodules; its manifest includes Chromium's submodules. This new change, in addition to fixing the regex, also take this type of workarounds into consideration; it adds a new attribute that makes repo not fetch submodules unless submodules have a project element defined in the manifest, or this attribute is overridden by a parent project element or by the default element.) We need a representation of git-submodule in repo; otherwise repo will not sync submodules, and leave workspace in a broken state. Of course this will not be a problem if all projects are owned by the owner of the manifest file, who may simply choose not to use git-submodule in all projects. However, this is not possible in practice because manifest file owner is unlikely to own all upstream projects. As git submodules are simply git repositories, it is natural to treat them as plain repo projects that live inside a repo project. That is, we could use recursively declared projects to denote the is-submodule relation of git repositories. The behavior of repo remains the same to projects that do not have a sub-project within. As for parent projects, repo fetches them and their sub-projects as normal projects, and then checks out subprojects at the commit specified in parent's commit object. The sub-project is fetched at a path relative to parent project's working directory; so the path specified in manifest file should match that of .gitmodules file. If a submodule is not registered in repo manifest, repo will derive its properties from itself and its parent project, which might not always be correct. In such cases, the subproject is called a derived subproject. To a user, a sub-project is merely a git-submodule; so all tips of working with a git-submodule apply here, too. For example, you should not run `repo sync` in a parent repository if its submodule is dirty. Change-Id: I4b8344c1b9ccad2f58ad304573133e5d52e1faef
2012-01-11 03:28:42 +00:00
if p.Wait() != 0:
return [], []
gitmodules_lines = p.stdout.split('\n')
except GitError:
return [], []
finally:
platform_utils.remove(temp_gitmodules_path)
Represent git-submodule as nested projects, take 2 (Previous submission of this change broke Android buildbot due to incorrect regular expression for parsing git-config output. During investigation, we also found that Android, which pulls Chromium, has a workaround for Chromium's submodules; its manifest includes Chromium's submodules. This new change, in addition to fixing the regex, also take this type of workarounds into consideration; it adds a new attribute that makes repo not fetch submodules unless submodules have a project element defined in the manifest, or this attribute is overridden by a parent project element or by the default element.) We need a representation of git-submodule in repo; otherwise repo will not sync submodules, and leave workspace in a broken state. Of course this will not be a problem if all projects are owned by the owner of the manifest file, who may simply choose not to use git-submodule in all projects. However, this is not possible in practice because manifest file owner is unlikely to own all upstream projects. As git submodules are simply git repositories, it is natural to treat them as plain repo projects that live inside a repo project. That is, we could use recursively declared projects to denote the is-submodule relation of git repositories. The behavior of repo remains the same to projects that do not have a sub-project within. As for parent projects, repo fetches them and their sub-projects as normal projects, and then checks out subprojects at the commit specified in parent's commit object. The sub-project is fetched at a path relative to parent project's working directory; so the path specified in manifest file should match that of .gitmodules file. If a submodule is not registered in repo manifest, repo will derive its properties from itself and its parent project, which might not always be correct. In such cases, the subproject is called a derived subproject. To a user, a sub-project is merely a git-submodule; so all tips of working with a git-submodule apply here, too. For example, you should not run `repo sync` in a parent repository if its submodule is dirty. Change-Id: I4b8344c1b9ccad2f58ad304573133e5d52e1faef
2012-01-11 03:28:42 +00:00
names = set()
paths = {}
urls = {}
for line in gitmodules_lines:
if not line:
continue
m = re_path.match(line)
if m:
names.add(m.group(1))
paths[m.group(1)] = m.group(2)
continue
m = re_url.match(line)
if m:
names.add(m.group(1))
urls[m.group(1)] = m.group(2)
continue
names = sorted(names)
return ([paths.get(name, '') for name in names],
[urls.get(name, '') for name in names])
def git_ls_tree(gitdir, rev, paths):
cmd = ['ls-tree', rev, '--']
cmd.extend(paths)
try:
p = GitCommand(None, cmd, capture_stdout=True, capture_stderr=True,
bare=True, gitdir=gitdir)
Represent git-submodule as nested projects, take 2 (Previous submission of this change broke Android buildbot due to incorrect regular expression for parsing git-config output. During investigation, we also found that Android, which pulls Chromium, has a workaround for Chromium's submodules; its manifest includes Chromium's submodules. This new change, in addition to fixing the regex, also take this type of workarounds into consideration; it adds a new attribute that makes repo not fetch submodules unless submodules have a project element defined in the manifest, or this attribute is overridden by a parent project element or by the default element.) We need a representation of git-submodule in repo; otherwise repo will not sync submodules, and leave workspace in a broken state. Of course this will not be a problem if all projects are owned by the owner of the manifest file, who may simply choose not to use git-submodule in all projects. However, this is not possible in practice because manifest file owner is unlikely to own all upstream projects. As git submodules are simply git repositories, it is natural to treat them as plain repo projects that live inside a repo project. That is, we could use recursively declared projects to denote the is-submodule relation of git repositories. The behavior of repo remains the same to projects that do not have a sub-project within. As for parent projects, repo fetches them and their sub-projects as normal projects, and then checks out subprojects at the commit specified in parent's commit object. The sub-project is fetched at a path relative to parent project's working directory; so the path specified in manifest file should match that of .gitmodules file. If a submodule is not registered in repo manifest, repo will derive its properties from itself and its parent project, which might not always be correct. In such cases, the subproject is called a derived subproject. To a user, a sub-project is merely a git-submodule; so all tips of working with a git-submodule apply here, too. For example, you should not run `repo sync` in a parent repository if its submodule is dirty. Change-Id: I4b8344c1b9ccad2f58ad304573133e5d52e1faef
2012-01-11 03:28:42 +00:00
except GitError:
return []
if p.Wait() != 0:
return []
objects = {}
for line in p.stdout.split('\n'):
if not line.strip():
continue
object_rev, object_path = line.split()[2:4]
objects[object_path] = object_rev
return objects
try:
rev = self.GetRevisionId()
except GitError:
return []
return get_submodules(self.gitdir, rev)
def GetDerivedSubprojects(self):
result = []
if not self.Exists:
