Commit Graph

128 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
David Pursehouse
e15c65abc2 Remove unused imports
There are several imports that are not used.  Remove them.

Change-Id: I2ac3be66827bd68d3faedcef7d6bbf30ea01d3f2
2012-08-23 12:15:26 +02:00
Dmitry Fink
17f85eab24 Omit all default groups when generating a manifest
One of the recent changes introduced implicit path:xxx and name:xxx groups
to every project, however they are not being stripped when generating
a manifest using "repo manifest" command resulting in clutter

Change-Id: Iec8610ba794b2fe4a6cdf0f59ca561595b66f9b5
2012-08-07 11:42:54 -07:00
Shawn O. Pearce
f35b2d9c31 Fix mirror mode
Change-Id: Ica0e8392562a7ae5aad7e45441c1540e5e2b0238
2012-08-02 11:46:22 -07:00
Yestin Sun
b292b98c3e Add remote alias support in manifest
The `alias` is an optional attribute in element `remote`. It can be
used to override attibute `name` to be set as the remote name in each
project's .git/config. Its value can be duplicated while attribute
`name` has to be unique across the manifest file. This helps each
project to be able to have same remote name which actually points
to different remote url.

It eases some automation scripts to be able to checkout/push to same
remote name but actually different remote url, like:

repo forall -c "git checkout -b work same_remote/work"
repo forall -c "git push same_remote work:work"

for example:
The manifest with 'alias' will look like:

<?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?>
<manifest>
  <remote alias="same_alias" fetch="git://git.external1.org/" name="ext1"
      review="http://review.external1.org"/>
  <remote alias="same_alias" fetch="git://git.external2.org/" name="ext2"
      review="http://review.external2.org"/>
  <remote alias="same_alias" fetch="ssh://git.internal.com:29418" name="int"
      review="http://review.internal.com"/>
  <default remote="int" revision="int-branch" sync-j="2"/>
  <project name="path/to/project1" path="project1" remote="ext1"/>
  <project name="path/to/project2" path="project2" remote="ext2"/>
  <project name="path/to/project3" path="project3"/>
  ...
</manifest>

In each project, use command "git remote -v"

project1:
same_alias  git://git.external1.org/project1 (fetch)
same_alias  git://git.external1.org/project1 (push)

project2:
same_alias  git://git.external2.org/project2 (fetch)
same_alias  git://git.external2.org/project2 (push)

project3:
same_alias  ssh://git.internal.com:29418/project3 (fetch)
same_alias  ssh://git.internal.com:29418/project3 (push)

Change-Id: I2c48263097ff107f0c978f3e83966ae71d06cb90
2012-07-31 22:13:13 -07:00
Brian Harring
7da1314e38 Inject the project name into each projects groups.
For CrOS, we have scenarios were people checkout a smaller version
of our manifest via groups, and enable individual repositories as
needed for their work.  Previously this was via local_manifest
manipulation, which breaks via manifest-groups would require a
remove-project tag.

Via injecting the projects name into the projects groups, this
allows us to instead manipulate the configured groups allowing
the user to turn on/off projects as necessary.

Change-Id: I07b7918e16cc9dc28eb47e19a46a04dc4fd0be74
2012-07-31 22:05:44 -07:00
Brian Harring
475a47d531 Restore include support.
Calculation of where the include file lives was broken by 23acdd3f14
since it resulted in looking for the first include in .repo, rather
than .repo/manifests.

While people can work around it via setting their includes to
manifests/<include-target>, that breaks down since each layer of
includes would then have to be relative.

As such, restore the behaviour back to 2644874d; manifests includes
are calculated relative to the manifest root (ie, .repo/manifests);
local manifests includes are calculated relative to .repo/ .

Change-Id: I74c19ba614c41d2f08cd3e9fd094f3c510e3bfd1
2012-06-07 20:19:04 -07:00
Colin Cross
23acdd3f14 Parse manifest and local_manifest together
Combine manifest and local_manifest into a single list of elements
before parsing.  This will allow elements in the local_manifest to
affect elements in the main manifest.

