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easy-git wrapper
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#!/usr/bin/perl -w | |
## Easy GIT (eg), a frontend for git designed for former cvs and svn users | |
## Version 1.7.5.2 | |
## Copyright 2008-2013 by Elijah Newren and others | |
## Licensed under GNU GPL, version 2. | |
## To use eg, simply stick this file in your path. Then fire off an | |
## 'eg help' to get oriented. You may also be interested in | |
## http://www.gnome.org/~newren/eg/git-for-svn-users.html | |
## to get a comparison to svn in terms of capabilities and commands. | |
## Webpage for eg: http://www.gnome.org/~newren/eg | |
use strict; | |
use warnings; | |
package main; | |
use Getopt::Long; | |
use Cwd qw(getcwd abs_path); | |
use List::Util qw(max); | |
use File::Temp qw/ tempfile /; | |
# configurables | |
my $DEBUG = $ENV{EASYGIT_DEBUG} || 0; | |
my $GIT_CMD = $ENV{EASYGIT_GIT_CMD} || "git"; # Includes any global args, thus "git --exec-path=..." | |
my $USE_PAGER = exists($ENV{EASYGIT_USE_PAGER}) ? $ENV{EASYGIT_USE_PAGER} : -1; | |
# globals :-( | |
my $OUTFH; | |
my $VERSION = "1.7.5.2"; | |
my $EG_EXEC = abs_path($0); | |
my %ALIAS; | |
my %COMMAND; # command=>{section, short_description} mapping | |
my $SECTION = { | |
'creation' => | |
{ order => 1, | |
desc => 'Creating repositories', | |
}, | |
'discovery' => | |
{ order => 2, | |
desc => 'Obtaining information about changes, history, & state', | |
}, | |
'modification' => | |
{ order => 3, | |
desc => 'Making, undoing, or recording changes', | |
}, | |
'projects' => | |
{ order => 4, | |
desc => 'Managing branches', | |
}, | |
'collaboration' => | |
{ order => 5, | |
desc => 'Collaboration' | |
}, | |
'timesavers' => | |
{ order => 6, | |
desc => 'Time saving commands' | |
}, | |
'compatibility' => | |
{ order => 7, | |
extra => 1, | |
desc => 'Commands provided solely for compatibility with other ' . | |
'prominent SCMs' | |
}, | |
'misc' => | |
{ order => 8, | |
extra => 1, | |
desc => 'Miscellaneous' | |
}, | |
}; | |
my ($CURDIR, $TOPDIR, $GITDIR); | |
## Commands to list in help even though we haven't overridden the git versions | |
## (yet, in most cases) | |
INIT { | |
%COMMAND = ( | |
blame => { | |
unmodified_help => 1, | |
unmodified_behavior => 1, | |
extra => 1, | |
section => 'discovery', | |
about => 'Show what version and author last modified each line of a file' | |
}, | |
bisect => { | |
unmodified_help => 1, | |
unmodified_behavior => 1, | |
section => 'timesavers', | |
about => 'Find the change that introduced a bug by binary search' | |
}, | |
grep => { | |
unmodified_help => 1, | |
unmodified_behavior => 1, | |
extra => 1, | |
section => 'discovery', | |
about => 'Print lines of known files matching a pattern' | |
}, | |
mv => { | |
unmodified_help => 1, | |
unmodified_behavior => 1, | |
section => 'modification', | |
about => 'Move or rename files (or directories or symlinks)' | |
}, | |
); | |
} | |
#*************************************************************************# | |
#*************************************************************************# | |
#*************************************************************************# | |
# CLASSES DEFINING ACTIONS TO PERFORM # | |
#*************************************************************************# | |
#*************************************************************************# | |
#*************************************************************************# | |
########################################################################### | |
# subcommand, a base class for all eg subcommands # | |
########################################################################### | |
package subcommand; | |
sub new { | |
my $class = shift; | |
my $self = {git_repo_needed => 0, @_}; # Hashref initialized as we're told | |
bless($self, $class); | |
# Our "see also" section in help usually references the same subsection | |
# as our class name. | |
$self->{git_equivalent} = ref($self) if !defined $self->{git_equivalent}; | |
# We allow direct instantiation of the subcommand class only if they | |
# provide a command name for us to pass to git. | |
if (ref($class) eq "subcommand" && !defined $self->{command}) { | |
die "Invalid subcommand usage" | |
} | |
# Most commands must be run inside a git working directory | |
unless (!$self->{git_repo_needed} || (@ARGV > 0 && $ARGV[0] eq "--help")) { | |
$self->{git_dir} = RepoUtil::git_dir(); | |
if (!defined $self->{git_dir}) { | |
# Couldn't find git repository. That could be for any of three reasons: | |
# 1) Is 'git' even in the user's PATH? | |
my @paths_to_git = grep {-x "$_/git"} split(/:/, $ENV{PATH}); | |
if (!@paths_to_git) { | |
die "Error: Cannot find git in your PATH!\n"; | |
} | |
# 2) Does 'git' even work (possible bad installation)? | |
my ($ret, $output) = | |
ExecUtil::execute_captured("$GIT_CMD --version", ignore_ret => 1); | |
if ($ret != 0 || $output !~ /^git version .*$/) { | |
die "Error: Cannot execute git (check your git installation)!\n"; | |
} | |
# 3) They just aren't in a project tracked by git | |
die "Error: Must be run inside a git-tracked working directory!\n"; | |
} | |
} | |
# Many commands do not work if no commit has yet been made | |
if ($self->{initial_commit_error_msg} && | |
RepoUtil::initial_commit() && | |
(@ARGV < 1 || $ARGV[0] ne "--help")) { | |
die "$self->{initial_commit_error_msg}\n"; | |
} | |
return $self; | |
} | |
sub help { | |
my $self = shift; | |
my $package_name = ref($self); | |
$package_name =~ s/_/-/; # Packages use underscores, commands use dashes | |
my $git_equiv = $self->{git_equivalent}; | |
$git_equiv =~ s/_/-/; # Packages use underscores, commands use dashes | |
if ($package_name eq "subcommand") { | |
exit ExecUtil::execute("$GIT_CMD $self->{command} --help") | |
} | |
$ENV{"LESS"} = "FRSX" unless defined $ENV{"LESS"}; | |
my $less = ($USE_PAGER == 1) ? "less" : | |
($USE_PAGER == 0) ? "cat" : | |
`$GIT_CMD config core.pager` || "less"; | |
chomp($less); | |
open(OUTPUT, "| $less"); | |
print OUTPUT "$package_name: $COMMAND{$package_name}{about}\n"; | |
print OUTPUT $self->{'help'}; | |
print OUTPUT "\nDifferences from git $package_name:"; | |
print OUTPUT "\n None.\n" if !defined $self->{'differences'}; | |
print OUTPUT $self->{'differences'} if defined $self->{'differences'}; | |
if ($git_equiv) { | |
print OUTPUT "\nSee also\n"; | |
print OUTPUT <<EOF; | |
Run 'git help $git_equiv' for a comprehensive list of options available. | |
eg $package_name is designed to accept the same options as git $git_equiv, and | |
with the same meanings unless specified otherwise in the above | |
"Differences" section. | |
EOF | |
} | |
close(OUTPUT); | |
exit 0; | |
} | |
sub preprocess { | |
my $self = shift; | |
return if (scalar(@ARGV) > 0 && $ARGV[0] eq "--"); | |
my $result=main::GetOptions("--help" => sub { $self->help() }); | |
} | |
sub run { | |
my $self = shift; | |
my $package_name = ref($self); | |
my $subcommand = | |
$package_name eq "subcommand" ? $self->{'command'} : $package_name; | |
@ARGV = Util::quote_args(@ARGV); | |
return ExecUtil::execute("$GIT_CMD $subcommand @ARGV", ignore_ret => 1); | |
} | |
########################################################################### | |
# add # | |
########################################################################### | |
package add; | |
@add::ISA = qw(subcommand); | |
INIT { | |
$COMMAND{add} = { | |
unmodified_behavior => 1, | |
section => 'compatibility', | |
about => 'Mark content in files as being ready for commit' | |
}; | |
} | |
sub new { | |
my $class = shift; | |
my $self = $class->SUPER::new(git_repo_needed => 1, @_); | |
bless($self, $class); | |
$self->{'help'} = " | |
Description: | |
eg add is provided for backward compatibility; it has identical usage and | |
functionality as 'eg stage'. See 'eg help stage' for more details. | |
"; | |
return $self; | |
} | |
########################################################################### | |
# apply # | |
########################################################################### | |
package apply; | |
@apply::ISA = qw(subcommand); | |
INIT { | |
$COMMAND{apply} = { | |
about => 'Apply a patch in a git repository' | |
}; | |
} | |
sub new { | |
my $class = shift; | |
my $self = $class->SUPER::new(git_repo_needed => 0, @_); | |
bless($self, $class); | |
$self->{'help'} = " | |
Usage: | |
eg apply [--staged] [-R | --reverse] [-pNUM] | |
