this check can only detect errors that happen within 1 sec after launching
ssh. But this is typically enough to catch configuration issues like
'connection refused' or 'authentication failed'.
Change-Id: I00b6f62d4c2889b1faa6c820e49a198554c92795
Instead of
Do you want to allow this script to run (yes/yes-never-ask-again/NO)? (yes/always/NO)?
ask
Do you want to allow this script to run (yes/always/NO)?
Change-Id: I5f5a2d0e88086a8d85e54fb8623a62d74a20956a
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrn@google.com>
There have been a number of changes in the repo wrapper since the last
increment that was done in fee390ee:
- 9711a98 init: Add --no-clone-bundle option
- 631d0ec Support non-ASCII GNUPGHOME environment variable
- 4088eb4 repo: Cleaned up pylint/pep8 violations
- 5553628 repo: Add check of REPO_URL env variable
- 745b4ad Fix gitc-init behavior
- d3ddcdb Ignore clone.bundle on HTTP 501, i.e. Not Implemented
Change-Id: I3f763ef0ec2df2d726dff429021b48ad474148f1
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
During sync, repo runs `git read-tree --reset -u -v HEAD` which causes
git-lfs's smudge filter to run. However this fails because git-lfs does
not work with bare repositories.
Add lfs.filter configuration to the project config as suggested in the
comments on the upstream git-lfs client issue [1]. This prevents the
smudge filter from running, and the sync completes successfully.
For any projects that have LFS objects, `git lfs pull` must be executed.
[1] https://github.com/github/git-lfs/issues/1422
Bug: Issue 224
Change-Id: I091ff37998131e2e6bbc59aa37ee352fe12d7fcd
Re-ordered to first create the symlink before checking the source
file and remove the destination if the source does not exists.
Change-Id: Iae923ba2ef0ba5a8dc1b8e42d8cc3f3708f773af
If upstream string is empty, current_branch_only variable will be assigned
to an empty string.
This is not what we expect here as this variable is a boolean.
Change-Id: Ibba935e25a74c2be1e50c88b4b403cf394ba365e
When sync-s="true" option is used, the checkout of a submodule will try
to use the revision attribute of the parent project.
If this revision is a named reference, the checkout will fail if there
is no reference with this name in the submodule.
The proposed solution is to use the git commit id as revisionExpr for
submodules.
Change-Id: Ie8390a11957fd6a9c61289c6861d13cb3fa11678
Adds the hook-scripts to .gitattributes due to the shell-scripts not
liking CRLF which they will get if a user sets 'autocrlf = true'
in their global gitconfig.
Further, since the python interpreter can handle either CRLF or LF,
python-scripts specific line-ending rules have been removed.
Change-Id: I2d6bfd491b2f626b9ca93c40a3a7f2cfba6c54f0
This ignores whitespaces errors, which we have quite a few of in argument
lists, for example:
************* Module git_config
C:209, 0: No space allowed around keyword argument assignment
def HasSection(self, section, subsection = ''):
^ (bad-whitespace)
C:320, 0: No space allowed around keyword argument assignment
capture_stdout = True,
^ (bad-whitespace)
C:321, 0: No space allowed around keyword argument assignment
capture_stderr = True)
^ (bad-whitespace)
C:427, 0: Exactly one space required after comma
'-o','ControlPath %s' % ssh_sock(),
^ (bad-whitespace)
C:436, 0: Exactly one space required after comma
check_command = command_base + ['-O','check']
^ (bad-whitespace)
C:464, 0: Exactly one space required after comma
% (host,port, str(e)), file=sys.stderr)
^ (bad-whitespace)
C:707, 0: No space allowed around keyword argument assignment
return self._config.GetString(key, all_keys = all_keys)
^ (bad-whitespace)
C:759, 0: No space allowed around keyword argument assignment
return self._config.GetString(key, all_keys = all_keys)
^ (bad-whitespace)
Change-Id: Ia8f154f6741ce609787551f65877d7584c457903
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
When the alias attribute is set for a remote, the RemoteSpec attached to
a Project only contains the alias name used by git, not the original
name used in the manifest. But that's not enough information to
reconstruct the manifest, so save off the original manifest name as
another RemoteSpec parameter, only used to write the manifest out.
Bug: Issue 181
Bug: Issue 219
Change-Id: Id7417dfd6ce5572e4e5fe14f22924fdf088ca4f3
Mention that the RPC endpoints are used when running repo
sync with the --smart-sync and --smart-tag options
Change-Id: I4b0b82e8b714fe923a5b325a6135f0128bf636ff
The repo script allows a manifest to specify a '.' as the path the
top-level directory, which co-locates the .git and .repo directories,
and places files from the git repository at the top-level:
<project name="proj_name" path="." />
<project name="sierra.other.git" path="other" />
Most commands work correctly with this setup. Some commands, however,
fail to find the project. For instance, 'repo sync' works, and 'repo sync .'
works in a sub-project ('other' in this case) but 'repo sync .' in the
top-level directory fails with the error:
error: project . not found
There are two reasons for this:
1. The self.worktree attribute of the Project object is not normalized,
so with a '.' for path its value would be '/my/project/root/.'. This is
fine when used as a path, since it's the same path as '/my/project/root',
but when used in a string comparison it fails. This commit applies
os.path.normpath() to that value before storing it.