Change-Id: I4d34c9260b299a76be2960b07c0c3fe1af35f33c
2012-05-24 09:32:15 -07:00
Brian Harring
2644874d9d ManifestXml: add include support
Having the ability to include other manifests is a very practical feature
to ease the managment of manifest. It allows to divide a manifest into separate
files, and create different environment depending  on what we want to release

You can have unlimited recursion of include, the manifest configs will simply be concatenated
as if it was in a single file.

command "repo manifest" will create a single manifest, and not recreate the manifest hierarchy

for example:
Our developement manifest will look like:

<?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?>
<manifest>
  <default revision="platform/android/main" remote="intel"/>
  <include name="server.xml"/> <!-- The Server configuration -->
  <include name="aosp.xml" />  <!-- All the AOSP projects -->
  <include name="bsp.xml" />   <!-- The BSP projects that we release in source form -->
  <include name="bsp-priv.xml" /> <!-- The source of the BSP projects we release in binary form -->
</manifest>

Our release manifest will look like:

<?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?>
<manifest>
  <default revision="platform/android/release-ext" remote="intel"/>
  <include name="server.xml"/> <!-- The Server configuration -->
  <include name="aosp.xml" />  <!-- All the AOSP projects -->
  <include name="bsp.xml" />   <!-- The BSP projects that we release in source form -->
  <include name="bsp-ext.xml" /> <!-- The PREBUILT version of the BSP projects we release in binary form -->
</manifest>

And it is also easy to create and maintain feature branch with a manifest that looks like:

<?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?>
<manifest>
  <default revision="feature_branch_foobar" remote="intel"/>
  <include name="server.xml"/> <!-- The Server configuration -->
  <include name="aosp.xml" />  <!-- All the AOSP projects -->
  <include name="bsp.xml" />   <!-- The BSP projects that we release in source form -->
  <include name="bsp-priv.xml" /> <!-- The source of the BSP projects we release in binary form -->
</manifest>

Signed-off-by: Brian Harring <brian.harring@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Pierre Tardy <pierre.tardy@intel.com>
Change-Id: I833a30d303039e485888768e6b81561b7665e89d
2012-05-24 09:07:24 -07:00
Anatol Pomazau
79770d269e Add sync-c option to manifest
There are use-cases when fetching all branch is impractical and
we really need to fetch only one branch/tag.
e.g. there is a large project with binaries and every update of a
binary file is put to a separate branch.
The whole project history might be too large to allow users fetch it.

Add 'sync-c' option to 'project' and 'default' tags to make it possible
to configure 'sync-c' behavior at per-project and per-manifest level.

Note that currently there is no possibility to revert boolean flag from
command line. If 'sync-c' is set in manifest then you cannot make
full fetch by providing a repo tool argument.

Change-Id: Ie36fe5737304930493740370239403986590f593
2012-04-23 14:10:52 -07:00
Colin Cross
c39864f5e1 Treat groups= as default
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
2012-04-23 13:43:41 -07:00
Conley Owens
971de8ea7b Refine groups functionality
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
2012-04-23 12:39:05 -07:00
James W. Mills
24c1308840 Add project annotation handling to repo
Allow the optional addition of "annotation" nodes nested under
projects.  Each annotation node must have "name" and "value"
attributes.  These name/value pairs will be exported into the
environment during any forall command, prefixed with "REPO__"

In addition, an optional "keep" attribute with case insensitive "true"
or "false" values can be included to determine whether the annotation
will be exported with 'repo manifest'

Change-Id: Icd7540afaae02c958f769ce3d25661aa721a9de8
Signed-off-by: James W. Mills <jameswmills@gmail.com>
2012-04-23 12:35:08 -07:00
Colin Cross
5acde75e5d Add manifest groups
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>
2012-04-13 09:46:00 -07:00
Mike Pontillo
d315382572 Add 'rebase="false"' attribute to the <project/> XML.
This new attribute can prevent 'repo sync' from automatically rebasing.

