Use the same cookies and proxy that git traffic goes through for
persistent-http[s] to support authentication for smart-sync.
Change-Id: I20f4a281c259053a5a4fdbc48b1bca48e781c692
Passing the force_sync variable into the string formatting results in
the message:
"Retrying clone after deleting None"
or
"Retrying clone after deleting True".
Pass the name of the git directory instead.
Also, move the print inside the if-block so it's only displayed
when the retry is actually going to be attempted.
Change-Id: I76d9ecc176cecee4ad512d13e9d1f6bd36aacbbb
Add repo sync support for GITC checkouts. If the user is in the
GITC client directory they can still pull the sources as normal
if they pass in the --force-gitc argument. Otherwise the user
should call repo sync in the GITC view to update the user's
remote view. (This works because .repo in the GITC view will
link to .repo in the client config directory.)
Part of the support for this change is the refactoring of GITC
related code into gitc_utils.py.
Change-Id: I2636aaa50b450b6f091309db8dd0e8f4dbdad579
This argument wasn't being copied, which caused syncs from generated
manifests to pull down too much of the git history.
Change-Id: I269bab788d4557267c081628b3f8c6aec7744e81
Adds the new gitc-init command to set up a GITC client. Gitc-init
sets up the client directory and calls repo init within it. Once
the repo is initialized, then generates a GITC manifest file
by using git ls-remote on each project and retrieving the HEAD SHA
to use as the revision attribute.
Gitc-init inherits from and has all the options as repo init.
Change-Id: Icd7e47e90eab752a77de7c80ebc98cfe16bf6de3
For projects that have been cloned outside of the repo command (or
cloned a long time ago), commit abaa7f312f
introduced an error message to invite the user to use --force-sync.
However, due to the risk of data loss, it's useful to know which
project's git directory is being replaced before deciding whether or not
to provide --force-sync.
This change updates the exception's associated value to include the
project's relative path and explain to the user how they can resolve the
issue. A previous version of this commit used the project name. However,
for projects that have multiple work trees, the name can be ambiguous,
while the path clearly identifies which git directory will be replaced.
Change-Id: If717e66fda4d19accc0a8e889a91f4cd4ff14dff
The existing code here makes sure that switching clone-depth from on to
off actually causes the history to be fully restored. Unfortunately, it
does this by fetching the full history every time the fetch spec
changes. Switching between two clone-depth="1" branches will fetch far
more than the top commit.
Instead, when not using clone-depth, pass --depth=2147483647 to git
fetch so that it ensures that we have the entire history. That is
slightly less efficient, so limit it to only when there are shallow
objects in the project by checking for the existance of the 'shallow'
file.
Change-Id: Iee0cfc9c6992c208344b1d9123769992412db67b
Previously repo would only print the failing project path if
Sync_NetworkHalf returned false/empty, but if it threw an
exception the print() was never called.
Change-Id: I58c41de43930df5e34b21561c205e062a72e290f
This fixes these errors:
...
File ".repo/repo/project.py", line 2371, in _ReferenceGitDir
os.symlink(os.path.relpath(src, os.path.dirname(dst)), dst)
OSError: [Errno 17] File exists
Which was happening for checkouts that were created before v1.12.8, when
project-objects was created. Nothing had yet been forcing these
checkouts to use project-objects, until the recent verification changes.
In this OSError case, we already created the symlink, so src == dst, and
the directory did not exist. This caused us to run os.makedirs the
os.symlink on the same file.
dst really should be the file in gitdir, not the target of that symlink
if it exists. So just use realpath for the dotgit portion of the path.
Change-Id: Iff5396a2093de91029c42cf38aa57131fd22981c
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
In some cases, a user may wish to continue with a sync even though
it would require overwriting an existing git directory. This behavior
is not safe as a default because it could result in the loss of some
user data, but as an optional flag it allows the user more flexibility.
To support this, add a --force-sync flag to the sync command that will
attempt to overwrite the existing git dir if it is specified and the
existing git dir points to the wrong obj dir.
Change-Id: Ieddda8ad54e264a1eb4a9d54881dd6ebc8a03833
repo info will crash when using a manifest with no default element despite
default being an optional element. Output nothing for "Manifest Branch" if no
default element exists (or if no default revision exists).