2. The _GetProjectByPath method in command.py was not checking the path
against manifest.topdir, so even once it was normalized the project was
not found. This commit adds a check against manifest.topdir if the
loop drops out without finding a project.
Change-Id: Ic84d053f1bbb5a357cad566805d5a326ae8246d2
We weren't copying these lists, so the += was actually changing the
underlying lists.
When a new project was added to the manifest, we run _CheckDirReference
against the manifest project with share_refs=True, which added the
working_tree_* to the shareable_* lists. Then, when we load the new
manifest and create the new project, it uses the lists that already
contain the working_tree_* files, even though we passed
share_refs=False.
This happens reliably under the above conditions, but doesn't seem to
happen when syncing a fresh tree. So we've got a mixture of links that
may need to be cleaned up later. This patch will just stop it from
happening in the future.
Change-Id: Ib7935bfad78af1e494a75e55134ec829f13c2a41
Make it possible to exclude projects using regex/wildcard.
The syntax is similar to that of the -r option, e.g.:
repo forall -i ^platform/ ^device/ -c 'echo $REPO_PROJECT'
Change-Id: Id250de5665152228c044c79337d3ac15b5696484
A common design pattern is to use __file__ to find the location of the
active python module to assist in output or loading of related assets.
The current hook systems runs the pre-upload.py hook in a context w/out
that set leading to runtime errors:
$ repo upload --cbr .
ERROR: Traceback (most recent call last):
File ".../repo/project.py", line 481, in _ExecuteHook
self._script_fullpath, 'exec'), context)
File ".../repohooks/pre-upload.py", line 32, in <module>
path = os.path.dirname(os.path.realpath(__file__))
NameError: name '__file__' is not defined
Define this variable in this context so code can safely use it.
Change-Id: If6331312445fa61d9351b59f83abcc1c99ae6748
I noticed when running pylint (as the SUBMITTING_PATCHES file directs)
that there were a few violations reported. This makes it difficult
to see violations I might have introduced. This commit corrects all
pylint violations in the command.py script.
This script now has a pylint score of 10.0.
Change-Id: Ibb35fa9af0e0b9b40e02ae043682b3af23286748
I noticed when running pylint (as the SUBMITTING_PATCHES file directs)
that there were a number of violations reported. This makes it difficult
to see violations I might have introduced. This commit corrects all
pylint violations in the project.py script.
This script now has a pylint score of 10.0, and no violations reported
by pep8.
Change-Id: I1462fd84f5b6b4c0dc893052671373e7ffd838f1
It was only displaying 'Project list error: GitError()'
without any useful info about the project nor the error
Change-Id: Iad66cbaa03cad1053b5ae9ecc90d7772aa42ac13
This commit adds additional instructions on getting patches submitted,
based on my recent experience doing so.
Change-Id: I8e0d37d316214cc9a39383414773aad181f83f18
I noticed when running pylint (as the SUBMITTING_PATCHES file directs)
that there were a number of violations reported. This makes it difficult
to see violations I might have introduced. This commit corrects all
pylint violations in the repo script.
First I ran this to clean up the formatting:
autopep8 --max-line-length=80 --indent-size 2 repo
Following that the following violations remained:
% pylint --rcfile=.pylintrc repo
************* Module repo
W:220,21: Redefining name 'init_optparse' from outer scope (line 156)
(redefined-outer-name)
W:482, 2: No exception type(s) specified (bare-except)
C:704, 0: Old-style class defined. (old-style-class)
For line 220, the parameter to _GitcInitOptions was renamed so as not to
mask the init_optparse global.
For line 482, a pylint directive was added to disable the bare-execpt
violation for just that line.
For line 704, the _Options class was changed to subclass object.
Additionally, the comments at lines 107-113 were spaced out to line up
with the comment at line 112 that autopep8 moved.
This script now has a pylint score of 10.0
Change-Id: I779b66eb6b061a195d3c4372b99dec1b6d2a214f
We want to be able to run repo on a system that is not connected to
the Internet and cannot access https://gerrit.googlesource.com. We
can put a clone of that repos there, but would prefer to use the
stable version of the repo script instead of a locally modified
version.
This commit adds a check for the REPO_URL environment variable. If
that is set and not empty its value will be set in the REPO_URL
global in repo. Otherwise the standard path will be used.
Change-Id: I0616f5f81ef75f3463b73623b892cb5eed6bb7ba
As soon as we wrote the gitc manifest, the folder for that repo became
empty, causing the next GetProjects lookup to fail. Reorder the
GetProjects calls so that they all happen while we still have the
repository contents available.
If you were already in a subdir, for cases like 'repo start <branch> .',
this would still fail, since the working directory would disappear out
from under you. That's fine most of the time, since we shouldn't be
doing operations based on the local directory, but git has a realpath
function that tries to restore CWD by chdir'ing back to it. So if the
working directory no longer exists, chdir to the topdir before
continuing.
Change-Id: Ibdf6cd37ff6e5a5f8338347c3919175491f7166f