I hit a situation in where one of the git repositories I was tracking
was actually an external repository that I wanted to pull commits
into and merge myself. (NOT rebase, since that would lose the merge
history.) In this case, I'm not using 'repo upload', I'm manually
managing the merges to and from this repository.

Everything was going great until I typed 'repo sync' and it rebased
my manually-merged tree. Hence the option to skip it.

Change-Id: I965e0dd1acb87f4a56752ebedc7e2de1c502dbf8
2012-03-12 12:24:22 -07:00
Shawn O. Pearce
34fb20f67c Revert "Default repo manifest settings in git config"
This reverts commit ee1c2f5717.

This breaks a lot of buildbot systems. Rolling it back for now
until we can understand what the breakage was and how to fix it.
2011-11-30 13:41:02 -08:00
Victor Boivie
ee1c2f5717 Default repo manifest settings in git config
A default manifest URL can be specified using:
  git config --global repo-manifest.<id>.url <url>

A default manifest server can be specified using:
  git config --global repo-manifest.<id>.server <url>

A default git mirror reference can be specified using:
  git config --global repo-manifest.<id>.reference <path>

This will allow the user to use 'repo init -u <id>' as
a shorter alternative to specifying the full URL.

Also, manifest server will not have to be specified in the
manifest XML and the reference will not have to be specified
on the command line. If they are, they will override these
default values however.

Change-Id: Ifdbc160bd5909ec7df9efb0c5d7136f1d9351754
Signed-off-by: Victor Boivie <victor.boivie@sonyericsson.com>
2011-11-29 14:24:58 -08:00
Conley Owens
9d8f914fe8 Remove extra '/' in RemoteSpec
urljoin appends a '/' if only the domain is in the url path.  This
change strips that off before creating a RemoteSpec
2011-11-03 13:05:14 -07:00
Conley Owens
ceea368e88 Correctly name projects when mirroring
A bug introduced by relative urls caused projects such as manifest.git
to be placed in the root directory instead of the directory they should
by in.

This fix creates and refers to a resolvedFetchUrl in the _XmlRemote
class in order to get a fetchUrl that is never relative.
2011-10-20 11:01:38 -07:00
Conley Owens
db728cd866 Allow remote url to be relative to manifst url 2011-09-28 10:07:01 -07:00
Shawn O. Pearce
6392c87945 sync: Allow -j to have a default in manifest
This permits manifest authors to suggest a number of parallel
fetch operations against a remote server. For example, Gerrit
Code Review servers support queuing of requests and processes
them in first-in, first-out order. Running concurrent fetches
can utilize multiple CPUs on the Gerrit server, but will also
decrease overall operation latency by having the request put
into the queue ready to execute as soon as a CPU is free.

Change-Id: I3d3904acb6f63516bae4b071c510ad57a2afab18
Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <sop@google.com>
2011-09-22 18:08:27 -07:00
Doug Anderson
37282b4b9c Support repo-level pre-upload hook and prep for future hooks.
All repo-level hooks are expected to live in a single project at the
top level of that project.  The name of the hooks project is provided
in the manifest.xml.  The manifest also lists which hooks are enabled
to make it obvious if a file somehow failed to sync down (or got
deleted).

Before running any hook, we will prompt the user to make sure that it
is OK.  A user can deny running the hook, allow once, or allow
"forever" (until hooks change).  This tries to keep with the git
spirit of not automatically running anything on the user's computer
that got synced down.  Note that individual repo commands can add
always options to avoid these prompts as they see fit (see below for
the 'upload' options).

When hooks are run, they are loaded into the current interpreter (the
one running repo) and their main() function is run.  This mechanism is
used (instead of using subprocess) to make it easier to expand to a
richer hook interface in the future.  During loading, the
interpreter's sys.path is updated to contain the directory containing
the hooks so that hooks can be split into multiple files.