Description: | |
Applies a patch to a git repository. | |
Examples: | |
Reverse changes in foo.patch | |
\$ eg apply -R foo.patch | |
(Advanced) Reverse changes since the last commit to the version of foo.c | |
in the staging area (equivalent to 'eg revert --staged foo.c'): | |
\$ eg diff --staged foo.c | eg apply -R --staged | |
Options: | |
--staged | |
Apply the patch to the staged (explicitly marked as ready to be committed) | |
versions of files | |
--reverse, -R | |
Apply the patch in reverse. | |
-pNUM | |
Remove NUM leading paths from filenames. For example, with the filename | |
/home/user/bla/foo.c | |
using -p0 would leave the name unmodified, using -p1 would yield | |
home/user/bla/foo.c | |
and using -p3 would yield | |
bla/foo.c | |
"; | |
$self->{'differences'} = ' | |
eg apply is identical to git apply except that it accepts --staged as a | |
synonym for --cached. | |
'; | |
return $self; | |
} | |
sub preprocess { | |
my $self = shift; | |
my $result = main::GetOptions("--help" => sub { $self->help() }); | |
foreach my $i (0..$#ARGV) { | |
$ARGV[$i] = "--cached" if $ARGV[$i] eq "--staged"; | |
} | |
} | |
########################################################################### | |
# branch # | |
########################################################################### | |
package branch; | |
@branch::ISA = qw(subcommand); | |
INIT { | |
$COMMAND{branch} = { | |
section => 'projects', | |
about => 'List, create, or delete branches' | |
}; | |
$ALIAS{'br'} = "branch"; | |
} | |
sub new { | |
my $class = shift; | |
my $self = $class->SUPER::new(git_repo_needed => 1, @_); | |
bless($self, $class); | |
$self->{'help'} = " | |
Usage: | |
eg branch [-r] | |
eg branch [-s] NEWBRANCH [STARTPOINT] | |
eg branch -d BRANCH | |
Description: | |
List the existing branches that you can switch to, create a new branch, | |
or delete an existing branch. For switching the working copy to a | |
different branch, use the eg switch command instead. | |
Note that branches are local; creation of branches in a remote repository | |
can be accomplished by first creating a local branch and then pushing the | |
new branch to the remote repository using eg push. | |
Examples | |
List the available local branches | |
\$ eg branch | |
Create a new branch named random_stuff, based off the last commit. | |
\$ eg branch random_stuff | |
Create a new branch named sec-48 based off the 4.8 branch | |
\$ eg branch sec-48 4.8 | |
Delete the branch named bling | |
\$ eg branch -d bling | |
Create a new branch named my_fixes in the default remote repository | |
\$ eg branch my_fixes | |
\$ eg push --branch my_fixes | |
(Advanced) Create a new branch named bling, based off the remote tracking | |
branch of the same name | |
\$ eg branch bling origin/bling | |
See 'eg remote' for more details about setting up named remotes and | |
remote tracking branches, and 'eg help topic storage' for more details on | |
differences between branches and remote tracking branches. | |
Options: | |
-d | |
Delete specified branch | |
-r | |
List remote tracking branches (see 'eg help topic storage') for more | |
details. This is useful when using named remote repositories (see 'eg | |
help remote') | |
-s | |
After creating the new branch, switch to it | |
"; | |
$self->{'differences'} = ' | |
eg branch is identical to git branch other than adding a new -s option for | |
switching to a branch immediately after creating it. | |
'; | |
return $self; | |
} | |
sub run { | |
my $self = shift; | |
my $switch = 0; | |
if (scalar(@ARGV) > 1 && $ARGV[0] eq "-s") { | |
$switch = 1; | |
shift @ARGV; | |
} | |
@ARGV = Util::quote_args(@ARGV); | |
my $ret = ExecUtil::execute("$GIT_CMD branch @ARGV", ignore_ret => 1); | |
$ret = ExecUtil::execute("$GIT_CMD checkout $ARGV[0]", ignore_ret => 1) | |
if ($switch && $ret == 0); | |
return $ret; | |
} | |
########################################################################### | |
# bundle # | |
########################################################################### | |
package bundle; | |
@bundle::ISA = qw(subcommand); | |
INIT { | |
$COMMAND{bundle} = { | |
extra => 1, | |
section => 'collaboration', | |
about => 'Pack repository updates (or whole repository) into a file' | |
}; | |
} | |
sub new { | |
my $class = shift; | |
my $self = $class->SUPER::new( | |
git_repo_needed => 1, | |
initial_commit_error_msg => "No bundles can be created until a commit " . | |
"has been made.", | |
@_ | |
); | |
bless($self, $class); | |
$self->{'help'} = " | |
Usage: | |
eg bundle create FILENAME [REFERENCES] | |
eg bundle create-update NEWFILENAME OLDFILENAME [REFERENCES] | |
eg bundle verify FILENAME | |
Description: | |
Bundle creates a file which contains a repository, or a subset thereof. | |
This is useful when two machines cannot be directly connected (thus | |
preventing use of the standard interactive git protocols -- git, ssh, | |
rsync or http), but changes still need to be communicated between the | |
machines. | |
The remote side can use the resulting file (or the path to it) as the URL | |
for the repository they want to clone or pull updates from. | |
Examples | |
Create a bundle in the file repo.bundle which contains the whole repository | |
\$ eg bundle create repo.bundle | |
After getting the bundle named repo.bundle from a collaborator (which | |
must contain \"HEAD\" as one of the references if you explicitly list which | |
ones to be included at creation time), clone the repository into the | |
directory named project-name | |
\$ eg clone /path/to/repo.bundle project-name | |
Create a bundle in the file called new-repo containing only updates since | |
the bundle old-repo was created. | |
\$ eg bundle create-update new-repo old-repo | |
Pulls updates from a new bundle we have been sent. | |
\$ eg pull /path/to/repo.bundle | |
Pull updates from a new bundle we have been sent, if we first overwrite | |
the bundle we originally original cloned from with the new bundle | |
\$ eg pull | |
(Advanced) Create a bundle containing the two branches debug and | |
installer, and the tag named v2.3, in the file called my-changes | |
\$ eg bundle create my-changes debug installer v2.3 | |
(Advanced) Create a bundle in the file called new-repo that contains | |
updates since the bundle old-bundle was created, but don't include the | |
new branch secret-stuff or crazy-idea | |
\$ eg bundle create-update new-repo old-bundle ^secret-stuff ^crazy-idea | |
Options: | |
eg bundle create FILENAME [REFERENCES] | |
eg bundle create-update NEWFILENAME OLDFILENAME [REFERENCES] | |
eg bundle verify FILENAME | |
create FILENAME [REFERENCES] | |
Create a new bundle in the file FILENAME. If no REFERENCES are passed, | |
all branches and tags (plus \"HEAD\") will be included. See below for | |
a basic explanation of REFERENCES. | |
create-update NEWFILENAME OLDFILENAME [REFERENCES] | |
Create a new bundle in the file NEWFILENAME, but don't include any | |
commits already included in OLDFILENAME. See below for a basic | |
explanation of REFERNCES. By default, any new branch or tags will be | |
included as well; exclude specific branches or tags by passing ^BRANCH | |
or ^TAG as a reference; see below for more details. | |
verify FILENAME | |
Check whether the given bundle in FILENAME will cleanly apply to the | |
current repository. | |
REFERENCES | |
Which commits to include or exclude from the bundle. Probably best | |
explained by example: | |
Example Meaning | |
----------------- -------------------------------------------------- | |
master Include the master branch | |
master~10..master Include the last 10 commits on the master branch | |
^baz foo bar Include commits on the foo or bar branch, except for | |
those that are in the baz branch | |
"; | |
$self->{'differences'} = ' | |
eg bundle differs from git bundle in two ways: | |
(1) eg bundle defaults to "--all HEAD" if no revisions are passed to create | |
(2) eg bundle provides a create-update subcommand | |
'; | |
return $self; | |
} | |
sub preprocess { | |
my $self = shift; | |
# | |
# Parse options | |
# | |
my @args; | |
my $result=main::GetOptions("--help" => sub { $self->help() }); | |
# Get the (sub)subcommand | |
$self->{subcommand} = shift @ARGV; | |
push(@args, $self->{subcommand}); | |
if ($self->{subcommand} eq 'create') { | |
my $filename = shift @ARGV || | |
die "Error: need a filename to write bundle to.\n"; | |
push(@args, $filename); # Handle the filename | |