# If git repo does not exist yet, querying its submodules will
# mess up its states; so return here.
return result
for rev, path, url in self._GetSubmodules():
name = self.manifest.GetSubprojectName(self, path)
relpath, worktree, gitdir, objdir = \
self.manifest.GetSubprojectPaths(self, name, path)
project = self.manifest.paths.get(relpath)
Represent git-submodule as nested projects, take 2 (Previous submission of this change broke Android buildbot due to incorrect regular expression for parsing git-config output. During investigation, we also found that Android, which pulls Chromium, has a workaround for Chromium's submodules; its manifest includes Chromium's submodules. This new change, in addition to fixing the regex, also take this type of workarounds into consideration; it adds a new attribute that makes repo not fetch submodules unless submodules have a project element defined in the manifest, or this attribute is overridden by a parent project element or by the default element.) We need a representation of git-submodule in repo; otherwise repo will not sync submodules, and leave workspace in a broken state. Of course this will not be a problem if all projects are owned by the owner of the manifest file, who may simply choose not to use git-submodule in all projects. However, this is not possible in practice because manifest file owner is unlikely to own all upstream projects. As git submodules are simply git repositories, it is natural to treat them as plain repo projects that live inside a repo project. That is, we could use recursively declared projects to denote the is-submodule relation of git repositories. The behavior of repo remains the same to projects that do not have a sub-project within. As for parent projects, repo fetches them and their sub-projects as normal projects, and then checks out subprojects at the commit specified in parent's commit object. The sub-project is fetched at a path relative to parent project's working directory; so the path specified in manifest file should match that of .gitmodules file. If a submodule is not registered in repo manifest, repo will derive its properties from itself and its parent project, which might not always be correct. In such cases, the subproject is called a derived subproject. To a user, a sub-project is merely a git-submodule; so all tips of working with a git-submodule apply here, too. For example, you should not run `repo sync` in a parent repository if its submodule is dirty. Change-Id: I4b8344c1b9ccad2f58ad304573133e5d52e1faef
2012-01-11 03:28:42 +00:00
if project:
result.extend(project.GetDerivedSubprojects())
continue
if url.startswith('..'):
url = urllib.parse.urljoin("%s/" % self.remote.url, url)
Represent git-submodule as nested projects, take 2 (Previous submission of this change broke Android buildbot due to incorrect regular expression for parsing git-config output. During investigation, we also found that Android, which pulls Chromium, has a workaround for Chromium's submodules; its manifest includes Chromium's submodules. This new change, in addition to fixing the regex, also take this type of workarounds into consideration; it adds a new attribute that makes repo not fetch submodules unless submodules have a project element defined in the manifest, or this attribute is overridden by a parent project element or by the default element.) We need a representation of git-submodule in repo; otherwise repo will not sync submodules, and leave workspace in a broken state. Of course this will not be a problem if all projects are owned by the owner of the manifest file, who may simply choose not to use git-submodule in all projects. However, this is not possible in practice because manifest file owner is unlikely to own all upstream projects. As git submodules are simply git repositories, it is natural to treat them as plain repo projects that live inside a repo project. That is, we could use recursively declared projects to denote the is-submodule relation of git repositories. The behavior of repo remains the same to projects that do not have a sub-project within. As for parent projects, repo fetches them and their sub-projects as normal projects, and then checks out subprojects at the commit specified in parent's commit object. The sub-project is fetched at a path relative to parent project's working directory; so the path specified in manifest file should match that of .gitmodules file. If a submodule is not registered in repo manifest, repo will derive its properties from itself and its parent project, which might not always be correct. In such cases, the subproject is called a derived subproject. To a user, a sub-project is merely a git-submodule; so all tips of working with a git-submodule apply here, too. For example, you should not run `repo sync` in a parent repository if its submodule is dirty. Change-Id: I4b8344c1b9ccad2f58ad304573133e5d52e1faef
2012-01-11 03:28:42 +00:00
remote = RemoteSpec(self.remote.name,
url=url,
pushUrl=self.remote.pushUrl,
review=self.remote.review,
revision=self.remote.revision)
subproject = Project(manifest=self.manifest,
name=name,
remote=remote,
gitdir=gitdir,
objdir=objdir,
worktree=worktree,
relpath=relpath,
revisionExpr=rev,
revisionId=rev,
rebase=self.rebase,
groups=self.groups,
sync_c=self.sync_c,
sync_s=self.sync_s,
sync_tags=self.sync_tags,
parent=self,
is_derived=True)
Represent git-submodule as nested projects, take 2 (Previous submission of this change broke Android buildbot due to incorrect regular expression for parsing git-config output. During investigation, we also found that Android, which pulls Chromium, has a workaround for Chromium's submodules; its manifest includes Chromium's submodules. This new change, in addition to fixing the regex, also take this type of workarounds into consideration; it adds a new attribute that makes repo not fetch submodules unless submodules have a project element defined in the manifest, or this attribute is overridden by a parent project element or by the default element.) We need a representation of git-submodule in repo; otherwise repo will not sync submodules, and leave workspace in a broken state. Of course this will not be a problem if all projects are owned by the owner of the manifest file, who may simply choose not to use git-submodule in all projects. However, this is not possible in practice because manifest file owner is unlikely to own all upstream projects. As git submodules are simply git repositories, it is natural to treat them as plain repo projects that live inside a repo project. That is, we could use recursively declared projects to denote the is-submodule relation of git repositories. The behavior of repo remains the same to projects that do not have a sub-project within. As for parent projects, repo fetches them and their sub-projects as normal projects, and then checks out subprojects at the commit specified in parent's commit object. The sub-project is fetched at a path relative to parent project's working directory; so the path specified in manifest file should match that of .gitmodules file. If a submodule is not registered in repo manifest, repo will derive its properties from itself and its parent project, which might not always be correct. In such cases, the subproject is called a derived subproject. To a user, a sub-project is merely a git-submodule; so all tips of working with a git-submodule apply here, too. For example, you should not run `repo sync` in a parent repository if its submodule is dirty. Change-Id: I4b8344c1b9ccad2f58ad304573133e5d52e1faef
2012-01-11 03:28:42 +00:00
result.append(subproject)
result.extend(subproject.GetDerivedSubprojects())
return result
# Direct Git Commands ##
def EnableRepositoryExtension(self, key, value='true', version=1):
"""Enable git repository extension |key| with |value|.
Args:
key: The extension to enabled. Omit the "extensions." prefix.
value: The value to use for the extension.
version: The minimum git repository version needed.
"""
# Make sure the git repo version is new enough already.
found_version = self.config.GetInt('core.repositoryFormatVersion')
if found_version is None:
found_version = 0
if found_version < version:
self.config.SetString('core.repositoryFormatVersion', str(version))
# Enable the extension!
self.config.SetString('extensions.%s' % (key,), value)
def ResolveRemoteHead(self, name=None):
"""Find out what the default branch (HEAD) points to.
Normally this points to refs/heads/master, but projects are moving to main.
Support whatever the server uses rather than hardcoding "master" ourselves.
"""
if name is None:
name = self.remote.name
# The output will look like (NB: tabs are separators):
# ref: refs/heads/master HEAD
# 5f6803b100bb3cd0f534e96e88c91373e8ed1c44 HEAD
output = self.bare_git.ls_remote('-q', '--symref', '--exit-code', name, 'HEAD')
for line in output.splitlines():
lhs, rhs = line.split('\t', 1)
if rhs == 'HEAD' and lhs.startswith('ref:'):
return lhs[4:].strip()
return None
def _CheckForImmutableRevision(self):
try:
# if revision (sha or tag) is not present then following function
# throws an error.
self.bare_git.rev_list('-1', '--missing=allow-any',
'%s^0' % self.revisionExpr, '--')
return True
except GitError:
# There is no such persistent revision. We have to fetch it.
return False
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def _FetchArchive(self, tarpath, cwd=None):
cmd = ['archive', '-v', '-o', tarpath]
cmd.append('--remote=%s' % self.remote.url)
cmd.append('--prefix=%s/' % self.relpath)
cmd.append(self.revisionExpr)
command = GitCommand(self, cmd, cwd=cwd,
capture_stdout=True,
capture_stderr=True)
if command.Wait() != 0:
raise GitError('git archive %s: %s' % (self.name, command.stderr))
def _RemoteFetch(self, name=None,
current_branch_only=False,
initial=False,
quiet=False,
verbose=False,
output_redir=None,
alt_dir=None,
tags=True,
prune=False,
depth=None,
submodules=False,
force_sync=False,
clone_filter=None,
retry_fetches=2,
retry_sleep_initial_sec=4.0,
retry_exp_factor=2.0):