Change-Id: I7ebffa2408863837ba980f0ab6e593134400aea9
If _InitGitDir fails, it leaves any progress it had made on the file
system. This can cause subsequent calls to repo sync to behave
differently. This is especially evident when _CheckDirReference() fails,
since it will not be invoked when sync is retried because both the
source and destination directories already exist.
To address this, have _InitGitDir() clean up any directories it has created
if it catches an exception. Also behave the same way for _InitWorkTree().
Change-Id: Ic16bb3feea649e115b59bd44be294e89e3692aeb
For some users it is not desirable to remove refs that don't exist
on the remote server when syncing a mirror repo.
This reverts commit b4d43b9f66.
Change-Id: Ie849b66682138ef88da6cd1a5fbb27e993197dd7
The fetch logic for the case where depth is set and revision is a
SHA1 has several failure modes that are not handled well by the
current logic.
1) 'git fetch <SHA1>' requires git version >= 1.8.3
2) 'git fetch <SHA1>' can be prevented by a configuration option on the server.
3) 'git fetch --depth=<N> <refspec>' can fail to contain a SHA1 specified by
the manifest.
Each of these cases cause infinite recursion when _RemoteFetch() tries to call
itself with current_branch_only=False because current_branch_only is set to
True when depth != None.
To try to prevent the infinite recursion, we set self.clone_depth to None
before the first retry of _RemoteFetch(). This will allow the Fetch to
eventually succeed in the case where clone-depth is specified in the manifest.
A user specified depth from the init command will still recurse infinitely.
In addition, never try to fetch a SHA1 directly if the git version being used
is not at least 1.8.3.
Change-Id: I802fc17878c0929cfd63fff611633c1d3b54ecd3
* changes:
forall: use smart sync override manifest if it exists
sync: Remove smart sync override manifest when not in smart sync mode
forall: Don't try to get lrev of projects in mirror workspace
sync: Improve error message when writing smart sync manifest fails
Previously, in running the `manifest` command, we wouldn't output the
upstream if the default upstream would include the pinned sha1.
However, now that fetching refs/heads/* doesn't guarantee that we will
have the sha1, we need to always output the specified upstream branch.
Change-Id: Ib8b409a8ecd439397b38ee9649c530407797f841
If a workspace is synced with the -s or -t option, the included projects
may be different to those in the original manifest. However, when using
the forall command, the list of the projects from the original manifest
is used.
If the smart sync manifest file exists, use it to override the original
manifest.
Change-Id: Iaefcbe148d2158ac046f158d98bbd8b5a5378ce7
When syncing with the -s or -t option, a smart_sync_override.xml file
is created. This file is left in the file system when syncing again
without the -s or -t option.
Remove the smart sync override manifest, if it exists, when not using
the -s or -t option.
Change-Id: I697a0f6405205ba5f84a4d470becf7cd23c07b4b
git rev-parse fails for projects that don't have an explicit revision
specified, and don't have a branch of the same name as the default
revision. This can be the case in a workspace synced with the smart
sync (-s) or smart tag (-t) option.
Change-Id: I19bfe9fe7396170379415d85f10f6440dc6ea08f
The error message only states that writing the manifest failed.
Include the exception message, so it's easier to track down the reason
that the write failed.
Change-Id: I06e942c48a19521ba45292199519dd0a8bdb1de7
After performing the actual cherry-pick operation, the code
in cherry_pick.py opens a pipe to 'git commit -F' to rewrite the commit
message, emits the fixed-up commit msg to the pipe, then waits
for 'git commit' to complete. The child 'git' process winds up
hanging while reading from the pipe, however, since the parent
process still has it open. To fix the hang, change the parent process
to close its end of the pipe after it has emitted the message.
Change-Id: I5929371e69a5b076f09009d00d40a2c72ac8ac33
output from a process is in bytes in python3. we need
to decode it.
in Python3, bytes don't have an encode attribute. use this
to identify it.
Change-Id: I152f2ec34614131027db680ead98b53f9b321ed5
This allows a project to use globs in the linkfile src attribute. When
a glob is used in the src the dest field must be a directory. Then
_LinkFile._Link(self) calls will create symbolic links in the dest
directory to all of the entries in the src as defined by the glob
specification.
Below all of the entries in master-configs/ will have symbolic links
in <root dir>/configs directory:
<project name="helloworld.git" path="apps/helloworld">
<linkfile src="master-configs/*" dest="configs"/>
</project>
Change-Id: Idfed8fa47c83d2ca6e2b8e867731b8e2f9e2eb47