if (!@ARGV) { | |
push(@args, ("--all", "HEAD")); | |
} | |
} | |
elsif ($self->{subcommand} eq 'create-update') { | |
pop(@args); # 'create-update' isn't a real git bundle subcommand | |
my $newname = shift @ARGV || | |
die "You must specify a new and an old filename.\n"; | |
my $oldname = shift @ARGV || | |
die "You must also specify an old filename\n"; | |
die "$oldname does not exist.\n" if ! -f $oldname; | |
my ($retval, $output) = | |
ExecUtil::execute_captured("$GIT_CMD bundle list-heads $oldname"); | |
my @lines = split '\n', $output; | |
my @refs = map { m#^([0-9a-f]+)# && "^$1" } @lines; | |
push(@args, ('create', $newname, "--all", "HEAD", @refs)); | |
} | |
push(@args, @ARGV); | |
# Reset @ARGV with the built up list of arguments | |
@ARGV = @args; | |
} | |
########################################################################### | |
# cat # | |
########################################################################### | |
package cat; | |
@cat::ISA = qw(subcommand); | |
INIT { | |
$COMMAND{cat} = { | |
new_command => 1, | |
extra => 1, | |
section => 'compatibility', | |
about => 'Output the current or specified version of files' | |
}; | |
} | |
sub new { | |
my $class = shift; | |
my $self = $class->SUPER::new( | |
git_repo_needed => 1, | |
git_equivalent => 'show', | |
initial_commit_error_msg => "Error: Cannot show committed versions of " . | |
"files when no commits have occurred.", | |
@_ | |
); | |
bless($self, $class); | |
$self->{'help'} = " | |
Usage: | |
eg cat [REVISION:]FILE... | |
Description: | |
Output the specified file(s) as of the given revisions. | |
Note that this basically is just a compatibility alias provided for users | |
of other SCMs. You should consider using 'git show' instead, though with | |
core git whenever you specify a REVISION, you will need to specify the | |
path to FILE relative to the toplevel project directory, instead of a | |
path for FILE relative to the current directory. | |
Examples | |
Output the most recently committed version of foo.c | |
\$ eg cat foo.c | |
Output the version of bar.h from the 5th to last commit on the | |
ugly_fixes branch | |
\$ eg cat ugly_fixes~5:bar.h | |
Concatenate the version of hello.c from two commits ago and the | |
version of world.h from the branch timbuktu, and output the result: | |
\$ eg cat HEAD~1:hello.c timbuktu:world.h | |
"; | |
$self->{'differences'} = ' | |
The output of "git show FILE" is probably confusing to users at first, | |
as is the need to specify files relative to the top of the git project | |
rather than relative to the current directory. Thus, "eg cat FILE" | |
calls "git show HEAD:PATH/TO/FILE". | |
'; | |
return $self; | |
} | |
sub preprocess { | |
my $self = shift; | |
my $result=main::GetOptions("--help" => sub { $self->help() }); | |
# Get important directories | |
my ($cur_dir, $top_dir, $git_dir) = RepoUtil::get_dirs(); | |
my @args; | |
foreach my $arg (@ARGV) { | |
if ($arg !~ /:/) { | |
my ($path) = Util::reroot_paths__from_to_files($cur_dir, $top_dir, $arg); | |
push(@args, "HEAD:$path"); | |
} else { | |
my ($REVISION, $FILE) = split(/:/, $arg, 2); | |
my ($path) = Util::reroot_paths__from_to_files($cur_dir, $top_dir, $FILE); | |
push(@args, "$REVISION:$path"); | |
} | |
} | |
@ARGV = @args; | |
} | |
sub run { | |
my $self = shift; | |
@ARGV = Util::quote_args(@ARGV); | |
return ExecUtil::execute("$GIT_CMD show @ARGV", ignore_ret => 1); | |
} | |
########################################################################### | |
# changes # | |
########################################################################### | |
package changes; | |
@changes::ISA = qw(subcommand); | |
INIT { | |
$COMMAND{changes} = { | |
new_command => 1, | |
section => 'misc', | |
about => 'Provide an overview of the changes from git to eg' | |
}; | |
} | |
sub new { | |
my $class = shift; | |
my $self = $class->SUPER::new(git_repo_needed => 1, git_equivalent => '', @_); | |
bless($self, $class); | |
$self->{'help'} = " | |
Usage: | |
eg changes [--details] | |
Options | |
--details | |
In addition to the summary of which commands were changed, list the | |
changes to each command. | |
"; | |
$self->{'differences'} = ' | |
eg changes is unique to eg; git does not have a similar command. | |
'; | |
return $self; | |
} | |
sub preprocess { | |
my $self = shift; | |
$self->{details} = 0; | |
my $result = main::GetOptions( | |
"--help" => sub { $self->help() }, | |
"--details" => \$self->{details}, | |
); | |
die "Unrecognized arguments: @ARGV\n" if @ARGV; | |
} | |
sub run { | |
my $self = shift; | |
if ($DEBUG == 2) { | |
print " >>(No commands to run, just data to print)<<\n"; | |
return; | |
} | |
# Print valid subcommands sorted by section | |
my $indent = " "; | |
my $header_indent = ""; | |
$ENV{"LESS"} = "FRSX" unless defined $ENV{"LESS"}; | |
my $less = ($USE_PAGER == 1) ? "less" : | |
($USE_PAGER == 0) ? "cat" : | |
`$GIT_CMD config core.pager` || "less"; | |
chomp($less); | |
open(OUTPUT, "| $less"); | |
if ($self->{details}) { | |
print OUTPUT "Summary of changes:\n"; | |
$indent = " "; | |
$header_indent = " "; | |
} | |
print OUTPUT "${header_indent}Modified Behavior:\n"; | |
foreach my $c (sort keys %COMMAND) { | |
next if $COMMAND{$c}{unmodified_behavior}; | |
next if $COMMAND{$c}{new_command}; | |
print OUTPUT "$indent$c\n"; | |
} | |
print OUTPUT "${header_indent}New commands:\n"; | |
foreach my $c (sort keys %COMMAND) { | |
next if !$COMMAND{$c}{new_command}; | |
print OUTPUT "$indent$c\n"; | |
} | |
print OUTPUT "${header_indent}Modified Help Only:\n"; | |
foreach my $c (sort keys %COMMAND) { | |
next if $COMMAND{$c}{unmodified_help}; | |
next if !$COMMAND{$c}{unmodified_behavior}; | |
next if $COMMAND{$c}{new_command}; | |
print OUTPUT "$indent$c\n"; | |
} | |
if ($self->{details}) { | |
foreach my $c (sort keys %COMMAND) { | |
next if $COMMAND{$c}{unmodified_help} || $COMMAND{$c}{unmodified_behavior}; | |
my $real_c = $c; | |
$c =~ s/-/_/; # Packages use underscores, commands use dashes | |
next if !$c->can("new"); | |
my $obj = $c->new(initial_commit_error_msg => ''); | |
print OUTPUT "Changes to $real_c:\n"; | |
if ($obj->{differences}) { | |
$obj->{differences} =~ s/^\n//; | |
print OUTPUT $obj->{differences}; | |
} else { | |
print OUTPUT " <Unknown>.\n"; | |
} | |
} | |
} | |
close(OUTPUT); | |
} | |
########################################################################### | |
# checkout # | |
########################################################################### | |
package checkout; | |
@checkout::ISA = qw(subcommand); | |
INIT { | |
$COMMAND{checkout} = { | |
section => 'compatibility', | |
about => 'Compatibility wrapper for clone/switch/revert' | |
}; | |
} | |
sub new { | |
my $class = shift; | |
my $self = $class->SUPER::new(git_repo_needed => 0, @_); | |
bless($self, $class); | |
$self->{'help'} = " | |
Usage: | |
eg checkout [-b] BRANCH | |
eg checkout [REVISION] PATH... | |
Description: | |
eg checkout mostly exists as a compatibility wrapper for those used to | |
other systems (cvs/svn and git). If you: | |
(1) want a new copy of the source code from a remote repository | |
OR | |
(2) want to switch your working copy to a different branch | |
OR | |
(3) want to revert the contents of a file to its content from a | |
different revision | |
Then use: | |
(1) eg clone | |
(2) eg switch | |
(3) eg revert | |
eg checkout will accept the same arguments as eg clone (for getting a new | |
copy of the source code from a remote repository), but will provide an | |
error message and tell the user to use eg clone in such cases. | |
The first usage form of eg checkout is used to switch to a different | |
branch (optionally also creating it first). This is something that can | |
be done with no network connectivity in git and thus eg. Users can find | |
identical functionality in eg switch. | |
The second usage form of eg checkout is used to replace files in the | |
working copy with versions from an older commit, i.e. to revert files to | |
an older version. Note that this only works when the specified files | |
also existed in the older version (eg checkout will not delete or unstage | |
files for you), does not work for the initial commit (since there's no | |
older revision to revert back to -- unless you are an advanced user | |
interested in just undoing the changes since the most recent staging), | |
and cannot be used to undo an incomplete merge (since it only operates on | |
