This reverts commit 38e4387f8e.
A "repo init" followed by "repo sync" is meant to be as safe as
"git clone". In particular it should not run arbitrary code provided
by the manifest owner.
It would still be nice to have support for manifest-defined git hooks
--- they'd just need a prompt like the upload RepoHook has. Hopefully
a later change can bring them back.
Change-Id: I5ecd90fb5c2ed64f103d856d1ffcba38a47b062d
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrn@google.com>
Currently, paths longer than 39 chars have no space after them so it looks
like this:
project path/branch master
Change-Id: I4c1bb13648ac099ade8a8d4ebafa04131571f842
The stderr output generated by git during a RemoteFetch was not being
printed. This information is useful so print it.
Change-Id: I6e6ce12c4a57e5ca2359f76ce14f2fcbbc37a5ef
If the repo project is synced with partial depth, then the tags
won't be fetched and users will be told the newest sha1 in the
stable branch isn't signed.
Change-Id: I107df97b4836b928c76aa33a700fa35d1705ae09
Handle the case when this error occurs:
error: some local refs could not be updated; try running
'git remote prune origin' to remove any old, conflicting branches
This is usually caused by a reference getting changed from a file to a
directory.
For example:
Initially someone creates a branch 'foo' and it is stored as:
.git/refs/remotes/origin/foo
Then later on it is decided to change the layout structure where 'foo'
is a directory with branches below it:
.git/refs/remotes/origin/foo/master
The problem occurs when someone still has
'.git/refs/remotes/origin/foo' on their system and does a repo sync.
When this occurs the error message for needing to do a
'git remote prune origin' occurs.
Now when doing a 'git fetch' if the error message from git says that a
'git remote prune' is needed, it will do the prune and then retry the
fetch.
Change-Id: I4c6f5aa6bd932f0ef7a39134400bedd52e82f633
Signed-off-by: John L. Villalovos <john.l.villalovos@intel.com>
When working within a team or corporation it is often
useful/required to use predefined git templates. This
change teaches repo to use a per-remote git hook template
structure.
The implementation is done as a continuation of the
existing projecthook functionality. The terminology is
therefore defined as projecthooks.
The downloaded projecthooks are stored in the .repo
directory as a metaproject separating them from the users
project forest.
The projecthooks are downloaded and set up when doing a
repo init and updated for each new repo init.
When downloading a mirror the projecthooks gits are
not added to the bare forest since the intention is to
ensure that the latest are used (allows for company policy
enforcement).
The projecthooks are defined in the manifest file in the
remote element as a subnode, the name refers to the
project name on the server referred to in the remote.
<remote name="myremote ..>
<projecthook name="myprojecthookgit" revision="myrevision"/>
</remote>
The hooks found in the projecthook revision supersede
the stock hooks found in repo. This removes the need for
updating the projecthook gits for repo stock hook changes.
Change-Id: I6796b7b0342c1f83c35f4b3e46782581b069a561
Signed-off-by: Patrik Ryd <patrik.ryd@stericsson.com>
Signed-off-by: Ian Kumlien <ian.kumlien@gmail.com>
Currently, we only use the depth flag when cloning. The result is that when
new project history has merges, the entire history of the merged branch is
brought in and the project becomes unshallow very quickly. --depth and
clone-depth are often used to save on space, not just network load, so this
seems less than ideal.
This change uses --depth on every fetch (when the user has depth specified),
not just the initial clone. The result is that the given project stays
consistently shallow as opposed to growing over time, especially when merges
are involved.
Change-Id: Iac706cfdad4a555c72f9d9f1119195d38d91df12
When doing a shallow checkout SHA1 pinned repos with repo init --depth=1 and
repo sync -c, repo would try to fetch only some reference and fail if the exact
SHA1 repo was missing.
Instead, when depth is set, fetch only the specific commit.
Change-Id: If3f799d0e78c03faea47f796380bb5e367b11998
We currently delete all hooks in .git/hooks for each project before
symlink'ing in the standard project hooks. This can be annoying for
users who have installed custom git hooks.
There's no reason to delete all existing hooks. Just rip out the
deletion code.
Change-Id: I5062a6cd20af700f6d6a17b11ad6c94853987c57
Signed-off-by: Mitchel Humpherys <mitchelh@codeaurora.org>
The persistent proxy may choose to present a per-process cookie file
that gets cleaned up after the process exits, to help with the fact
that libcurl cannot save cookies atomically when a cookie file is
shared across processes. We were letting this cleanup happen
immediately by closing stdin as soon as we read the configuration
option, resulting in a nonexistent cookie file by the time we use the
config option.
Work around this by converting the cookie logic to a context manager
method, which closes the process only when we're done with the cookie
file.
Change-Id: I12a88b25cc19621ef8161337144c1b264264211a
The invalid clone.bundle file warning is not typically user actionable,
and can be confusing. So don't show it when -q flag is in effect.
Change-Id: If9fef4085391acf54b63c75029ec0e161c38eb86
This reverts commit 565480588d.
We are reverting this change for 2 reasons:
1) It introduced a bug for users using sync -c with a reference mirror.
2) The fetch specs have recently changed to cause git to properly fail
when we request a non-existent branch of a manifest, removing the need
for this change.
Change-Id: I0f63da9bfb40cf5ffafb7979f1b8c929a738fc7b
When there are uncommitted files in the tree, 'repo upload' stops to
ask if it is OK to continue, but does not report the actual names of
uncommitted files.
This patch adds plumbing to have the outstanding file names reported
if desired.