The upload command has two options that control hook behavior:
  - no-verify=False, verify=False (DEFAULT):
    If stdout is a tty, can prompt about running upload hooks if needed.
    If user denies running hooks, the upload is cancelled.  If stdout is
    not a tty and we would need to prompt about upload hooks, upload is
    cancelled.
  - no-verify=False, verify=True:
    Always run upload hooks with no prompt.
  - no-verify=True, verify=False:
    Never run upload hooks, but upload anyway (AKA bypass hooks).
  - no-verify=True, verify=True:
    Invalid

Sample bit of manifest.xml code for enabling hooks (assumes you have a
project named 'hooks' where hooks are stored):
  <repo-hooks in-project="hooks" enabled-list="pre-upload" />

Sample main() function in pre-upload.py in hooks directory:
  def main(project_list, **kwargs):
    print ('These projects will be uploaded: %s' %
           ', '.join(project_list))
    print ('I am being a good boy and ignoring anything in kwargs\n'
           'that I don\'t understand.')
    print 'I fail 50% of the time.  How flaky.'
    if random.random() <= .5:
      raise Exception('Pre-upload hook failed.  Have a nice day.')

Change-Id: I5cefa2cd5865c72589263cf8e2f152a43c122f70
2011-03-11 11:53:23 -08:00
Anthony Newnam
df14a70c45 Make path references OS independent
Change-Id: I5573995adfd52fd54bddc62d1d1ea78fb1328130
(cherry picked from commit b0f9a02394)

Conflicts:

	command.py
2011-01-09 17:39:19 -08:00
Doug Anderson
2b8db3ce3e Added feature to print a <notice> from manifest at the end of a sync.
This feature is used to convey information on a when a branch has
ceased development or if it is an experimental branch with a few
gotchas, etc.

You add it to your manifest XML by doing something like this:
<manifest>
  <notice>
    NOTE TO DEVELOPERS:
      If you checkin code, you have to pinky-swear that it contains no bugs.
      Anyone who breaks their promise will have tomatoes thrown at them in the
      team meeting.  Be sure to bring an extra set of clothes.
  </notice>

  <remote ... />
  ...
</manifest>

Carriage returns and indentation are relevant for the text in this tag.

This feature was requested by Anush Elangovan on the ChromiumOS team.
2010-11-01 15:08:06 -07:00
Nico Sallembien
a1bfd2cd72 Add a 'smart sync' option to repo sync
This option allows the user to specify a manifest server to use when
syncing. This manifest server will provide a manifest pegging each
project to a known green build. This allows developers to work on a
known good tree that is known to build and pass tests, preventing
failed builds to hamper productivity.

The manifest used is not "sticky" so as to allow subsequent
'repo sync' calls to sync to the tip of the tree.

Change-Id: Id0a24ece20f5a88034ad364b416a1dd2e394226d
2010-04-13 10:20:37 -07:00
Shawn O. Pearce
21c5c34ee2 Support detached HEAD in manifest repository
If the manifest repository is on a detached HEAD and we are parsing
an XML formatted manifest we should simply set the branch property
to None, rather than crash with an AttributeError.

Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <sop@google.com>
2009-06-25 16:47:30 -07:00
Shawn O. Pearce
3c8dea1f8d Change project.revision to revisionExpr and revisionId
The revisionExpr field now holds an expression from the manifest,
such as "refs/heads/master", while revisionId holds the current
commit-ish SHA-1 of the revisionExpr.  Currently that is only
filled in if the manifest points directly to a SHA-1.

Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <sop@google.com>
2009-05-29 18:45:20 -07:00
Shawn O. Pearce
d1f70d9929 Refactor how projects parse remotes so it can be replaced
We now feed Project a RemoteSpec, instead of the Remote directly
from the XmlManifest.  This way the RemoteSpec already has the
full project URL, rather than just the base, permitting other
types of manifests to produce the URL in their own style.

Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <sop@google.com>
2009-05-29 09:31:28 -07:00
Shawn O. Pearce
c8a300f639 Refactor Manifest to be XmlManifest
We'll soon be supporting two different manifest formats, but we
can't immediately remove support for the current XML one that is
in wide spread use within Android.

Signed-off-by: Shawn O. Pearce <sop@google.com>
2009-05-29 09:31:28 -07:00