a subset of files and not everything since a given commit). Users can | |
find the same functionality (without all the caveats) as well as other | |
capabilities in eg revert. | |
Examples: | |
Switch to the stable branch | |
\$ eg checkout stable | |
Replace foo.c with the third to last version before the most recent | |
commit (Note that HEAD always refers to the current branch, and the | |
current branch always refers to its most recent commit) | |
\$ eg checkout HEAD~3 foo.c | |
"; | |
$self->{'differences'} = ' | |
eg checkout accepts all parameters that git checkout accepts with the | |
same meanings and same output (eg checkout merely calls git checkout in | |
such cases). | |
The only difference between eg and git regarding checkout is that eg | |
checkout will also accept all arguments to git clone, and then tell users | |
that they must have meant to run eg clone (a much nicer error message for | |
users trying to get a copy of source code from a remote repository than | |
"fatal: Not a git repository"). | |
'; | |
return $self; | |
} | |
sub _looks_like_git_repo ($) { | |
my $path = shift; | |
my $clone_protocol = qr#^(?:git|ssh|http|https|rsync)://#; | |
my $git_dir = RepoUtil::git_dir(); | |
my $in_working_copy = defined $git_dir ? 1 : 0; | |
# If the path looks like a git, ssh, http, https, or rsync url, then it | |
# looks like we're being given a url to a git repo | |
if ($path =~ /$clone_protocol/) { | |
return 1; | |
} | |
# If the path isn't a clone_protocol url and isn't a directory, it can't be | |
# a git repo | |
if (! -d $path) { | |
return 0; | |
} | |
my $path_is_absolute = ($path =~ m#^/#); | |
return (!$in_working_copy || ($in_working_copy && $path_is_absolute)); | |
} | |
sub preprocess { | |
my $self = shift; | |
if (scalar(@ARGV) > 0 && $ARGV[0] ne "--") { | |
main::GetOptions("--help" => sub { $self->help() }); | |
} | |
$self->{command} = 'checkout'; | |
die "eg checkout requires at least one argument.\n" if !@ARGV; | |
# | |
# Determine whether this should be a call to git clone or git checkout | |
# | |
my $clone_protocol = qr#^(?:git|ssh|http|https|rsync)://#; | |
if (_looks_like_git_repo($ARGV[-1]) || | |
(! -d $ARGV[-1] && @ARGV > 1 && _looks_like_git_repo($ARGV[-2])) | |
) { | |
$self->{command} = 'clone'; | |
} | |
} | |
sub run { | |
my $self = shift; | |
@ARGV = Util::quote_args(@ARGV); | |
if ($self->{command} ne 'clone') { | |
# If this operation isn't a clone, then we should have checked for | |
# whether we are in a git directory. But we didn't do that, just in | |
# case it was a clone. So, do it now. | |
$self->{git_dir} = RepoUtil::git_dir(); | |
die "Must be run inside a git repository!\n" if !defined $self->{git_dir}; | |
return ExecUtil::execute("$GIT_CMD checkout @ARGV", ignore_ret => 1); | |
} else { | |
die "Did you mean to run\n eg clone @ARGV\n?\n"; | |
} | |
} | |
########################################################################### | |
# cherry_pick # | |
########################################################################### | |
package cherry_pick; | |
@cherry_pick::ISA = qw(subcommand); | |
INIT { | |
$COMMAND{"cherry-pick"} = { | |
extra => 1, | |
section => 'modification', | |
about => 'Apply (or reverse) a commit, usually from another branch' | |
}; | |
} | |
sub new { | |
my $class = shift; | |
my $self = $class->SUPER::new(git_repo_needed => 1, @_); | |
bless($self, $class); | |
$self->{'help'} = " | |
Usage: | |
eg cherry-pick [--reverse] [--edit] [-n] [-m parent-number] [-s] [-x] REVISION | |
Description: | |
Given an existing revision, apply the change between its parent and it | |
(or reverse apply if the --reverse option is present), and record a new | |
revision with this change. Your working tree must be clean (no local | |
unsaved modifications) in order to run eg cherry-pick. | |
Examples: | |
Apply the fix 3 commits behind the tip of the experimental branch | |
(i.e. the fix made in experimental~3) to the current branch | |
\$ eg cherry-pick experimental~3 | |
Make a new commit that reverses the changes made in the most recent | |
commit of the current branch | |
\$ eg cherry-pick -R HEAD | |
Options: | |
--reverse, --revert, -R | |
Reverse apply the changes from the specified commit (i.e. revert the | |
specified revision with a new commit). | |
--edit, -e | |
With this option, eg cherry-pick will let you edit the commit message | |
prior to committing. | |
-x | |
When recording the commit, append to the original commit message a note | |
that indicates which commit this change was cherry-picked from. Append | |
the note only for cherry picks without conflicts. Do not use this | |
option if you are cherry-picking from your private branch because the | |
information is useless to the recipient. If on the other hand you are | |
cherry-picking between two publicly visible branches (e.g. backporting | |
a fix to a maintenance branch for an older release from a development | |
branch), adding this information can be useful. | |
This option is turned on automatically when -R is specified. | |
--mainline parent-number, -m parent-number | |
cherry-pick always applies the changes between a revision and its | |
parent; thus if a revision represents a merge commit, it is not clear | |
which parent cherry-pick should get the changes relative to. This | |
option specifies the parent number (starting from 1) of the mainline | |
and allows cherry-pick to replay the change relative to the specified | |
parent. | |
--no-commit, -n | |
Usually cherry-pick automatically creates a commit. This flag applies | |
the change necessary to cherry-pick the named revision to your working | |
tree and staging area, but does not make the commit. In addition, when | |
this option is used, the staging area can contain unsaved changes and | |
the cherry-pick will be done against the beginning state of your | |
staging area. | |
This is useful when cherry-picking more than one commit into a single | |
combined change. | |
--signoff, -s | |
Add Signed-off-by line at the end of the commit message. | |
REVISION | |
A reference to a recorded version of the repository. See 'eg help | |
topic revisions' for more details. | |
"; | |
$self->{'differences'} = ' | |
eg cherry-pick contains both the functionality of git cherry-pick and git | |
revert. If the -R option is specified, eg cherry-pick calls git revert | |
(after removing the -R option); otherwise it calls git cherry-pick. | |
'; | |
return $self; | |
} | |
sub preprocess { | |
my $self = shift; | |
my ($reverse, $dash_x, $mainline) = (0, 0, -1); | |
Getopt::Long::Configure("permute"); # Allow unrecognized options through | |
my $result = main::GetOptions( | |
"--help" => sub { $self->help() }, | |
"mainline|m=i" => \$mainline, | |
"reverse|R" => \$reverse, | |
"revert" => \$reverse, | |
"x" => \$dash_x, | |
); | |
$self->{reverse} = $reverse; | |
unshift(@ARGV, "-x") if (!$reverse && $dash_x); | |
unshift(@ARGV, ("-m", $mainline)) if $mainline != -1; | |
} | |
sub run { | |
my $self = shift; | |
@ARGV = Util::quote_args(@ARGV); | |
if ($self->{reverse}) { | |
return ExecUtil::execute("$GIT_CMD revert @ARGV", ignore_ret => 1); | |
} else { | |
return ExecUtil::execute("$GIT_CMD cherry-pick @ARGV", ignore_ret => 1); | |
} | |
} | |
########################################################################### | |
# clone # | |
########################################################################### | |
package clone; | |
@clone::ISA = qw(subcommand); | |
INIT { | |
$COMMAND{clone} = { | |
section => 'creation', | |
about => 'Clone a repository into a new directory' | |
}; | |
} | |
sub new { | |
my $class = shift; | |
my $self = $class->SUPER::new(git_repo_needed => 0, @_); | |
bless($self, $class); | |
$self->{'help'} = " | |
Usage: | |
eg clone [--depth DEPTH] REPOSITORY [DIRECTORY] | |
Description: | |
Obtains a copy of a remote repository, including all history by default. | |
A --depth option can be passed to only include a specified number of | |
recent commits instead of all history (however, this option exists mostly | |
due to the fact that users of other SCMs fail to understand that all | |
history can be compressed into a size that is often smaller than the | |
working copy). | |
See 'eg help topic remote-urls' for a detailed list of the different ways | |
to refer to remote repositories. | |
Examples: | |
Get a local clone of cairo | |
\$ eg clone git://git.cairographics.org/git/cairo | |