is_sha1 = False
tag_name = None
# The depth should not be used when fetching to a mirror because
# it will result in a shallow repository that cannot be cloned or
# fetched from.
# The repo project should also never be synced with partial depth.
if self.manifest.IsMirror or self.relpath == '.repo/repo':
depth = None
if depth:
current_branch_only = True
if ID_RE.match(self.revisionExpr) is not None:
is_sha1 = True
if current_branch_only:
if self.revisionExpr.startswith(R_TAGS):
# this is a tag and its sha1 value should never change
tag_name = self.revisionExpr[len(R_TAGS):]
if is_sha1 or tag_name is not None:
if self._CheckForImmutableRevision():
if verbose:
print('Skipped fetching project %s (already have persistent ref)'
% self.name)
return True
if is_sha1 and not depth:
# When syncing a specific commit and --depth is not set:
# * if upstream is explicitly specified and is not a sha1, fetch only
# upstream as users expect only upstream to be fetch.
# Note: The commit might not be in upstream in which case the sync
# will fail.
# * otherwise, fetch all branches to make sure we end up with the
# specific commit.
if self.upstream:
current_branch_only = not ID_RE.match(self.upstream)
else:
current_branch_only = False
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if not name:
name = self.remote.name
ssh_proxy = False
remote = self.GetRemote(name)
if remote.PreConnectFetch():
ssh_proxy = True
if initial:
if alt_dir and 'objects' == os.path.basename(alt_dir):
ref_dir = os.path.dirname(alt_dir)
packed_refs = os.path.join(self.gitdir, 'packed-refs')
remote = self.GetRemote(name)
all_refs = self.bare_ref.all
ids = set(all_refs.values())
tmp = set()
for r, ref_id in GitRefs(ref_dir).all.items():
if r not in all_refs:
if r.startswith(R_TAGS) or remote.WritesTo(r):
all_refs[r] = ref_id
ids.add(ref_id)
continue
if ref_id in ids:
continue
r = 'refs/_alt/%s' % ref_id
all_refs[r] = ref_id
ids.add(ref_id)
tmp.add(r)
tmp_packed_lines = []
old_packed_lines = []
for r in sorted(all_refs):
line = '%s %s\n' % (all_refs[r], r)
tmp_packed_lines.append(line)
if r not in tmp:
old_packed_lines.append(line)
tmp_packed = ''.join(tmp_packed_lines)
old_packed = ''.join(old_packed_lines)
_lwrite(packed_refs, tmp_packed)
else:
alt_dir = None
cmd = ['fetch']
if clone_filter:
git_require((2, 19, 0), fail=True, msg='partial clones')
cmd.append('--filter=%s' % clone_filter)
self.EnableRepositoryExtension('partialclone', self.remote.name)
if depth:
cmd.append('--depth=%s' % depth)
else:
# If this repo has shallow objects, then we don't know which refs have
# shallow objects or not. Tell git to unshallow all fetched refs. Don't
# do this with projects that don't have shallow objects, since it is less
# efficient.
if os.path.exists(os.path.join(self.gitdir, 'shallow')):
cmd.append('--depth=2147483647')
if not verbose:
cmd.append('--quiet')
if not quiet and sys.stdout.isatty():
cmd.append('--progress')
if not self.worktree:
cmd.append('--update-head-ok')
cmd.append(name)
if force_sync:
cmd.append('--force')
if prune:
cmd.append('--prune')
if submodules:
cmd.append('--recurse-submodules=on-demand')
spec = []
if not current_branch_only:
# Fetch whole repo
spec.append(str((u'+refs/heads/*:') + remote.ToLocal('refs/heads/*')))
elif tag_name is not None:
spec.append('tag')
spec.append(tag_name)
if self.manifest.IsMirror and not current_branch_only:
branch = None
else:
branch = self.revisionExpr
if (not self.manifest.IsMirror and is_sha1 and depth
and git_require((1, 8, 3))):
# Shallow checkout of a specific commit, fetch from that commit and not
# the heads only as the commit might be deeper in the history.
spec.append(branch)
if self.upstream:
spec.append(self.upstream)
else:
if is_sha1:
branch = self.upstream
if branch is not None and branch.strip():
if not branch.startswith('refs/'):
branch = R_HEADS + branch
spec.append(str((u'+%s:' % branch) + remote.ToLocal(branch)))
# If mirroring repo and we cannot deduce the tag or branch to fetch, fetch
# whole repo.
if self.manifest.IsMirror and not spec:
spec.append(str((u'+refs/heads/*:') + remote.ToLocal('refs/heads/*')))
# If using depth then we should not get all the tags since they may
# be outside of the depth.
if not tags or depth:
cmd.append('--no-tags')
else:
cmd.append('--tags')
spec.append(str((u'+refs/tags/*:') + remote.ToLocal('refs/tags/*')))
cmd.extend(spec)
# At least one retry minimum due to git remote prune.
retry_fetches = max(retry_fetches, 2)
retry_cur_sleep = retry_sleep_initial_sec
ok = prune_tried = False
for try_n in range(retry_fetches):
gitcmd = GitCommand(self, cmd, bare=True, ssh_proxy=ssh_proxy,
merge_output=True, capture_stdout=quiet or bool(output_redir))
if gitcmd.stdout and not quiet and output_redir:
output_redir.write(gitcmd.stdout)
ret = gitcmd.Wait()
if ret == 0:
ok = True
break
# Retry later due to HTTP 429 Too Many Requests.
elif (gitcmd.stdout and
'error:' in gitcmd.stdout and
'HTTP 429' in gitcmd.stdout):
# Fallthru to sleep+retry logic at the bottom.
pass
# Try to prune remote branches once in case there are conflicts.
# For example, if the remote had refs/heads/upstream, but deleted that and
# now has refs/heads/upstream/foo.
elif (gitcmd.stdout and
'error:' in gitcmd.stdout and
'git remote prune' in gitcmd.stdout and
not prune_tried):
prune_tried = True
prunecmd = GitCommand(self, ['remote', 'prune', name], bare=True,
ssh_proxy=ssh_proxy)
ret = prunecmd.Wait()
if ret:
break
output_redir.write('retrying fetch after pruning remote branches')
# Continue right away so we don't sleep as we shouldn't need to.
continue
elif current_branch_only and is_sha1 and ret == 128:
# Exit code 128 means "couldn't find the ref you asked for"; if we're
# in sha1 mode, we just tried sync'ing from the upstream field; it
# doesn't exist, thus abort the optimization attempt and do a full sync.
break
elif ret < 0:
# Git died with a signal, exit immediately
break
# Figure out how long to sleep before the next attempt, if there is one.
if not verbose:
output_redir.write('\n%s:\n%s' % (self.name, gitcmd.stdout), file=sys.stderr)
if try_n < retry_fetches - 1:
output_redir.write('sleeping %s seconds before retrying' % retry_cur_sleep)
time.sleep(retry_cur_sleep)
retry_cur_sleep = min(retry_exp_factor * retry_cur_sleep,
MAXIMUM_RETRY_SLEEP_SEC)
retry_cur_sleep *= (1 - random.uniform(-RETRY_JITTER_PERCENT,
RETRY_JITTER_PERCENT))
if initial:
if alt_dir:
if old_packed != '':
_lwrite(packed_refs, old_packed)
else:
platform_utils.remove(packed_refs)
self.bare_git.pack_refs('--all', '--prune')
if is_sha1 and current_branch_only:
# We just synced the upstream given branch; verify we
# got what we wanted, else trigger a second run of all
# refs.
if not self._CheckForImmutableRevision():
