Make it possible to exclude projects using regex/wildcard.
The syntax is similar to that of the -r option, e.g.:
repo forall -i ^platform/ ^device/ -c 'echo $REPO_PROJECT'
Change-Id: Id250de5665152228c044c79337d3ac15b5696484
I noticed when running pylint (as the SUBMITTING_PATCHES file directs)
that there were a few violations reported. This makes it difficult
to see violations I might have introduced. This commit corrects all
pylint violations in the command.py script.
This script now has a pylint score of 10.0.
Change-Id: Ibb35fa9af0e0b9b40e02ae043682b3af23286748
These won't show up as common commands in the help text unless in a GITC
client, and will refuse to execute.
Change-Id: Iffe82adcc9d6ddde9cb4b204f83ff018042bdab0
Add repo start support for GITC checkouts. If the user is in
the GITC FS view, they can now run repo start to check out
the sources and create a new working branch.
When "repo start" is called on a GITC project, the revision
tag is set to an empty string and saved in a new tag:
old-revision. This tells the GITC filesystem to display the
local copy of the sources when being viewed. The local copy
is created by pulling the project sources and the new branch
is created based off the original project revision.
Updated main.py to setup each command's gitc_manifest when
appropriate.
Updated repo sync's logic to sync opened projects and
updating the GITC manifest file for the rest.
Change-Id: I7e4809d1c4fc43c69b26f2f1bebe45aab0cae628
Enable operating against groups of repositories. As it stands, it isn't
compatible with `-r/--regex`.
`repo forall -g groupname -c pwd` will run `pwd` for all projects in
groupname.
`repo forall -g thisgroup,-butnotthisone -c pwd` will run `pwd` for all
projects in `thisgroup` but not `butnotthisone`.
`repo list -g groupname -n` will list all the names of repos in
`groupname`.
Change-Id: Ia75c50ce52541d1c8cea2874b20a4db2e0e54960
It is often useful to be able to include the same project more than
once, but with different branches and placed in different paths in the
workspace. Add this feature.
This CL adds the concept of an object directory. The object directory
stores objects that can be shared amongst several working trees. For
newly synced repositories, we set up the git repo now to share its
objects with an object repo.
Each worktree for a given repo shares objects, but has an independent
set of references and branches. This ensures that repo only has to
update the objects once; however the references for each worktree are
updated separately. Storing the references separately is needed to
ensure that commits to a branch on one worktree will not change the
HEAD commits of the others.
One nice side effect of sharing objects between different worktrees is
that you can easily cherry-pick changes between the two worktrees
without needing to fetch them.
Bug: Issue 141
Change-Id: I5e2f4e1a7abb56f9d3f310fa6fd0c17019330ecd
Make a list of compiled patterns once, and then iterate over that
per project, instead of compiling the patterns again on every project.
Change-Id: I91ec430d3060ec76d5e6b61facf6b13e343c90a7
Filter the project list based on regex or wildcard matching
of strings, then we can handle subset of all projects.
Change-Id: Ib6c23aec79e7d981f7b6a5eb0ae93c44effec467
Signed-off-by: Zhiguang Li <muzili@gmail.com>
* Fix imports.
* Use python3 syntax.
* Wrap map() calls with list().
* Use list() only wherever needed.
(Thanks Conley!)
* Fix dictionary iteration methods
(s/iteritems/items/).
* Make use of sorted() in appropriate places
* Use iterators directly in the loop.
* Don't use .keys() wherever it isn't needed.
* Use sys.maxsize instead of sys.maxint
TODO:
* Make repo work fully with python3. :)
Some of this was done by the '2to3' tool [1], by
applying the needed fixes in a way that doesn't
break compatibility with python2.
Links:
[1]: http://docs.python.org/2/library/2to3.html
Change-Id: Ibdf3bf9a530d716db905733cb9bfef83a48820f7
Signed-off-by: Chirayu Desai <cdesai@cyanogenmod.org>
Change Details:
* Make "default" a special manifest group that matches any project that
does not have the special project group "notdefault"
* Use "default" instead of "all,-notdefault" when user does not specify
manifest group
* Expand -g option help to include example usage of manifest groups
Change Benefits:
* Allow a more intuitive and expressive manifest groups specification:
* "default" instead of "all,-notdefault"
* "default,foo" instead of "all,-notdefault,foo"
* "default,-foo" instead of "all,-notdefault,-foo"
* "foo,-default" which has no equivalent
* Default manifest groups behavior can be restored by the command
'repo init -g default'. This is significantly more intuitive than the
current equivalent command 'repo init -g all,-notdefault'.
Change-Id: I6d0673791d64a650110a917c248bcebb23b279d3
(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
Extend the Command base class to allow options to be set from values
in environment variables, if the user has not given the option on the
command line and the environment variable is set.