Get a clone of a local project in a new directory 'mycopy' | |
\$ eg clone /path/to/existing/repo mycopy | |
Get a clone of a project hosted on someone's website, asking for only the | |
most recent 20 commits instead of all history, and storing it in the | |
local directory mydir | |
\$ eg clone --depth 20 http://www.random.machine/path/to/git.repo mydir | |
Options: | |
--depth DEPTH | |
Only download the DEPTH most recent commits instead of all history | |
"; | |
return $self; | |
} | |
########################################################################### | |
# commit # | |
########################################################################### | |
package commit; | |
@commit::ISA = qw(subcommand); | |
INIT { | |
$COMMAND{commit} = { | |
section => 'modification', | |
about => 'Record changes locally' | |
}; | |
$ALIAS{'checkin'} = "commit"; | |
$ALIAS{'ci'} = "commit"; | |
} | |
sub new { | |
my $class = shift; | |
my $self = $class->SUPER::new(git_repo_needed => 1, @_); | |
bless($self, $class); | |
$self->{'help'} = " | |
Usage: | |
eg commit [-a|--all-known] [-b|--bypass-unknown-check] | |
[--staged|-d|--dirty] [-F FILE | -m MSG] [--amend] [--] | |
[FILE...] | |
Description: | |
Records changes locally along with a log message describing the | |
changes you have made. If no -F or -m option is supplied, an editor | |
is opened for you to enter a log message. | |
In order to prevent common errors, the commit will abort with a warning | |
message if there are no changes to commit, there are conflicts from a | |
merge, or if eg detects that the choice of what to commit is ambiguous. | |
In particular, if you have any \"newly created\" unknown files present, | |
or if you have both staged changes (i.e. changes explicitly marked as | |
ready for commit) and unstaged changes, then you will get a warning | |
rather than having the commit occur. You can run 'eg status' to get the | |
status of various files and their changes. These commit checks can be | |
bypassed with various options. | |
Examples: | |
Record current changes locally, not changing anything in CVS...OR...get | |
a warning message if eg detects that the choice of what to commit is not | |
necessarily clear. | |
\$ eg commit | |
Record current changes, ignoring any unknown files present. Also | |
remember the list of unknown files so that their existence will not | |
trigger future \"You have new unknown files present\" warnings when not | |
using the -b flag. | |
\$ eg commit -b | |
Record brand new file and current changes. | |
\$ eg stage file.c | |
\$ eg commit -a | |
Note: Running 'eg stage FILE' explicitly marks FILE as being ready to | |
commit. Since you likely haven't explicitly marked your other changes as | |
ready to commit, pass the -a flag to specify that both kinds of changes | |
should be recorded. | |
(Advanced) Record staged changes, ignoring both unstaged changes and | |
unknown files. | |
\$ eg commit --staged | |
Options: | |
--all-known, -a | |
(Could also be called --act-like-other-vcses). Commit both staged | |
(i.e. explictly marked as ready for commit) changes and unstaged | |
changes. | |
Incompatible with explicitly specifying files to commit on the command | |
line, and incompatible with the --staged option. | |
--bypass-unknown-check, -b | |
Commit local changes, even if there are unknown files around. If this | |
flag is not used and unknown files are currently present that were not | |
present the last time the -b flag was used, then the commit will be | |
aborted with a warning message. | |
--staged, --dirty, -d | |
Commit only staged changes and bypass sanity checks. (\"dirty\" is kept | |
as a synonym in order to provide a short (-d) form. The term \"dirty\" | |
is used to convey the fact that the working area will likely not be | |
\"clean\" after a commit since unstaged changes will still be present). | |
WARNING: Do not try to use -s as a shorthand for --staged; -s has a | |
different meaning (see 'git commit --help') | |
Incompatible with explicitly specifying files to commit on the command | |
line, and incompatible with the --all-known option. | |
-F FILE | |
Use the contents of FILE as the commit message | |
-m MSG | |
Use MSG as the commit message. | |
--amend | |
Amend the last commit on the current branch. | |
"; | |
$self->{'differences'} = ' | |
The "--staged" (and "-d" and "--dirty" aliases) are unique to eg commit; | |
git commit behavior differs from eg commit in that it acts by default | |
like the --staged flag was passed UNLESS either the -a option is passed | |
or files are explicitly listed on the command line. | |
The "--bypass-unknown-check" is unique to eg commit; git commit | |
behavior differs by always turning on this functionality -- there is | |
no way to have git commit do an unknown files sanity check for you. | |
"-a" is not nearly as useful for eg commit as it is for git commit. "-a" | |
has the same behavior in both, but the "smart" behavior of eg commit | |
means it is only rarely needed. | |
The "--all-known" alias for "-a" is known as "--all" to git-commit; I | |
find the latter confusing and misleading and thus renamed to the former | |
for eg commit. | |
To be precise about the behavior of a plain "eg commit": | |
If the working copy is clean -> warn user: nothing to commit | |
else if there are unmerged files -> warn user: unmerged files | |
else if there are new untracked files -> warn user: new unknown files | |
else if both "staged" & unstaged changes[1] -> warn user: mix | |
else -> run "git commit -a" | |
Actually, I do not pass -a if there are only staged changes present, but | |
the result is the same. Note that this essentially boils down to making | |
the user do less work (no need to remember -a in the common case) and | |
extending the sanity checks git commit does (which currently only covers | |
the clean working copy case) to also prevent a number of other very | |
common user pitfalls. | |
[1] The reason for putting "staged" in quotes comes from the case of | |
running "eg commit --amend" when you have local unstaged changes. Does | |
the user want to merely amend the prior commit message or add their | |
changes to the previous commit? (Even if the index matches HEAD at this | |
time, we are committing relative to HEAD^1.) It is not clear what the | |
user wants, so we warn and ask them to use -a or --staged. | |
'; | |
return $self; | |
} | |
sub preprocess { | |
my $self = shift; | |
my $package_name = ref($self); | |
# | |
# Parse options | |
# | |
$self->{args} = []; | |
my $record_arg = sub { push(@{$self->{args}}, "$_[0]$_[1]"); }; | |
my $record_args = sub { push(@{$self->{args}}, "$_[0]$_[1]"); | |
push(@{$self->{args}}, splice(@_, 2)); }; | |
my ($all_known, $bypass_unknown, $staged, $amend, | |
$dry_run, $allow_empty, $include) = (0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0); | |
Getopt::Long::Configure("permute"); | |
my $result = main::GetOptions( | |
"--help|h" => sub { $self->help() }, | |
"all-known|a" => \$all_known, | |
"bypass-unknown-check|b" => \$bypass_unknown, | |
"staged|dirty|d" => \$staged, | |
"dry-run" => sub { $dry_run = 1, | |
&$record_arg("--", @_) }, | |
"s" => sub { &$record_arg("-", @_) }, | |
"v" => sub { &$record_arg("-", @_) }, | |
"u" => sub { &$record_arg("-", @_) }, | |
"c=s" => sub { &$record_args("-", @_) }, | |
"C=s" => sub { &$record_args("-", @_) }, | |
"F=s" => sub { &$record_args("-", @_) }, | |
"file=s" => sub { &$record_args("--", @_) }, | |
"m=s" => sub { &$record_args("-", @_) }, | |
"amend" => sub { $amend = 1; &$record_arg("--", @_) }, | |
"allow-empty" => sub { $allow_empty = 1; | |
&$record_arg("--", @_) }, | |
"interactive" => sub { $allow_empty = 1; | |
&$record_arg("--", @_) }, | |
"no-verify" => sub { &$record_arg("--", @_) }, | |
"e" => sub { &$record_arg("-", @_) }, | |
"author=s" => sub { &$record_args("--", @_) }, | |
"cleanup=s" => sub { &$record_args("--", @_) }, | |
"include|i=s" => sub { $include = 1; | |
&$record_args("--", @_) }, | |
); | |
my ($opts, $revs, $files) = RepoUtil::parse_args([], @ARGV); | |
# | |
# Set up flags based on options, do sanity checking of options | |
# | |
my ($check_no_changes, $check_unknown, $check_mixed, $check_unmerged); | |
my $skip_all = $include || $dry_run; | |
$self->{'commit_flags'} = []; | |
die "Cannot specify both --all-known (-a) and --staged (-d)!\n" if | |
$all_known && $staged; | |