# Sync the current branch only with depth set to None.
# We always pass depth=None down to avoid infinite recursion.
return self._RemoteFetch(
name=name, quiet=quiet, verbose=verbose, output_redir=output_redir,
current_branch_only=current_branch_only and depth,
initial=False, alt_dir=alt_dir,
depth=None, clone_filter=clone_filter)
return ok
def _ApplyCloneBundle(self, initial=False, quiet=False, verbose=False):
if initial and \
(self.manifest.manifestProject.config.GetString('repo.depth') or
self.clone_depth):
return False
remote = self.GetRemote(self.remote.name)
bundle_url = remote.url + '/clone.bundle'
bundle_url = GitConfig.ForUser().UrlInsteadOf(bundle_url)
if GetSchemeFromUrl(bundle_url) not in ('http', 'https',
'persistent-http',
'persistent-https'):
return False
bundle_dst = os.path.join(self.gitdir, 'clone.bundle')
bundle_tmp = os.path.join(self.gitdir, 'clone.bundle.tmp')
exist_dst = os.path.exists(bundle_dst)
exist_tmp = os.path.exists(bundle_tmp)
if not initial and not exist_dst and not exist_tmp:
return False
if not exist_dst:
exist_dst = self._FetchBundle(bundle_url, bundle_tmp, bundle_dst, quiet,
verbose)
if not exist_dst:
return False
cmd = ['fetch']
if not verbose:
cmd.append('--quiet')
if not quiet and sys.stdout.isatty():
cmd.append('--progress')
if not self.worktree:
cmd.append('--update-head-ok')
cmd.append(bundle_dst)
for f in remote.fetch:
cmd.append(str(f))
cmd.append('+refs/tags/*:refs/tags/*')
ok = GitCommand(self, cmd, bare=True).Wait() == 0
if os.path.exists(bundle_dst):
platform_utils.remove(bundle_dst)
if os.path.exists(bundle_tmp):
platform_utils.remove(bundle_tmp)
return ok
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def _FetchBundle(self, srcUrl, tmpPath, dstPath, quiet, verbose):
if os.path.exists(dstPath):
platform_utils.remove(dstPath)
cmd = ['curl', '--fail', '--output', tmpPath, '--netrc', '--location']
if quiet:
cmd += ['--silent', '--show-error']
if os.path.exists(tmpPath):
size = os.stat(tmpPath).st_size
if size >= 1024:
cmd += ['--continue-at', '%d' % (size,)]
else:
platform_utils.remove(tmpPath)
with GetUrlCookieFile(srcUrl, quiet) as (cookiefile, proxy):
if cookiefile:
cmd += ['--cookie', cookiefile]
if proxy:
cmd += ['--proxy', proxy]
elif 'http_proxy' in os.environ and 'darwin' == sys.platform:
cmd += ['--proxy', os.environ['http_proxy']]
if srcUrl.startswith('persistent-https'):
srcUrl = 'http' + srcUrl[len('persistent-https'):]
elif srcUrl.startswith('persistent-http'):
srcUrl = 'http' + srcUrl[len('persistent-http'):]
cmd += [srcUrl]
if IsTrace():
Trace('%s', ' '.join(cmd))
if verbose:
print('%s: Downloading bundle: %s' % (self.name, srcUrl))
stdout = None if verbose else subprocess.PIPE
stderr = None if verbose else subprocess.STDOUT
try:
proc = subprocess.Popen(cmd, stdout=stdout, stderr=stderr)
except OSError:
return False
(output, _) = proc.communicate()
curlret = proc.returncode
if curlret == 22:
# From curl man page:
# 22: HTTP page not retrieved. The requested url was not found or
# returned another error with the HTTP error code being 400 or above.
# This return code only appears if -f, --fail is used.
if verbose:
print('%s: Unable to retrieve clone.bundle; ignoring.' % self.name)
if output:
print('Curl output:\n%s' % output)
return False
elif curlret and not verbose and output:
print('%s' % output, file=sys.stderr)
if os.path.exists(tmpPath):
if curlret == 0 and self._IsValidBundle(tmpPath, quiet):
platform_utils.rename(tmpPath, dstPath)
return True
else:
platform_utils.remove(tmpPath)
return False
else:
return False
def _IsValidBundle(self, path, quiet):
try:
with open(path, 'rb') as f:
if f.read(16) == b'# v2 git bundle\n':
return True
else:
if not quiet:
print("Invalid clone.bundle file; ignoring.", file=sys.stderr)
return False
except OSError:
return False
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def _Checkout(self, rev, quiet=False):
cmd = ['checkout']
if quiet:
cmd.append('-q')
cmd.append(rev)
cmd.append('--')
if GitCommand(self, cmd).Wait() != 0:
if self._allrefs:
raise GitError('%s checkout %s ' % (self.name, rev))
def _CherryPick(self, rev, ffonly=False, record_origin=False):
cmd = ['cherry-pick']
if ffonly:
cmd.append('--ff')
if record_origin:
cmd.append('-x')
cmd.append(rev)
cmd.append('--')
if GitCommand(self, cmd).Wait() != 0:
if self._allrefs:
raise GitError('%s cherry-pick %s ' % (self.name, rev))
def _LsRemote(self, refs):
cmd = ['ls-remote', self.remote.name, refs]
p = GitCommand(self, cmd, capture_stdout=True)
if p.Wait() == 0:
return p.stdout
return None
def _Revert(self, rev):
cmd = ['revert']
cmd.append('--no-edit')
cmd.append(rev)
cmd.append('--')
if GitCommand(self, cmd).Wait() != 0:
if self._allrefs:
raise GitError('%s revert %s ' % (self.name, rev))
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def _ResetHard(self, rev, quiet=True):
cmd = ['reset', '--hard']
if quiet:
cmd.append('-q')
cmd.append(rev)
if GitCommand(self, cmd).Wait() != 0:
raise GitError('%s reset --hard %s ' % (self.name, rev))
def _SyncSubmodules(self, quiet=True):
cmd = ['submodule', 'update', '--init', '--recursive']
if quiet:
cmd.append('-q')
if GitCommand(self, cmd).Wait() != 0:
raise GitError('%s submodule update --init --recursive %s ' % self.name)
def _Rebase(self, upstream, onto=None):
cmd = ['rebase']
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if onto is not None:
cmd.extend(['--onto', onto])
cmd.append(upstream)
if GitCommand(self, cmd).Wait() != 0:
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raise GitError('%s rebase %s ' % (self.name, upstream))
def _FastForward(self, head, ffonly=False):
cmd = ['merge', '--no-stat', head]
if ffonly:
cmd.append("--ff-only")
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if GitCommand(self, cmd).Wait() != 0:
raise GitError('%s merge %s ' % (self.name, head))
def _InitGitDir(self, mirror_git=None, force_sync=False, quiet=False):
init_git_dir = not os.path.exists(self.gitdir)
init_obj_dir = not os.path.exists(self.objdir)
try:
# Initialize the bare repository, which contains all of the objects.
if init_obj_dir:
os.makedirs(self.objdir)
self.bare_objdir.init()
if self.use_git_worktrees:
# Set up the m/ space to point to the worktree-specific ref space.
# We'll update the worktree-specific ref space on each checkout.
if self.manifest.branch:
self.bare_git.symbolic_ref(
'-m', 'redirecting to worktree scope',
R_M + self.manifest.branch,
R_WORKTREE_M + self.manifest.branch)
# Enable per-worktree config file support if possible. This is more a
# nice-to-have feature for users rather than a hard requirement.
if git_require((2, 20, 0)):
self.EnableRepositoryExtension('worktreeConfig')
# If we have a separate directory to hold refs, initialize it as well.
if self.objdir != self.gitdir:
if init_git_dir:
os.makedirs(self.gitdir)
if init_obj_dir or init_git_dir:
self._ReferenceGitDir(self.objdir, self.gitdir, share_refs=False,
copy_all=True)
try:
self._CheckDirReference(self.objdir, self.gitdir, share_refs=False)
except GitError as e:
if force_sync:
print("Retrying clone after deleting %s" %
self.gitdir, file=sys.stderr)
try:
platform_utils.rmtree(platform_utils.realpath(self.gitdir))
if self.worktree and os.path.exists(platform_utils.realpath
(self.worktree)):
platform_utils.rmtree(platform_utils.realpath(self.worktree))
return self._InitGitDir(mirror_git=mirror_git, force_sync=False,
quiet=quiet)
except Exception:
raise e
raise e
if init_git_dir:
mp = self.manifest.manifestProject
ref_dir = mp.config.GetString('repo.reference') or ''
if ref_dir or mirror_git:
if not mirror_git:
mirror_git = os.path.join(ref_dir, self.name + '.git')
repo_git = os.path.join(ref_dir, '.repo', 'projects',
self.relpath + '.git')
worktrees_git = os.path.join(ref_dir, '.repo', 'worktrees',
self.name + '.git')
if os.path.exists(mirror_git):
ref_dir = mirror_git
elif os.path.exists(repo_git):
ref_dir = repo_git
elif os.path.exists(worktrees_git):
ref_dir = worktrees_git
else:
ref_dir = None
if ref_dir:
if not os.path.isabs(ref_dir):
# The alternate directory is relative to the object database.
ref_dir = os.path.relpath(ref_dir,
os.path.join(self.objdir, 'objects'))
_lwrite(os.path.join(self.gitdir, 'objects/info/alternates'),
os.path.join(ref_dir, 'objects') + '\n')
self._UpdateHooks(quiet=quiet)
m = self.manifest.manifestProject.config
for key in ['user.name', 'user.email']:
if m.Has(key, include_defaults=False):
self.config.SetString(key, m.GetString(key))
self.config.SetString('filter.lfs.smudge', 'git-lfs smudge --skip -- %f')
self.config.SetString('filter.lfs.process', 'git-lfs filter-process --skip')
self.config.SetBoolean('core.bare', True if self.manifest.IsMirror else None)
except Exception:
if init_obj_dir and os.path.exists(self.objdir):
platform_utils.rmtree(self.objdir)
if init_git_dir and os.path.exists(self.gitdir):
platform_utils.rmtree(self.gitdir)
raise
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def _UpdateHooks(self, quiet=False):
if os.path.exists(self.gitdir):
self._InitHooks(quiet=quiet)
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def _InitHooks(self, quiet=False):
hooks = platform_utils.realpath(self._gitdir_path('hooks'))
if not os.path.exists(hooks):
os.makedirs(hooks)
for stock_hook in _ProjectHooks():
name = os.path.basename(stock_hook)
if name in ('commit-msg',) and not self.remote.review \
and self is not self.manifest.manifestProject:
# Don't install a Gerrit Code Review hook if this
# project does not appear to use it for reviews.
#
# Since the manifest project is one of those, but also
# managed through gerrit, it's excluded
continue
dst = os.path.join(hooks, name)
if platform_utils.islink(dst):
continue
if os.path.exists(dst):
# If the files are the same, we'll leave it alone. We create symlinks
# below by default but fallback to hardlinks if the OS blocks them.
# So if we're here, it's probably because we made a hardlink below.
if not filecmp.cmp(stock_hook, dst, shallow=False):
if not quiet:
_warn("%s: Not replacing locally modified %s hook",
self.relpath, name)
continue
try:
platform_utils.symlink(
os.path.relpath(stock_hook, os.path.dirname(dst)), dst)
except OSError as e:
if e.errno == errno.EPERM:
try:
os.link(stock_hook, dst)
except OSError:
raise GitError(self._get_symlink_error_message())
else:
raise
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def _InitRemote(self):
if self.remote.url:
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remote = self.GetRemote(self.remote.name)
remote.url = self.remote.url
remote.pushUrl = self.remote.pushUrl
remote.review = self.remote.review
remote.projectname = self.name
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if self.worktree:
remote.ResetFetch(mirror=False)
else:
remote.ResetFetch(mirror=True)
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remote.Save()
def _InitMRef(self):
if self.manifest.branch:
if self.use_git_worktrees:
# We can't update this ref with git worktrees until it exists.
# We'll wait until the initial checkout to set it.
if not os.path.exists(self.worktree):
return
base = R_WORKTREE_M
active_git = self.work_git
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self._InitAnyMRef(HEAD, self.bare_git, detach=True)
else:
base = R_M
active_git = self.bare_git
self._InitAnyMRef(base + self.manifest.branch, active_git)
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def _InitMirrorHead(self):
self._InitAnyMRef(HEAD, self.bare_git)
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def _InitAnyMRef(self, ref, active_git, detach=False):
cur = self.bare_ref.symref(ref)
if self.revisionId:
if cur != '' or self.bare_ref.get(ref) != self.revisionId:
msg = 'manifest set to %s' % self.revisionId
dst = self.revisionId + '^0'
active_git.UpdateRef(ref, dst, message=msg, detach=True)
else:
remote = self.GetRemote(self.remote.name)
dst = remote.ToLocal(self.revisionExpr)
if cur != dst:
msg = 'manifest set to %s' % self.revisionExpr
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if detach:
active_git.UpdateRef(ref, dst, message=msg, detach=True)
else:
active_git.symbolic_ref('-m', msg, ref, dst)
def _CheckDirReference(self, srcdir, destdir, share_refs):
# Git worktrees don't use symlinks to share at all.
if self.use_git_worktrees:
return
symlink_files = self.shareable_files[:]
symlink_dirs = self.shareable_dirs[:]
if share_refs:
symlink_files += self.working_tree_files
symlink_dirs += self.working_tree_dirs
to_symlink = symlink_files + symlink_dirs
for name in set(to_symlink):
# Try to self-heal a bit in simple cases.
dst_path = os.path.join(destdir, name)
src_path = os.path.join(srcdir, name)
if name in self.working_tree_dirs:
# If the dir is missing under .repo/projects/, create it.
if not os.path.exists(src_path):
os.makedirs(src_path)
elif name in self.working_tree_files:
# If it's a file under the checkout .git/ and the .repo/projects/ has
# nothing, move the file under the .repo/projects/ tree.
if not os.path.exists(src_path) and os.path.isfile(dst_path):
platform_utils.rename(dst_path, src_path)
# If the path exists under the .repo/projects/ and there's no symlink
# under the checkout .git/, recreate the symlink.
if name in self.working_tree_dirs or name in self.working_tree_files:
if os.path.exists(src_path) and not os.path.exists(dst_path):
platform_utils.symlink(
os.path.relpath(src_path, os.path.dirname(dst_path)), dst_path)
dst = platform_utils.realpath(dst_path)
if os.path.lexists(dst):
src = platform_utils.realpath(src_path)
# Fail if the links are pointing to the wrong place
if src != dst:
_error('%s is different in %s vs %s', name, destdir, srcdir)
raise GitError('--force-sync not enabled; cannot overwrite a local '
'work tree. If you\'re comfortable with the '
'possibility of losing the work tree\'s git metadata,'
' use `repo sync --force-sync {0}` to '
'proceed.'.format(self.relpath))
def _ReferenceGitDir(self, gitdir, dotgit, share_refs, copy_all):
"""Update |dotgit| to reference |gitdir|, using symlinks where possible.