Derived classes of Command can override the implementation of the method
_GetEnvironmentOptions to configure which of its options may be set from
environment variables.
Change-Id: I7c780bcf9644d6567893d9930984c054bce7351e
Fixing some more pylint warnings:
W1401: Anomalous backslash in string
W0623: Redefining name 'name' from outer scope
W0702: No exception type(s) specified
E0102: name: function already defined line n
Change-Id: I5afcdb4771ce210390a79981937806e30900a93c
pylint configuration file (.pylintrc) is added, and submission
instructions are updated to include pylint usage steps.
Deprecated pylint suppression (`disable-msg`) is updated in a few
modules to make it work properly with the latest version (0.26).
Change-Id: I4ec2ef318e23557a374ecdbf40fe12645766830c
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: I541e9e2ac1a70304272dbe09724572aa1004eb5c
Fixing more issues found with pylint. Some that were supposed to
have been fixed in the previous sweep (Ie0db839e) but were missed:
C0321: More than one statement on a single line
W0622: Redefining built-in 'name'
And some more:
W0631: Using possibly undefined loop variable 'name'
W0223: Method 'name' is abstract in class 'name' but is not overridden
W0231: __init__ method from base class 'name' is not called
Change-Id: Ie119183708609d6279e973057a385fde864230c3
Fix the following issues reported by pylint:
C0321: More than one statement on a single line
W0622: Redefining built-in 'name'
W0612: Unused variable 'name'
W0613: Unused argument 'name'
W0102: Dangerous default value 'value' as argument
W0105: String statement has no effect
Also fixed a few cases of inconsistent indentation.
Change-Id: Ie0db839e7c57d576cff12d8c055fe87030d00744
Instead of every group being in the group "default", every project
is now in the group "all". A group that should not be downloaded
by default may be added to the group "notdefault".
This allows all group names to be positive (instead of removing groups
directly in the manifest with -default) and offers a clear way of
selecting every project (--groups all).
Change-Id: I99cd70309adb1f8460db3bbc6eff46bdcd22256f
Previous incarnations of groups support left "groups=" in the
repo .config, which is now treated as "delete all the projects".
Treat empty groups configuration the same as no groups
configuration.
Change-Id: I57dab8dac55bdbf4cc181e2748cd2e4e510764f5
Projects may optionally specify their platform
(eg, groups="platform-linux" in the manifest).
By default, repo will automatically detect the platform. However,
users may specify --platform=[auto|all|linux|darwin].
Change-Id: Ie678851fb2fec5b0938aede01f16c53138a16537
Every project is in group "default". "-default" does not remove
it from this project. All group names specified in the manifest
are positive names as opposed to a mix of negative and positive.
Specified groups are resolved in order. If init is supplied with
--groups="group1,-group2", the following describes the project
selection when syncing:
* all projects in "group1" will be added, and
* all projects in "group2" will be removed.
Change-Id: I1df3dcdb64bbd4cd80d675f9b2d3becbf721f661
Allows specifying a list of groups with a -g argument to repo init.
The groups act on a group= attribute specified on projects in the
manifest.
All projects are implicitly labelled with "default" unless they are
explicitly labelled "-default".
Prefixing a group with "-" removes matching projects from the list
of projects to sync.
If any non-inverted manifest groups are specified, the default label
is ignored.
Change-Id: I3a0dd7a93a8a1756205de1d03eee8c00906af0e5
Reviewed-on: https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/34570
Reviewed-by: Shawn Pearce <sop@google.com>
Tested-by: Shawn Pearce <sop@google.com>
When trying to read log output from many projects at once it can
be difficult to make sense of which messages came from where.
For many professional developers it is common to want to view the
last week's worth of your work, so you can write a weekly summary
of your activity for your status report.
This is easier with the new -p option:
repo forall -pc git log --reverse --since=1.week.ago --author=sop
produces a report of all commits written by me in the last week,
formatted in a paged output display, with headers inserted in
front of each project's output.
Where this can be even more useful is with git log's pickaxe,
e.g. now we can use:
repo forall -pc git log -Sbar v1.0..v1.1
to locate all additions or removals of the symbol 'bar' since v1.0,
up to and including v1.1. Before displaying the matching commits in
a project, a project header is shown, giving the user some context
information for the matching results.
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <sop@google.com>
If a client was created with "repo init --mirror" then there are
no working directories present, and no files checked out. Using
a command like "repo status" in this context makes no sense, and
actually throws back a Pytyon traceback at the console when the
underlying commands fail out.
We now tag commands with the MirrorSafeCommand type if they are
able to be executed within a mirror directory safely. Using a
command in a mirror which lacks this base class results in a
useful error letting you know the command isn't supported.
Bug: REPO-14
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <sop@google.com>