die "Cannot specify --staged when specifying files!\n" if @$files && $staged; | |
$check_no_changes = !$amend && !$allow_empty && !$skip_all; | |
$check_unknown = !$bypass_unknown && !$staged && !@$files && !$skip_all; | |
$check_mixed = !$all_known && !$staged && !@$files && !$skip_all; | |
$check_unmerged = !$skip_all; | |
push(@{$self->{'commit_flags'}}, "-a") if $all_known; | |
# | |
# Lots of sanity checks | |
# | |
my $status = | |
RepoUtil::commit_push_checks($package_name, | |
{no_changes => $check_no_changes, | |
unknown => $check_unknown, | |
partially_staged => $check_mixed, | |
unmerged_changes => $check_unmerged}); | |
if ($amend && !$all_known && !$staged && !$skip_all && !@$files && | |
$status->{has_unstaged_changes} && !$status->{has_staged_changes}) { | |
print STDERR <<EOF; | |
Aborting: It is not clear whether you want to simply amend the commit | |
message or whether you want to include your local changes in the amended | |
commit. Please pass --staged to just amend the previous commit message, or | |
pass -a to include your current local changes with the previous amended | |
commit. | |
EOF | |
exit 1; | |
} | |
die "No staged changes, but --staged given.\n" | |
if (!$status->{has_staged_changes} && $staged && !$amend && !$dry_run); | |
if (!$all_known && !$include && !$staged && | |
$status->{has_unstaged_changes} && !$status->{has_staged_changes} && | |
!@$files) { | |
push(@{$self->{'commit_flags'}}, "-a"); | |
} | |
# | |
# Record the set of unknown files we ignored with -b, so the -b flag isn't | |
# needed next time. | |
# | |
if ($bypass_unknown) { | |
RepoUtil::record_ignored_unknowns(); | |
} | |
push(@{$self->{args}}, @{$self->{commit_flags}}); | |
unshift(@ARGV, @{$self->{args}}); | |
} | |
########################################################################### | |
# config # | |
########################################################################### | |
package config; | |
@config::ISA = qw(subcommand); | |
INIT { | |
$COMMAND{config} = { | |
unmodified_behavior => 1, | |
extra => 1, | |
section => 'misc', | |
about => 'Get or set configuration options' | |
}; | |
} | |
sub new { | |
my $class = shift; | |
my $self = $class->SUPER::new(git_repo_needed => 0, @_); | |
bless($self, $class); | |
$self->{'help'} = " | |
Usage: | |
eg config OPTION [ VALUE ] | |
eg config --unset OPTION | |
eg config [ --list ] | |
Description: | |
Gets or sets configuration options. | |
See the 'Configuration File' section of 'git help config' for a fairly | |
comprehensive list of special options used by eg (and git). | |
Examples: | |
Get the value of the configuration option user.email | |
\$ eg config user.email | |
Set the value of the configuration option user.email to whizbang\@flashy.org | |
\$ eg config user.email whizbang\@flashy.org | |
Unset the values of the configuration options branch.master.remote | |
and branch.master.merge | |
\$ eg config --unset branch.master.remote | |
\$ eg config --unset branch.master.merge | |
List all options that have been set | |
\$ eg config --list | |
"; | |
return $self; | |
} | |
########################################################################### | |
# diff # | |
########################################################################### | |
package diff; | |
@diff::ISA = qw(subcommand); | |
INIT { | |
$COMMAND{diff} = { | |
section => 'discovery', | |
about => 'Show changes to file contents' | |
}; | |
} | |
sub new { | |
my $class = shift; | |
my $self = $class->SUPER::new(git_repo_needed => 1, @_); | |
bless($self, $class); | |
$self->{'help'} = " | |
Usage: | |
eg diff [--unstaged | --staged] [REVISION] [REVISION] [FILE...] | |
Description: | |
Shows differences between different versions of the project. By default, | |
it shows the differences between the last locally recorded version and the | |
version in the working copy. | |
Examples: | |
Show local unrecorded changes | |
\$ eg diff | |
In a project with the current branch being 'master', show the differences | |
between the version before the last recorded commit and the working copy. | |
\$ eg diff master~1 | |
Or do the same using \"HEAD\" which is a synonym for the current branch: | |
\$ eg diff HEAD~1 | |
Show changes to the file myscript.py between 10 versions before last | |
recorded commit and the last recorded commit (assumes the current branch | |
is 'master'). | |
\$ eg diff master~10 master myscript.py | |
(Advanced) Show changes between staged (ready-to-be-committed) version of | |
files and the working copy (use 'eg stage' to stage files). In other | |
words, show the unstaged changes. | |
\$ eg diff --unstaged | |
(Advanced) Show changes between last recorded copy and the staged (ready- | |
to-be-committed) version of files (use 'eg stage' to stage files). In | |
other words, show the staged changes. | |
\$ eg diff --staged | |
(Advanced) Show changes between 5 versions before the last recorded | |
commit and the currently staged (ready-to-be-committed) version of the | |
repository. (Use 'eg stage' to stage files). | |
\$ eg diff --staged HEAD~5 | |
Options: | |
REVISION | |
A reference to a recorded version of the repository, defaulting to HEAD | |
(meaning the most recent commit on the current branch). See 'eg help | |
topic revisions' for more details. | |
--staged | |
Show changes between the last commit and the staged copy of files. | |
Cannot be used when two revisions have been specified. | |
--unstaged | |
Show changes between the staged copy of files and the current working | |
directory. Cannot be used when a revision is specified. | |
"; | |
$self->{'differences'} = ' | |
Changes to eg diff relative to git diff are: | |
(1) Different defaults for what to diff relative to | |
(2) Providing a more consistent double-dot operator | |
Section 1: Different defaults for what to diff relative to | |
The following illustrate the two changed defaults of eg diff: | |
eg diff <=> git diff HEAD | |
eg diff --unstaged <=> git diff | |
(Which is not 100% accurate due to merges; see below.) In more detail: | |
The "--unstaged" option is unique to eg diff; to get the same behavior | |
with git diff you simply list no revisions and omit the "--cached" flag. | |
When neither --staged nor --unstaged are specified to eg diff and no | |
revisions are given, eg diff will pass along the revision "HEAD" to git | |
diff. | |
The "--staged" option is an alias for "--cached" unique to eg diff; the | |
purpose of the alias is to reduce the number of different names in git | |
used to refer to the same concept. (Update: the --staged flag is now | |
part of git with the same meaning as in eg.) | |
Merges: The above is slightly modified if the user has an incomplete | |
merge; if the user has conflicts during a merge (or uses --no-commit when | |
calling merge) and then tries "eg diff", it will abort with a message | |
telling the user that there is no "last" commit and will provide | |
alternative suggestions. | |
Section 2: Providing a more consistent double-dot operator | |
The .. operator of git diff (e.g. git diff master..devel) means what | |
the ... operator of git log means, and vice-versa. This causes lots of | |
confusion. We fix this by making the .. operator of eg diff | |
do exactly what the ... operator of git diff does. To see why: | |
Meanings of git commands, as a reminder (A and B are revisions): | |
git diff A..B <=> git diff A B # Endpoint difference | |
git diff A...B <=> git diff $(git merge-base A B) B # Changes from base | |
Why this is confusing (compare to above): | |
git log A..B <=> git log ^$(git merge-base A B) B # Changes from base | |
git log A...B <=> git log A B ^$(git merge-base A B) # Endpoint difference | |
So, my translation: | |
eg diff A B <=> git diff A B <=> git diff A..B | |
eg diff A..B <=> git diff A...B | |
eg diff A...B <=> git diff A...B | |
Reasons for this change: | |
* New users automatically get sane behavior, and use either eg diff A B | |
or eg diff A..B, each doing what one would expect. They do not ever | |
realize that A...B is a bit weird because they have no need to try to | |
use it; eg diff A B covers their needs. | |
* Users worried about switching between eg and git without having to | |
modify their command lines can always use either diff A B or | |
diff A...B, but never any other form; using this subset ensures that | |
both eg and git behave identically. | |
* Users only access git diff A..B behavior through eg diff A B, which | |