Args:
gitdir: The bare git repository. Must already be initialized.
dotgit: The repository you would like to initialize.
share_refs: If true, |dotgit| will store its refs under |gitdir|.
Only one work tree can store refs under a given |gitdir|.
copy_all: If true, copy all remaining files from |gitdir| -> |dotgit|.
This saves you the effort of initializing |dotgit| yourself.
"""
symlink_files = self.shareable_files[:]
symlink_dirs = self.shareable_dirs[:]
if share_refs:
symlink_files += self.working_tree_files
symlink_dirs += self.working_tree_dirs
to_symlink = symlink_files + symlink_dirs
to_copy = []
if copy_all:
to_copy = platform_utils.listdir(gitdir)
dotgit = platform_utils.realpath(dotgit)
for name in set(to_copy).union(to_symlink):
try:
src = platform_utils.realpath(os.path.join(gitdir, name))
dst = os.path.join(dotgit, name)
if os.path.lexists(dst):
continue
# If the source dir doesn't exist, create an empty dir.
if name in symlink_dirs and not os.path.lexists(src):
os.makedirs(src)
if name in to_symlink:
platform_utils.symlink(
os.path.relpath(src, os.path.dirname(dst)), dst)
elif copy_all and not platform_utils.islink(dst):
if platform_utils.isdir(src):
shutil.copytree(src, dst)
elif os.path.isfile(src):
shutil.copy(src, dst)
# If the source file doesn't exist, ensure the destination
# file doesn't either.
if name in symlink_files and not os.path.lexists(src):
try:
platform_utils.remove(dst)
except OSError:
pass
except OSError as e:
if e.errno == errno.EPERM:
raise DownloadError(self._get_symlink_error_message())
else:
raise
def _InitGitWorktree(self):
"""Init the project using git worktrees."""
self.bare_git.worktree('prune')
self.bare_git.worktree('add', '-ff', '--checkout', '--detach', '--lock',
self.worktree, self.GetRevisionId())
# Rewrite the internal state files to use relative paths between the
# checkouts & worktrees.
dotgit = os.path.join(self.worktree, '.git')
with open(dotgit, 'r') as fp:
# Figure out the checkout->worktree path.
setting = fp.read()
assert setting.startswith('gitdir:')
git_worktree_path = setting.split(':', 1)[1].strip()
# Some platforms (e.g. Windows) won't let us update dotgit in situ because
# of file permissions. Delete it and recreate it from scratch to avoid.
platform_utils.remove(dotgit)
# Use relative path from checkout->worktree & maintain Unix line endings
# on all OS's to match git behavior.
with open(dotgit, 'w', newline='\n') as fp:
print('gitdir:', os.path.relpath(git_worktree_path, self.worktree),
file=fp)
# Use relative path from worktree->checkout & maintain Unix line endings
# on all OS's to match git behavior.
with open(os.path.join(git_worktree_path, 'gitdir'), 'w', newline='\n') as fp:
print(os.path.relpath(dotgit, git_worktree_path), file=fp)
self._InitMRef()
def _InitWorkTree(self, force_sync=False, submodules=False):
realdotgit = os.path.join(self.worktree, '.git')
tmpdotgit = realdotgit + '.tmp'
init_dotgit = not os.path.exists(realdotgit)
if init_dotgit:
if self.use_git_worktrees:
self._InitGitWorktree()
self._CopyAndLinkFiles()
return
dotgit = tmpdotgit
platform_utils.rmtree(tmpdotgit, ignore_errors=True)
os.makedirs(tmpdotgit)
self._ReferenceGitDir(self.gitdir, tmpdotgit, share_refs=True,
copy_all=False)
else:
dotgit = realdotgit
try:
self._CheckDirReference(self.gitdir, dotgit, share_refs=True)
except GitError as e:
if force_sync and not init_dotgit:
try:
platform_utils.rmtree(dotgit)
return self._InitWorkTree(force_sync=False, submodules=submodules)
except Exception:
raise e
raise e
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if init_dotgit:
_lwrite(os.path.join(tmpdotgit, HEAD), '%s\n' % self.GetRevisionId())
# Now that the .git dir is fully set up, move it to its final home.
platform_utils.rename(tmpdotgit, realdotgit)
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# Finish checking out the worktree.
cmd = ['read-tree', '--reset', '-u']
cmd.append('-v')
cmd.append(HEAD)
if GitCommand(self, cmd).Wait() != 0:
raise GitError('Cannot initialize work tree for ' + self.name)
if submodules:
self._SyncSubmodules(quiet=True)
self._CopyAndLinkFiles()
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def _get_symlink_error_message(self):
if platform_utils.isWindows():
return ('Unable to create symbolic link. Please re-run the command as '
'Administrator, or see '
'https://github.com/git-for-windows/git/wiki/Symbolic-Links '
'for other options.')
return 'filesystem must support symlinks'
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def _gitdir_path(self, path):
return platform_utils.realpath(os.path.join(self.gitdir, path))
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def _revlist(self, *args, **kw):
a = []
a.extend(args)
a.append('--')
return self.work_git.rev_list(*a, **kw)
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@property
def _allrefs(self):
return self.bare_ref.all
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def _getLogs(self, rev1, rev2, oneline=False, color=True, pretty_format=None):
"""Get logs between two revisions of this project."""
comp = '..'
if rev1:
revs = [rev1]
if rev2:
revs.extend([comp, rev2])
cmd = ['log', ''.join(revs)]
out = DiffColoring(self.config)
if out.is_on and color:
cmd.append('--color')
if pretty_format is not None:
cmd.append('--pretty=format:%s' % pretty_format)
if oneline:
cmd.append('--oneline')
try:
log = GitCommand(self, cmd, capture_stdout=True, capture_stderr=True)
if log.Wait() == 0:
return log.stdout
except GitError:
# worktree may not exist if groups changed for example. In that case,
# try in gitdir instead.
if not os.path.exists(self.worktree):
return self.bare_git.log(*cmd[1:])
else:
raise
return None
def getAddedAndRemovedLogs(self, toProject, oneline=False, color=True,
pretty_format=None):
"""Get the list of logs from this revision to given revisionId"""
logs = {}
selfId = self.GetRevisionId(self._allrefs)
toId = toProject.GetRevisionId(toProject._allrefs)
logs['added'] = self._getLogs(selfId, toId, oneline=oneline, color=color,
pretty_format=pretty_format)
logs['removed'] = self._getLogs(toId, selfId, oneline=oneline, color=color,
pretty_format=pretty_format)
return logs
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class _GitGetByExec(object):
def __init__(self, project, bare, gitdir):
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self._project = project
self._bare = bare
self._gitdir = gitdir
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# __getstate__ and __setstate__ are required for pickling because __getattr__ exists.
