When there are nested projects in a manifest, like on AOSP right now:
<project path="build" name="platform/build" />
<project path="build/blueprint" name="platform/build/blueprint" />
<project path="build/kati" name="platform/build/kati" />
<project path="build/soong" name="platform/build/soong" />
And the top "build" project is removed (or renamed to remove the
nesting), repo just wipes away everything under build/ and re-creates
the projects that are still there. But it only checks to see if the
build/ project is dirty, so if there are dirty files in a nested
project, they'll just be blown away, and a fresh worktree checked out.
Instead, behave similarly to how `git clean -dxf` behaves and preserve
any subdirectories that have git repositories in them. This isn't as
strict as git -- it does not check to see if the '.git' entry is a
readable gitdir, just whether an entry named '.git' exists.
If it encounters any errors removing files, we'll print them all out to
stderr and tell the user that we were unable to clean up the obsolete
project, that they should clean it up manually, then sync again.
Change-Id: I2f6a7dd205a8e0b7590ca5369e9b0ba21d5a6f77
The shared object stores confuse git and make it throw away objects which are
still in use. We'll avoid that problem by disabling automatic pruning on those
projects, but there's nothing preventing a user from changing the config back
or pruning a repository manually.
BUG=chromium:375945
TEST=Ran repo sync on fresh ChromeOS checkout, starting with a branch of repo
with this change. Verified that the kernel projects and no others were
identified as having shared object stores, and that repo successfully disabled
automatic pruning in their configs. Re-enabled pruning and ran repo sync just
on one of the kernel directories. Verified that pruning was re-disabled as a
result.
Change-Id: I728ed5b06f0087aeb5a23ba8f5410a7cd10af5b0
When repo sync is used with -f (--force-error) and a project fails to
sync, the sync will continue but then exit with an error status.
However if -n (--network-only) is also used, the exit code is 0, even
when a project failed.
Modify the logic to make sure the sync exits with the correct status.
Bug: Issue 214
Change-Id: I0b5d97a34642c5aa3743750ef14a42c9d5743c1d
By passing --prune to the sync command, the --prune option is
given to the `git fetch`, causing refs that no longer exist on
the remote to be removed.
Change-Id: I3cedacce14276d96ac2d5aabf2d07fd05e92bc02
The .gitcookies file generated by googlesource.com does not have
the header:
# (Netscape) HTTP Cookie File
which causes python's MozillaCookieJar.load to fail with the
error:
"does not look like a Netscape format cookies file"
Prepend the expected header onto the generated cookie file.
We don't bother to check if the header already exists on the
file; repeating it does not cause any problem.
Bug: Issue 207
Change-Id: I7d39720a1d36a6aae00f70691156514ebc04e579
This way any changes made to the main manifest are reflected in the gitc
manifest. It's also necessary to use both manifests to sync since the
information required to update the gitc manifest is actually in the repo
manifest.
This also fixes a few issues that came up when testing. notdefault
groups weren't being saved to the gitc manifest in a method that matched
'sync'. The merge branch wasn't always being set to the correct value
either.
Change-Id: I435235cb5622a048ffad0059affd32ecf71f1f5b
This way any changes made to the main manifest are reflected in the gitc
manifest. It's also necessary to use both manifests to sync since the
information required to update the gitc manifest is actually in the repo
manifest.
This also fixes a few issues that came up when testing. notdefault
groups weren't being saved to the gitc manifest in a method that matched
'sync'. The merge branch wasn't always being set to the correct value
either.
Change-Id: I5dbc850dd73a9fbd10ab2470ae4c40e46ff894de
Updates the repo launcher and gitc_utils to pull the manifest
directory location out of the gitc config file.
Change-Id: Id08381b8a7d61962093d5cddcb3ff6afbb13004b
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
Don't emit a message when the netrc file doesn't exist or couldn't
be opened.
Instead of trying to unpack the result of info.authenticators() and
catching the resulting TypeError when it's None, first store it to
a local and only unpack it if it has a value.
Also remove an unused import.
Change-Id: I5c404d91e48c261c1ab850c3e5f040c4f4c235cb
Use the same cookies and proxy that git traffic goes through for
persistent-http[s] to support authentication for smart-sync.
Change-Id: I20f4a281c259053a5a4fdbc48b1bca48e781c692
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
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
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
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
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
In 2fb6466f79 an optimisation was
added to avoid fetching from remotes if the project is fixed to
a revision and the revision is already available locally.
This causes problems for users who expect all objects to be
fetched by default.
Change the logic so that the optimized behaviour is only enabled if
an option is explicitly given to repo sync.
Change-Id: I3b2794ddd8e0071b1787e166463cd8347ca9e24f
Use JSON as it is shown to be much faster than pickle.
Also clean up the loading and saving functions.
Change-Id: I45b3dee7b4d59a1c0e0d38d4a83b543ac5839390
The fetch logic is now shared between the jobs == 1 and
jobs > 1 cases. This refactoring also fixes a bug where
opts.force_broken was not honored when jobs > 1.