is less typing and makes more sense. | |
* Since git diff A..B and git diff A B are the same, the latter is far | |
more common, and the former is confusing, odds are that if any git | |
user suggests someone use git diff A..B they probably really meant | |
git diff A...B | |
'; | |
return $self; | |
} | |
sub preprocess { | |
my $self = shift; | |
# Avoid Util::git_rev_parse because it fails on t2010-checkout-ambiguous by | |
# treating "--quiet" as a revision rather than an option; use our own | |
# parse_args implementation instead. | |
my ($opts, $revs, $files) = RepoUtil::parse_args(["--extcmd", "-x"], @ARGV); | |
# Replace '..' with '...' in revision specifiers. Use backslash escaping to | |
# get actual dots and not just any character. Use negative lookbehind and | |
# lookahead assertions to avoid replacing '...' with '....'. | |
my @new_revs = map(m#(.+)(?<!\.)\.\.(?!\.)(.+)# ? "$1...$2" : $_, @$revs); | |
$revs = \@new_revs; | |
# | |
# Parse options | |
# | |
$self->{'opts'} = ""; | |
@ARGV = @$opts; | |
my ($staged, $unstaged, $no_index, $ours, $theirs) = (0, 0, 0, 0, 0); | |
my $extcmd; | |
Getopt::Long::Configure("permute"); | |
my $result = main::GetOptions( | |
"--help" => sub { $self->help() }, | |
"staged|cached" => \$staged, | |
"unstaged" => \$unstaged, | |
"no-index" => \$no_index, | |
"extcmd=s" => \$extcmd, | |
"ours" => \$ours, | |
"theirs" => \$theirs, | |
); | |
die "Cannot specify both --staged and --unstaged!\n" if $staged && $unstaged; | |
my @args; | |
push(@args, "--cached") if $staged; | |
push(@args, "--no-index") if $no_index; | |
push(@args, "--extcmd", $extcmd) if $extcmd; | |
push(@args, "--theirs") if $theirs; | |
push(@args, "--ours") if $ours; | |
push(@args, @ARGV); | |
# | |
# Parse revs | |
# | |
die "eg diff: Cannot specify '--staged' with more than 1 revision.\n" | |
if ($staged && scalar @$revs > 1); | |
die "eg diff: Cannot specify '--unstaged' with any revisions.\n" | |
if ($unstaged && scalar @$revs > 0); | |
# 'eg diff' (without arguments) should act like 'git diff HEAD', unless | |
# we are in an aborted merge state | |
if (!@$revs && !$unstaged && !$staged && !$no_index && !$ours && !$theirs) { | |
if (-f "$self->{git_dir}/MERGE_HEAD") { | |
my @merge_branches = RepoUtil::merge_branches(); | |
my $list = join(", ", @merge_branches); | |
print STDERR <<EOF; | |
Aborting: Cannot show the changes since the last commit, since you are in the | |
middle of a merge and there are multiple last commits. Try passing one of | |
--unstaged, $list | |
to eg diff. | |
For additional conflict resolution help, try eg log --merge or | |
eg show BRANCH:FILE | |
where FILE is any file in your working copy and BRANCH is one of | |
$list | |
EOF | |
exit 1; | |
} | |
if (RepoUtil::initial_commit()) { | |
print STDERR <<EOF; | |
Aborting: Cannot show the changes since the last commit, since you do not | |
yet have any commits on the current branch. Try passing --unstaged to diff, | |
or making a commit first. | |
EOF | |
exit 1; | |
} | |
push(@$revs, "HEAD") | |
} | |
push(@args, @$revs); | |
push(@args, "--"); | |
push(@args, @$files); | |
@ARGV = @args; | |
} | |
########################################################################### | |
# difftool # | |
########################################################################### | |
package difftool; | |
@difftool::ISA = qw(diff); | |
INIT { | |
$COMMAND{difftool} = { | |
new_command => 1, | |
extra => 1, | |
section => 'discovery', | |
about => 'Show changes to file contents using an external tool' | |
}; | |
} | |
sub new { | |
my $class = shift; | |
my $self = $class->SUPER::new(git_repo_needed => 1, @_); | |
bless($self, $class); | |
$self->{'help'} = " | |
Usage: | |
eg difftool [--tool=<tool>] [--unstaged | --staged] [REVISION] [REVISION] [FILE...] | |
Description: | |
Shows differences between different versions of the project using an | |
external tool. By default, it shows the differences between the last | |
locally recorded version and the version in the working copy. | |
This command behaves just like 'eg diff'; see 'eg help diff' for more | |
details. | |
You can configure the default external tool with 'eg config'. You can | |
specify the default tool by setting 'diff.tool'; you can configure the | |
tool by setting 'difftool.<tool>.cmd'. See the 'Configuration File' | |
section of 'git help config' for more details. | |
Example: | |
Show local unrecorded changes in vimdiff | |
\$ eg difftool --tool=vimdiff | |
See 'eg help diff' for more diff examples. | |
"; | |
$self->{'differences'} = " | |
git difftool behaves just like git diff, but launches an external tool | |
instead of using git's built-in machinery. eg diff is quite different from | |
git diff (see 'eg help diff' for details); eg difftool behaves just like | |
eg diff. | |
"; | |
return $self; | |
} | |
########################################################################### | |
# gc # | |
########################################################################### | |
package gc; | |
@gc::ISA = qw(subcommand); | |
INIT { | |
$COMMAND{gc} = { | |
unmodified_behavior => 1, | |
extra => 1, | |
section => 'timesavers', | |
about => 'Optimize the local repository to make later operations faster', | |
}; | |
} | |
sub new { | |
my $class = shift; | |
my $self = $class->SUPER::new(git_repo_needed => 1, @_); | |
bless($self, $class); | |
$self->{'help'} = " | |
Usage: | |
eg gc | |
Description: | |
Optimizes the local repository; in particular, this command compresses | |
file revisions to reduce disk space and increase performance. | |
This command is occasionally called during normal git usage, making | |
explicit usage of this command unnecessary for many users. However, the | |
automatic calls of this command only do simple and quick optimizations, | |
so some users (particularly those with many revisions) may benefit from | |
manually invoking this command periodically (such as from nightly or | |
weekly cron scripts). | |
"; | |
return $self; | |
} | |
########################################################################### | |
# help # | |
########################################################################### | |
package help; | |
@help::ISA = qw(subcommand); | |
INIT { | |
$COMMAND{help} = { | |
section => 'misc', | |
about => 'Get command syntax and examples' | |
}; | |
} | |
sub new { | |
my $class = shift; | |
my $self = $class->SUPER::new(exit_status => 0, | |
git_equivalent => '', | |
git_repo_needed => 0, | |
@_); | |
bless($self, $class); | |
$self->{'help'} = " | |
Usage: | |
eg help --all | |
eg help [COMMAND] | |
eg help topic [TOPIC] | |
Description: | |
Shows general help for eg, for one of its subcommands, or for a | |
specialized topic. | |
Examples: | |
Show help for eg | |
\$ eg help | |
Show help for extended list of commands available in eg | |
\$ eg help --all | |
Show help for the switch command of eg | |
\$ eg help switch | |
Show which topics have available help | |
\$ eg help topic | |
Show the help for the staging topic | |
\$ eg help topic staging | |
"; | |
$self->{'differences'} = " | |
eg help uses its own help system, ignoring the one from git help...except | |
that eg help will call git help if asked for help on a subcommand it does | |
not recognize. | |
'git help COMMAND', by default, simply calls 'man git-COMMAND'. The git | |
man pages are really nice for people who are experts with git; they are | |
comprehensive and detailed. However, new users tend to get lost in a sea | |
of details and advanced topics (among other problems). 'eg help COMMAND' | |
provides much simpler pages of its own and refers to the manpages for | |
more details. The eg help pages also list any differences between the eg | |
commands and the git ones, to assist interested users in learning git. | |
If you simply want a brief list of available options and descriptions, | |
you may also want to try running 'git COMMAND -h' (which differs from | |
the two identical commands 'git COMMAND --help' and 'git help COMMAND'). | |
"; | |
return $self; | |
} | |
sub preprocess { | |
my $self = shift; | |
$self->{all} = 0; | |
my $result=main::GetOptions("--help" => sub { $self->help() }, | |
"--all" => \$self->{all}); | |
} | |
sub run { | |
my $self = shift; | |
if ($DEBUG == 2) { | |
print " >>(No commands to run, just data to print)<<\n"; | |
return; | |
} | |
# Check if we were asked to get help on a subtopic rather than toplevel help | |
if (@ARGV > 0) { | |