def __getstate__(self):
return (self._project, self._bare, self._gitdir)
def __setstate__(self, state):
self._project, self._bare, self._gitdir = state
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def LsOthers(self):
p = GitCommand(self._project,
['ls-files',
'-z',
'--others',
'--exclude-standard'],
bare=False,
gitdir=self._gitdir,
capture_stdout=True,
capture_stderr=True)
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if p.Wait() == 0:
out = p.stdout
if out:
# Backslash is not anomalous
return out[:-1].split('\0')
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return []
def DiffZ(self, name, *args):
cmd = [name]
cmd.append('-z')
cmd.append('--ignore-submodules')
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cmd.extend(args)
p = GitCommand(self._project,
cmd,
gitdir=self._gitdir,
bare=False,
capture_stdout=True,
capture_stderr=True)
p.Wait()
r = {}
out = p.stdout
if out:
out = iter(out[:-1].split('\0'))
while out:
try:
info = next(out)
path = next(out)
except StopIteration:
break
class _Info(object):
def __init__(self, path, omode, nmode, oid, nid, state):
self.path = path
self.src_path = None
self.old_mode = omode
self.new_mode = nmode
self.old_id = oid
self.new_id = nid
if len(state) == 1:
self.status = state
self.level = None
else:
self.status = state[:1]
self.level = state[1:]
while self.level.startswith('0'):
self.level = self.level[1:]
info = info[1:].split(' ')
info = _Info(path, *info)
if info.status in ('R', 'C'):
info.src_path = info.path
info.path = next(out)
r[info.path] = info
return r
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def GetDotgitPath(self, subpath=None):
"""Return the full path to the .git dir.
As a convenience, append |subpath| if provided.
"""
if self._bare:
dotgit = self._gitdir
else:
dotgit = os.path.join(self._project.worktree, '.git')
if os.path.isfile(dotgit):
# Git worktrees use a "gitdir:" syntax to point to the scratch space.
with open(dotgit) as fp:
setting = fp.read()
assert setting.startswith('gitdir:')
gitdir = setting.split(':', 1)[1].strip()
dotgit = os.path.normpath(os.path.join(self._project.worktree, gitdir))
return dotgit if subpath is None else os.path.join(dotgit, subpath)
def GetHead(self):
"""Return the ref that HEAD points to."""
path = self.GetDotgitPath(subpath=HEAD)
try:
with open(path) as fd:
line = fd.readline()
except IOError as e:
raise NoManifestException(path, str(e))
try:
line = line.decode()
except AttributeError:
pass
if line.startswith('ref: '):
return line[5:-1]
return line[:-1]
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def SetHead(self, ref, message=None):
cmdv = []
if message is not None:
cmdv.extend(['-m', message])
cmdv.append(HEAD)
cmdv.append(ref)
self.symbolic_ref(*cmdv)
def DetachHead(self, new, message=None):
cmdv = ['--no-deref']
if message is not None:
cmdv.extend(['-m', message])
cmdv.append(HEAD)
cmdv.append(new)
self.update_ref(*cmdv)
def UpdateRef(self, name, new, old=None,
message=None,
detach=False):
cmdv = []
if message is not None:
cmdv.extend(['-m', message])
if detach:
cmdv.append('--no-deref')
cmdv.append(name)
cmdv.append(new)
if old is not None:
cmdv.append(old)
self.update_ref(*cmdv)
def DeleteRef(self, name, old=None):
if not old:
old = self.rev_parse(name)
self.update_ref('-d', name, old)
self._project.bare_ref.deleted(name)
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def rev_list(self, *args, **kw):
if 'format' in kw:
cmdv = ['log', '--pretty=format:%s' % kw['format']]
else:
cmdv = ['rev-list']
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cmdv.extend(args)
p = GitCommand(self._project,
cmdv,
bare=self._bare,
gitdir=self._gitdir,
capture_stdout=True,
capture_stderr=True)
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if p.Wait() != 0:
raise GitError('%s rev-list %s: %s' %
(self._project.name, str(args), p.stderr))
return p.stdout.splitlines()
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def __getattr__(self, name):
Support repo-level pre-upload hook and prep for future hooks. All repo-level hooks are expected to live in a single project at the top level of that project. The name of the hooks project is provided in the manifest.xml. The manifest also lists which hooks are enabled to make it obvious if a file somehow failed to sync down (or got deleted). Before running any hook, we will prompt the user to make sure that it is OK. A user can deny running the hook, allow once, or allow "forever" (until hooks change). This tries to keep with the git spirit of not automatically running anything on the user's computer that got synced down. Note that individual repo commands can add always options to avoid these prompts as they see fit (see below for the 'upload' options). When hooks are run, they are loaded into the current interpreter (the one running repo) and their main() function is run. This mechanism is used (instead of using subprocess) to make it easier to expand to a richer hook interface in the future. During loading, the interpreter's sys.path is updated to contain the directory containing the hooks so that hooks can be split into multiple files. The upload command has two options that control hook behavior: - no-verify=False, verify=False (DEFAULT): If stdout is a tty, can prompt about running upload hooks if needed. If user denies running hooks, the upload is cancelled. If stdout is not a tty and we would need to prompt about upload hooks, upload is cancelled. - no-verify=False, verify=True: Always run upload hooks with no prompt. - no-verify=True, verify=False: Never run upload hooks, but upload anyway (AKA bypass hooks). - no-verify=True, verify=True: Invalid Sample bit of manifest.xml code for enabling hooks (assumes you have a project named 'hooks' where hooks are stored): <repo-hooks in-project="hooks" enabled-list="pre-upload" /> Sample main() function in pre-upload.py in hooks directory: def main(project_list, **kwargs): print ('These projects will be uploaded: %s' % ', '.join(project_list)) print ('I am being a good boy and ignoring anything in kwargs\n' 'that I don\'t understand.') print 'I fail 50% of the time. How flaky.' if random.random() <= .5: raise Exception('Pre-upload hook failed. Have a nice day.') Change-Id: I5cefa2cd5865c72589263cf8e2f152a43c122f70
2011-03-04 19:54:18 +00:00
"""Allow arbitrary git commands using pythonic syntax.
This allows you to do things like:
git_obj.rev_parse('HEAD')
Since we don't have a 'rev_parse' method defined, the __getattr__ will
run. We'll replace the '_' with a '-' and try to run a git command.
Any other positional arguments will be passed to the git command, and the
following keyword arguments are supported:
config: An optional dict of git config options to be passed with '-c'.
Support repo-level pre-upload hook and prep for future hooks. All repo-level hooks are expected to live in a single project at the top level of that project. The name of the hooks project is provided in the manifest.xml. The manifest also lists which hooks are enabled to make it obvious if a file somehow failed to sync down (or got deleted). Before running any hook, we will prompt the user to make sure that it is OK. A user can deny running the hook, allow once, or allow "forever" (until hooks change). This tries to keep with the git spirit of not automatically running anything on the user's computer that got synced down. Note that individual repo commands can add always options to avoid these prompts as they see fit (see below for the 'upload' options). When hooks are run, they are loaded into the current interpreter (the one running repo) and their main() function is run. This mechanism is used (instead of using subprocess) to make it easier to expand to a richer hook interface in the future. During loading, the interpreter's sys.path is updated to contain the directory containing the hooks so that hooks can be split into multiple files. The upload command has two options that control hook behavior: - no-verify=False, verify=False (DEFAULT): If stdout is a tty, can prompt about running upload hooks if needed. If user denies running hooks, the upload is cancelled. If stdout is not a tty and we would need to prompt about upload hooks, upload is cancelled. - no-verify=False, verify=True: Always run upload hooks with no prompt. - no-verify=True, verify=False: Never run upload hooks, but upload anyway (AKA bypass hooks). - no-verify=True, verify=True: Invalid Sample bit of manifest.xml code for enabling hooks (assumes you have a project named 'hooks' where hooks are stored): <repo-hooks in-project="hooks" enabled-list="pre-upload" /> Sample main() function in pre-upload.py in hooks directory: def main(project_list, **kwargs): print ('These projects will be uploaded: %s' % ', '.join(project_list)) print ('I am being a good boy and ignoring anything in kwargs\n' 'that I don\'t understand.') print 'I fail 50% of the time. How flaky.' if random.random() <= .5: raise Exception('Pre-upload hook failed. Have a nice day.') Change-Id: I5cefa2cd5865c72589263cf8e2f152a43c122f70
2011-03-04 19:54:18 +00:00
Args:
name: The name of the git command to call. Any '_' characters will
be replaced with '-'.