BUG=None
TEST=verified that 'repo upload' properly operates with the following
conditions present in the tree:
. file(s) modified locally
. file(s) added to index, but not committed
. files not known to git
. no modified files (the upload proceeds as expected)
Change-Id: If65d5f8e8bcb3300c16d85dc5d7017758545f80d
Signed-off-by: Vadim Bendebury <vbendeb@chromium.org>
Signed-off-by: Vadim Bendebury <vbendeb@google.com>
While not typical, some users might have an upstream that isn't in
the usual refs/heads/* namespace. There's no reason not to use
those refs as the value for the upstream attribute, so support
doing so.
Change-Id: I5b119f1135c3268c20e7c4084682e860d3ee1fb1
If a user reinits to a different manifest or the manifest updates so
that a project no longer has a fixed depth, we need to use --unshallow
when we fetch.
Change-Id: I6d3f15e5464b5eaad9205654bc24354947a78aea
Some projects use multiple remotes.
In some cases these remotes have different naming conventions.
Add an option to define a revision in the remote configuration.
The `project` revision takes precedence over `remote` and `default`.
The `remote` revision takes precedence over `default`.
The `default` revision acts as a fall back as it originally did.
Change-Id: I2b376160d45d48b0bab840c02a3eef1a1e32cf6d
iterator.next() was replaced with iterator.__next__() in Python 3.
Use next(iterator) instead which will select the correct method for
returning the next item.
Change-Id: I6d0c89c8b32e817e5897fe87332933dacf22027b
A recent optimization (2fb6466f79) skips
performing a remote fetch if we already know we have the sha1 we want.
However, that optimization skipped initialization steps that ensure HEAD
points to the correct sha1. This change makes sure not to skip those
steps.
Here is an example of how to test this change:
"""""""""
url=<manifest url>
branch1=<branch name>
branch2=<branch name>
project=<project with revision set to different sha1 in each branch>
repo init -u $url -b $branch1 --mirror
repo sync $project
first=$(cd $project.git; git rev-parse HEAD)
repo init -b $branch2
repo sync $project
second=$(cd platform/build.git; git rev-parse HEAD)
if [[ $first == $second ]]
then
echo 'problem!'
else
echo 'no problem!'
fi
"""""""""
This fixes the bug that kept clients from doing things like `git log`
in projects using the clone-depth feature.
Change-Id: Ib4024a7b82ceaa7eb7b8935b007b3e8225e0aea8
It's just like copyfile and runs at the same time as copyfile but
instead of copying it creates a symlink instead. This is needed
because copyfile copies the target of the link as opposed to the
symlink itself.
Change-Id: I7bff2aa23f0d80d9d51061045bd9c86a9b741ac5
If a manifest includes projects with a clone-depth=1 attribute, and a
workspace is initialised from that manifest using the --mirror option,
any workspaces initialised and synced from the mirror will fail with:
fatal: attempt to fetch/clone from a shallow repository
on the projects that had the clone-depth.
Ignore the clone-depth attribute when fetching from the remote to a
mirror workspace. Thus the mirror will be synched with a complete
clone of all the repositories.
Change-Id: I638b77e4894f5eda137d31fa6358eec53cf4654a
Currently, the --no-tags option is ignored if the user asks to only
fetch the current branch. There is no reason for this restriction. Fix
it.
Change-Id: Ibaaeae85ebe9955ed49325940461d630d794b990
Signed-off-by: Mitchel Humpherys <mitchelh@codeaurora.org>
The old "manifest required for this command -- please run
init" is replaced by a more helpful message that lists the
command repo was trying to execute (with arguments) as well
as the str() of the NoManifestException. For example:
> error: in `sync`: [Errno 2] No such file or directory:
> 'path/to/.repo/manifests/.git/HEAD'
> error: manifest missing or unreadable -- please run init
Other failure points in basic command parsing and dispatch
are more clearly explained in the same fashion.
Change-Id: I6212e5c648bc5d57e27145d55a5391ca565e4149
In existing workspaces where the manifest specifies a commit id in the
manifest, we can avoid doing a fetch from the remote if we have the
commit locally. This substantially improves sync times for fully
specified manifests.
Change-Id: Ide216f28a545e00e0b493ce90ed0019513c61613
This command allows a deeper diff between two manifest projects.
In addition to changed projects, it displays the logs of the
commits between both revisions for each project.
Change-Id: I86d30602cfbc654f8c84db2be5d8a30cb90f1398
Signed-off-by: Julien Campergue <julien.campergue@parrot.com>
When we do an initial fetch and have not specified any branch etc,
the following fetch command will not error:
git fetch origin --tags +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/*
In this change we make sure something got fetched and if not we report
an error.
This fixes the bug that occurs when we init using a bad manifest url and
then are unable to init again (because a manifest project has been
inited with no manifest).
Change-Id: I6f8aaefc83a1837beb10b1ac90bea96dc8e61156
Fetching a new branch on a shallow client may download the entire
project history, as the depth parameter is not passed to git
fetch. Force the fetch to only download the current branch.
Change-Id: Ie17ce8eb5e3487c24d90b2cae8227319dea482c8
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>
If the top-level .repo directory is moved somewhere else (e.g. a
different drive) and replaced with a symlink, _InitHooks() will create
broken symlinks. Resolving symlinks before computing the relative path
for the symlink keeps the path within the repo tree, so the tree can
be moved anywhere.
Change-Id: Ifa5c07869e3477186ddd2c255c6c607f547bc1fe
If git-remote-persistent-https fails, we use an iter() and then
subsequently a .read() on stderr. Python doesn't like this and
gives the following error message:
ValueError: Mixing iteration and read methods would lose data
This change removes the use of iter() to avoid the issue.
Change-Id: I980659b83229e2a559c20dcc7b116f8d2476abd5
* 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