Change-Id: Ic886f3c3c00f3d8fc73a65366328fed3c44dc3be
This takes the wrapper importing code from main.py and moves it into
its own module so that other modules may import it without causing
circular imports with main.py.
Change-Id: I9402950573933ed6f14ce0bfb600f74f32727705
the value of Manifest.projects has changed from being the dictionary
to the values of the dictionary. Here we handle this change
correctly on a PostRepoUpgrade.
From a `git diff v1.12.7 -- manifest_xml.py`:
+ @property
def projects(self):
self._Load()
- return self._projects
+ return self._paths.values()
self._paths does contain the projects according to this line of
manifest_xml.py:
484 self._paths[project.relpath] = project
Change-Id: I141f8d5468ee10dfb08f99ba434004a307fed810
This significantly reduces sync time and used brandwidth as only
a tar of each project's revision is checked out, but git is not
accessible from projects anymore.
This is relevant when git is not needed in projects but sync
speed/brandwidth may be important like on CI servers when building
several versions from scratch regularly for example.
Archive is not supported over http/https.
Change-Id: I48c3c7de2cd5a1faec33e295fcdafbc7807d0e4d
Signed-off-by: Julien Campergue <julien.campergue@parrot.com>
* Add .decode('utf-8') where needed
* Add 'b' to `open` where needed, and remove where unnecessary
Change-Id: I0f03ecf9ed1a78e3b2f15f9469deb9aaab698657
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
When the RPC call fails, the error message returned by the server
is printed, but it is not obvious that this is caused by RPC call
failure.
Prefix the error message with a descriptive message that explains
what went wrong.
Change-Id: I4b77af22aacc2e9843c4df9d06bf54e41d9692ff
When syncing using smart sync or smart tag mode, print the url of
the manifest server that is being used.
This is useful in organisations that have multiple manifest servers
used in different manifest branches.
Change-Id: Ib5bc2de5af6f4a942d0ef735c65cbc0721059a61
* manifest_name was never set if opt.smart_sync or opt.smart_tag is used.
* Set it earlier, so that the code handles it correctly when it is None.
* An UnboundLocalError is raised if running `repo sync` without any options:
local variable 'manifest_name' referenced before assignment
* This fixes the above regression caused by commit
53a6c5d93a
Change-Id: I57086670f3589beea8461ce0344f6ec47ab85b7b
Revert "Fix "'module' object is not callable" error", and fix it properly.
* The urlparse module is renamed to urllib.parse in Python 3.
* This commit fixes the code to use "urllib.parse.urlparse"
instead of creating a new module urlib and setting
urlib.parse to urlparse.urlparse.
* Fixes an AttributeError:
'function' object has no attribute 'uses_relative'
This reverts commit cd51f17c64.
Change-Id: I48490b20ecd19cf5a6edd835506ea5a467d556ac
In a couple of files the urlparse method was not being set up
correctly for python < 3 and this resulted in an error being
thrown when trying to call it.
Change-Id: I4d2040ac77101e4e228ee225862f365ae3d96cec
This was broken in b2bd91c, which updated the manifest after it had
been overridden, which made it fall back to the original file (and
not the one from the manifest server).
This builds on 0766900 and overrides the manifest by the one
downloaded from the manifest server completely.
Change-Id: Ic3972390a68919b614616631d99c9e7a63c0e0db
Add a new module with methods for checking the Python version.
Instead of handling Python3 imports with try...except blocks, first
check the python version and then import the relevant modules. This
makes the code a bit cleaner and will result in less diff when/if we
remove support for Python < 3 later.
Use the same mechanism to handle `input` vs. `raw_input` and add
suppression of pylint warnings caused by redefinition of the built-in
method `input`.
Change-Id: Ia403e525b88d77640a741ac50382146e7d635924
Also-by: Chirayu Desai <cdesai@cyanogenmod.org>
Signed-off-by: Chirayu Desai <cdesai@cyanogenmod.org>
* 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>
* Print project name if the "quiet" option is not used.
Change-Id: I99863bb50f66e4dcbaf2d170bdd05971f2a4e19a
Signed-off-by: Chirayu Desai <cdesai@cyanogenmod.org>
Several messages are printed with the `print` method and the message
is split across two lines, i.e.:
print('This is a message split'
'across two source code lines')
Which causes the message to be printed as:
This is a message splitacross two source code lines
Add a space at the end of the first line before the line break:
print('This is a message split '
'across two source code lines'
Also correct a minor spelling mistake.
Change-Id: Ib98d93fcfb98d78f48025fcc428b6661380cff79
Add an option to pass `--no-tags' to `git fetch'.
Change-Id: I4158cc369773e08e55a167091c38ca304a197587
Signed-off-by: Mitchel Humpherys <mitchelh@codeaurora.org>
If the current manifest is broken then "repo sync" fails because it
can't retrieve the default value for --jobs. Use 1 in this case, in
order that you can "repo sync" to get a fixed manifest (assuming someone
fixed it upstream).
Change-Id: I4262abb59311f1e851ca2a663438a7e9f796b9f6
(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