Returns:
A callable object that will try to call git with the named command.
"""
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name = name.replace('_', '-')
def runner(*args, **kwargs):
cmdv = []
config = kwargs.pop('config', None)
for k in kwargs:
raise TypeError('%s() got an unexpected keyword argument %r'
% (name, k))
if config is not None:
for k, v in config.items():
cmdv.append('-c')
cmdv.append('%s=%s' % (k, v))
cmdv.append(name)
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cmdv.extend(args)
p = GitCommand(self._project,
cmdv,
bare=self._bare,
gitdir=self._gitdir,
capture_stdout=True,
capture_stderr=True)
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if p.Wait() != 0:
raise GitError('%s %s: %s' %
(self._project.name, name, p.stderr))
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r = p.stdout
if r.endswith('\n') and r.index('\n') == len(r) - 1:
return r[:-1]
return r
return runner
class _PriorSyncFailedError(Exception):
def __str__(self):
return 'prior sync failed; rebase still in progress'
class _DirtyError(Exception):
def __str__(self):
return 'contains uncommitted changes'
class _InfoMessage(object):
def __init__(self, project, text):
self.project = project
self.text = text
def Print(self, syncbuf):
syncbuf.out.info('%s/: %s', self.project.relpath, self.text)
syncbuf.out.nl()
class _Failure(object):
def __init__(self, project, why):
self.project = project
self.why = why
def Print(self, syncbuf):
syncbuf.out.fail('error: %s/: %s',
self.project.relpath,
str(self.why))
syncbuf.out.nl()
class _Later(object):
def __init__(self, project, action):
self.project = project
self.action = action
def Run(self, syncbuf):
out = syncbuf.out
out.project('project %s/', self.project.relpath)
out.nl()
try:
self.action()
out.nl()
return True
except GitError:
out.nl()
return False
class _SyncColoring(Coloring):
def __init__(self, config):
super().__init__(config, 'reposync')
self.project = self.printer('header', attr='bold')
self.info = self.printer('info')
self.fail = self.printer('fail', fg='red')
class SyncBuffer(object):
def __init__(self, config, detach_head=False):
self._messages = []
self._failures = []
self._later_queue1 = []
self._later_queue2 = []
self.out = _SyncColoring(config)
self.out.redirect(sys.stderr)
self.detach_head = detach_head
self.clean = True
self.recent_clean = True
def info(self, project, fmt, *args):
self._messages.append(_InfoMessage(project, fmt % args))
def fail(self, project, err=None):
self._failures.append(_Failure(project, err))
self._MarkUnclean()
def later1(self, project, what):
self._later_queue1.append(_Later(project, what))
def later2(self, project, what):
self._later_queue2.append(_Later(project, what))
def Finish(self):
self._PrintMessages()
self._RunLater()
self._PrintMessages()
return self.clean
def Recently(self):
recent_clean = self.recent_clean
self.recent_clean = True
return recent_clean
def _MarkUnclean(self):
self.clean = False
self.recent_clean = False
def _RunLater(self):
for q in ['_later_queue1', '_later_queue2']:
if not self._RunQueue(q):
return
def _RunQueue(self, queue):
for m in getattr(self, queue):
if not m.Run(self):
self._MarkUnclean()
return False
setattr(self, queue, [])
return True
def _PrintMessages(self):
sync: improve output with intermingled progress bars and status When displaying progress bars, we use \r to reset the cursor to the start of the line before showing the new update. This assumes the new line will fully erase whatever was displayed there previously. The "done" codepath tries to handle this by including a few extra spaces at the end of the message to "white out" what was there. Lets replace that hack with the standard ECMA escape sequence that clears the current line completely. This is the CSI "erase in line" sequence that the terminal will use to delete all content. The \r is still needed to move the cursor to the start of the line. Using this sequence should be OK since we're already assuming the terminal is ECMA compliant with our use of coloring sequences. We also put the \r after the CSI sequence on the off chance the terminal can't process it and displays a few bytes of garbage. The other improvement is to the syncbuffer API. When it dumps its status information, it almost always comes after a progress bar update which leads to confusing comingled output. Something like: Fetching projects: 100% (2/2) error: src/platform2/: branch ... Since the progress bar is "throw away", have the syncbuffer reset the current output to the start of the line before showing whatever messages it has queued. Bug: https://crbug.com/gerrit/11293 Change-Id: I6544d073fe993d98ee7e91fca5e501ba5fecfe4c Reviewed-on: https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/c/git-repo/+/236615 Reviewed-by: David Pursehouse <dpursehouse@collab.net> Tested-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@google.com>
2019-08-26 19:22:36 +00:00
if self._messages or self._failures:
if os.isatty(2):
self.out.write(progress.CSI_ERASE_LINE)
self.out.write('\r')
for m in self._messages:
m.Print(self)
for m in self._failures:
m.Print(self)
self._messages = []
self._failures = []
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class MetaProject(Project):
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"""A special project housed under .repo.
"""
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def __init__(self, manifest, name, gitdir, worktree):
Project.__init__(self,
manifest=manifest,
name=name,
gitdir=gitdir,
objdir=gitdir,
worktree=worktree,
remote=RemoteSpec('origin'),
relpath='.repo/%s' % name,
revisionExpr='refs/heads/master',
revisionId=None,
groups=None)
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def PreSync(self):
if self.Exists:
cb = self.CurrentBranch
if cb:
base = self.GetBranch(cb).merge
if base:
self.revisionExpr = base
self.revisionId = None
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def MetaBranchSwitch(self, submodules=False):
""" Prepare MetaProject for manifest branch switch
"""
# detach and delete manifest branch, allowing a new
# branch to take over
syncbuf = SyncBuffer(self.config, detach_head=True)
self.Sync_LocalHalf(syncbuf, submodules=submodules)
syncbuf.Finish()
return GitCommand(self,
['update-ref', '-d', 'refs/heads/default'],
capture_stdout=True,
capture_stderr=True).Wait() == 0
@property
def LastFetch(self):
try:
fh = os.path.join(self.gitdir, 'FETCH_HEAD')
return os.path.getmtime(fh)
except OSError:
return 0
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@property
def HasChanges(self):
"""Has the remote received new commits not yet checked out?
"""
if not self.remote or not self.revisionExpr:
return False
all_refs = self.bare_ref.all
revid = self.GetRevisionId(all_refs)
head = self.work_git.GetHead()
if head.startswith(R_HEADS):
try:
head = all_refs[head]
except KeyError:
head = None
if revid == head:
return False
elif self._revlist(not_rev(HEAD), revid):
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return True
return False