os.remove raises an exception when deleting read-only files on
Windows. Replace all calls with calls to platform_utils.remove,
which deals with deals with that issue.
Change-Id: I4dc9e0c9a36b4238880520c69f5075eca40f3e66
* changes:
Port os.rename calls to work on Windows
Workaround shutil.rmtree limitation on Windows
Add support for creating symbolic links on Windows
Make "git command" and "forall" work on Windows
When starting a branch, branch.merge is set to project revision unless
the revision is a SHA1. In that case, branch.merge is set to dest_branch
if defined or manifest default revision otherwise. This special handling
allows repo upload to work when the project revision is a SHA1.
Extend the special handling to also happen when the project revision
is a tag value or a change value so that repo upload will work in those
case as well.
Change-Id: Iff81ece40e770cd02535e80dcb023564d42dcf47
This option allow to bypass verification ssl certification while
establishing connection with Gerrit to upload review.
Change-Id: If2e15f5a273c18a700eb5093ca8a4d5a4cbf80cd
This reverts commit d88f53e2b9. I merged
it too hastily without paying enough attention to compatibility with
released Gerrit versions.
Change-Id: I4028d4737df1255f11e217da183a19a010597d5b
Considering that some users might expect changes created with
'-d' option are not public. Private changes may be a better
choice here than work-in-progress changes.
Change-Id: I46a8fb9ae38beb41cf96d6abe82bea6db2439669
This change adds options for git-repo tool to support private
changes and work-in-progress changes.
Change-Id: I343491f5949f06f1580d53f9cc0dee2dca09130f
$ git ls-files | grep py$ | xargs pyflakes
subcmds/stage.py:101: list comprehension redefines 'p' from line 63
subcmds/sync.py:784: list comprehension redefines 'p' from line 664
subcmds/upload.py:467: list comprehension redefines 'avail' from line 454
Change-Id: Ia65d1a72ed185ab3357e1a91ed4450c719e75a7c
The submodule argument to Sync_LocalHalf was missing in
MetaBranchSwitch, causing submodules not to get synced when the
-b/--manifest-branch argument to init is used.
Change-Id: Ie86d271abac2020725770be36ead83be3326e64b
Signed-off-by: Martin Kelly <mkelly@xevo.com>
With --force-broken it continue to fetch other projects but nothing
is added in directory because it abort some lines later.
Change-Id: I32c4a4619b3028893dc4f98e8d4e5bc5c09adb27
By default, shutil.rmtree raises an exception when deleting readonly
files on Windows.
Replace all shutil.rmtree with platform_utils.rmtree, which adds an
error handler to make files read-write when they can't be deleted.
Change-Id: I9cfea9a7b3703fb16a82cf69331540c2c179ed53
Python on Windows does not support non blocking file operations.
To workaround this issue, we instead use Threads and a Queue to
simulate non-blocking calls. This is happens only when running
with the native Windows version of Python, meaning Linux and Cygwin
are not affected by this change.
Change-Id: I4ce23827b096c5138f67a85c721f58a12279bb6f
As reported by pyflakes:
subcmds/abandon.py:84: undefined name 'p'
The name of the variable should be 'proj'.
Change-Id: Ic09eb92e8db6b510e99efce010bd0bb094d7cbfe
repo sync can sync submodules via the --fetch-submodules option.
However, if the manifest repo has submodules, those will not be synced.
Having submodules in the manifest repo -- while not commonly done -- can
be useful for inheriting a manifest from another project using <include>
and layering changes on top of it. In this way, you can avoid having to
deal with merge conflicts between your own manifests and the other
project's manifests (for example, if you're managing an Android fork).
Add a --submodule option to init that automatically syncs the submodules
in the manifest repo whenever the manifest repo changes.
Change-Id: I45d34f04517774c1462d7f233f482d1d81a332a8
Signed-off-by: Martin Kelly <mkelly@xevo.com>
repo can be configured to download from any number of remote git repos.
However when one fails repo doesn't report which one. Example:
Fatal: remote error: Daily ls-remote rate limit exceeded for IP xx.xx.xx.xx
TEST=repo init -q -u https://chromium.googlesource.com/chromiumos/manifest.git
# Apply patch in ./.repo/repo/
# Simulate a git remote error:
sed -i -e 's#chromiumos/docs#chromiumos/XXdocs#' .repo/manifests/full.xml
repo sync --quiet --force-sync docs
# error message now shows the remote URL
Optional test tip: reduce the time.sleep(random(...)) in ./.repo/repo/project.py
Change-Id: I4509383b6a43a8e66064778e8ed612d8a735c8b6
The --quiet option reduces the output to just
a list of projects with modified workspaces (and
orphans if -o is specified)
A common use case is when performing a full-workspace
merge. The integrator will kick-off a merge via:
repo forall -c git merge <some tag>
And then produce a short list of conflicted projects via:
repo status -q
The integrator can then iteratively fix and clean up all conficted
components. The merge is complete when:
repo status -q
returns no output.
Change-Id: Ibbba8713eac35befd8287c95948874e23fd5c7e2
when you want to delete all local branches, you should be find
all branches' name, and type them behind 'repo abandon' command.
Usage:
repo abandon --all [<project>...]
Change-Id: I4d391f37fb9d89b8095488c585468eafc1a35f31
When repo syncs a manifest that utilizes multiple branches
in the same project, then the sync will use an extra
thread for each "duplicate". For example, if
the manifest includes the project "foo" and "bar"
twice, then "repo sync -jN" will fetch with N+2 threads.
This is caused by _FetchHelper() releasing the thread semaphore
object each time it's called, even though _FetchProjectList()
may call this function multiple times within the scope of a
single thread.
Fix by moving the thread semaphore release to
_FetchProjectList(), which is only called once per thread
instance.
Change-Id: I1da78b145e09524d40457db5ca5c37d315432bd8
When there's a symlink to a directory, os.walk still lists the symlink
in dirs, even if it isn't configured to follow symlinks. This will fail
the listdirs check if the symlink is broken (either before or during the
cleanup). So instead, check for directory symlinks and remove them using
os.remove.
Bug: Issue 231
Change-Id: I0ec45a26be566613a4a39bf694a3d9c6328481c2
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
The requirement to explicitly specify the local project when starting
a new repo branch is somewhat counter intuitive.
This patch uses the current directory's git tree as the default
project.
Tested by running
'repo start <name>'
observed that the result is the same as if running
'repo start <name> .'
Change-Id: If106caa801b4cd5ba70dbe8354a227d59f100aa3
When nothing is pending, most of this code is already short-circuited.
Hoist the single check up to make this more obvious/slightly faster.
Change-Id: Iec3a7e08eacd23a7c5f964900d5776bf5252c804
The constant prompting when registered hooks change can be tedious and
has a large multiplication factor when the project is large (e.g. the
AOSP). It gets worse as people want to write more checks, hooks, docs,
and tests (or fix bugs), but every CL that goes in will trigger a new
prompt to approve.
Let's tweak our trust model when it comes to hooks. Since people start
off by calling `repo init` with a URL to a manifest, and that manifest
defines all the hooks, anchor trust in that. This requires that we get
the manifest over a trusted link (e.g. https or ssh) so that it can't
be MITM-ed. If the user chooses to use an untrusted link (e.g. git or
http), then we'll fallback to the existing hash based approval.
Bug: Issue 226
Change-Id: I77be9e4397383f264fcdaefb582e345ea4069a13