my $orig_subcommand = shift @ARGV; | |
my $subcommand = $orig_subcommand; | |
$subcommand =~ s/-/_/; # Packages use underscores, commands use dashes | |
if (@ARGV != 0 && ($subcommand ne 'topic' || @ARGV != 1)) { | |
die "Too many arguments to help.\n"; | |
} | |
die "Oops, there's a bug.\n" if $self->{exit_status} != 0; | |
$subcommand = "help::topic" if $subcommand eq 'topic'; | |
if (!$subcommand->can("new")) { | |
print "$orig_subcommand is not modified by eg (eg $orig_subcommand is" . | |
" equivalent to git $orig_subcommand).\nWill try running 'git" . | |
" help $orig_subcommand' in 2 seconds...\n"; | |
sleep 2; | |
exit ExecUtil::execute("$GIT_CMD help $orig_subcommand"); | |
} | |
my $subcommand_obj = $subcommand->new(initial_commit_error_msg => '', | |
git_repo_needed => 0); | |
$subcommand_obj->help(); | |
} | |
# Set up a pager, if wanted | |
$ENV{"LESS"} = "FRSX" unless defined $ENV{"LESS"}; | |
my $less = ($USE_PAGER == 1) ? "less" : | |
($USE_PAGER == 0) ? "cat" : | |
`$GIT_CMD config core.pager` || "less"; | |
chomp($less); | |
open(OUTPUT, "| $less"); | |
# Help users know about the --all switch | |
if (!$self->{all}) { | |
print OUTPUT "(Run 'eg help --all' for a more detailed list.)\n\n"; | |
} | |
# Print valid subcommands sorted by section | |
foreach my $name (sort | |
{$SECTION->{$a}{'order'} <=> $SECTION->{$b}{'order'}} | |
keys %$SECTION) { | |
next if $SECTION->{$name}{extra} && !$self->{all}; | |
print OUTPUT "$SECTION->{$name}{desc}\n"; | |
foreach my $c (sort keys %COMMAND) { | |
next if !defined $COMMAND{$c}{section}; | |
next if $COMMAND{$c}{section} ne $name; | |
next if $COMMAND{$c}{extra} && !$self->{all}; | |
printf OUTPUT " eg %-11s %s\n", $c, $COMMAND{$c}{about}; | |
} | |
print OUTPUT "\n"; | |
} | |
# Check to see if someone added a command with an invalid section | |
my $broken_commands = ""; | |
foreach my $c (keys %COMMAND) { | |
next if !defined $COMMAND{$c}{section}; | |
next if defined $SECTION->{$COMMAND{$c}{section}}; | |
my $tmp = sprintf(" eg %-10s %s\n", $c, $COMMAND{$c}{about}); | |
$broken_commands .= $tmp; | |
} | |
if ($broken_commands) { | |
print OUTPUT "Broken (typo in classification?) commands:\n" . | |
"$broken_commands\n"; | |
} | |
# And let them know how to get more detailed help... | |
print OUTPUT "Additional help:\n"; | |
print OUTPUT " eg help COMMAND Get more help on COMMAND.\n"; | |
print OUTPUT " eg help --all List more commands (not really all)\n"; | |
print OUTPUT " eg help topic List specialized help topics.\n"; | |
# And let them know how to compare to git | |
if ($self->{all}) { | |
print OUTPUT "\n"; | |
print OUTPUT "Learning or comparing to git\n"; | |
print OUTPUT " eg --translate ARGS Show commands that would be executed for 'eg ARGS'\n"; | |
print OUTPUT " eg --debug ARGS Show & run commands that would be executed by 'eg ARGS'\n"; | |
} | |
close(OUTPUT); | |
exit $self->{exit_status}; | |
} | |
########################################################################### | |
# help::topic # | |
########################################################################### | |
package help::topic; | |
sub new { | |
my $class = shift; | |
my $self = {}; | |
bless($self, $class); | |
return $self; | |
} | |
sub middle_of_am { | |
my $continue_text = " | |
1. Standard case | |
When all conflicts have been resolved, run | |
eg am --resolved | |
Do NOT run \"eg commit\" to continue an interrupted rebase (unless you want | |
to manually insert a new commit; if you already accidentally ran eg commit, | |
then run 'eg reset HEAD~1' to undo it). If you try to continue without | |
resolving all conflicts, the command will error out and tell you that some | |
conflicts remain to be resolved. | |
2. Special case -- skipping a commit | |
If you do not want this particular commit to be included in the final | |
result, run | |
eg am --skip"; | |
my $abort_text = " | |
To abort your rebase operation, simply run | |
eg am --abort"; | |
return _conflict_resolution_message(op => "am", | |
show_empty_case => 1, | |
continue_text => $continue_text, | |
abort_text => $abort_text | |
); | |
} | |
sub middle_of_merge { | |
my $completion_text = " | |
When all conflicts have been resolved, run | |
eg commit | |
The log message will be pre-populated with a sample commit message for you, | |
noting the merge and any file conflicts. If you try to run this command | |
without resolving all conflicts, the command will error out and tell you | |
that some conflicts remain to be resolved."; | |
my $abort_text = " | |
To abort your merge operation, simply run | |
eg merge --abort"; | |
return _conflict_resolution_message(op => "merge", | |
show_empty_case => 0, | |
continue_text => $completion_text, | |
abort_text => $abort_text); | |
} | |
sub middle_of_rebase { | |
my $extra_stop_info = " | |
If you are in the middle of an interactive rebase (i.e. you specified the | |
--interactive flag), then rebase can also stop if you selected to edit a | |
commit, even when there are no conflicts. In such a case where there are | |
no conflicts, there is something else you may want to do: | |
5) Editing during an interactive rebase | |
Before telling git to continue the operation."; | |
my $continue_text = " | |
1. Standard case | |
When all conflicts have been resolved, run | |
eg rebase --continue | |
Do NOT run \"eg commit\" to continue an interrupted rebase (unless you want | |
to manually insert a new commit; if you already accidentally ran eg commit, | |
then run 'eg reset HEAD~1' to undo it). If you try to continue without | |
resolving all conflicts, the command will error out and tell you that some | |
conflicts remain to be resolved. | |
2. Special case -- skipping a commit | |
If you do not want this particular commit to be included in the final | |
result, run | |
eg rebase --skip"; | |
my $abort_text = " | |
To abort your rebase operation, simply run | |
eg rebase --abort"; | |
my $interactive_edit_text = " | |
******************* Editing during an interactive rebase ******************* | |
When an interactive rebase stops to allow you to edit a commit, make any | |
necessary changes to files, then run | |
eg commit --amend | |
If you do not use the --amend flag, you will be inserting a new commit | |
after the one you chose to edit. | |
After you are done amending the previous commit (and/or commit message), | |
run 'eg rebase --continue' to allow the rebase operation to continue. | |
"; | |
return _conflict_resolution_message(op => "rebase", | |
show_empty_case => 1, | |
extra_stop_info => $extra_stop_info, | |
continue_text => $continue_text, | |
abort_text => $abort_text, | |
final_text => $interactive_edit_text, | |
); | |
} | |
sub _conflict_resolution_message (%) { | |
my $opts = {op => "!!!FIXME!!!", | |
show_empty_case => 0, | |
extra_stop_info => '', | |
continue_text => '!!!FIXME!!!', | |
abort_text => '!!!FIXME!!!', | |
final_text => '', | |
@_}; # Hashref initialized as we're told | |
my $result = " | |
When conflicting changes are detected, a $opts->{op} operation will stop to | |
allow a user to resolve the conflicts. At this stage there is one of four | |
things a user may want to do: | |
1) Find out more about what conflicts occurred | |
2) Resolve the conflicts | |
3) Tell git to complete the operation | |
4) Abort the operation | |
Each will be discussed below.$opts->{extra_stop_info} | |
*************** Find out more about what conflicts occurred *************** | |
1. Standard case | |
In order to find out which files have conflicts, run | |
eg status | |
and then look for lines that begin with \"unmerged:\". You can then open | |
the relevant file in an editor and look for lines with conflict markers, | |
i.e. lines that start with one of | |
<<<<<<< | |
======= | |
>>>>>>> | |
Between the <'s and the ='s will be one version of the changed file, while | |
betwen the ='s and the >'s will be another version. | |
2. Simple tip | |
Since git will stage any changes it is able to successfully merge, you can | |
find the unresolved conflict sections of a file by running | |
eg diff --unstaged FILE | |
"; | |
if ($opts->{show_empty_case}) { | |
$result .= " | |
3. Special empty commit case | |
Sometimes, during a $opts->{op}, the changes in a commit will no longer be | |
necessary since they have already been included in the code which your | |
commit is being applied on top of. In such a case, eg status will simply | |
show that there are no changes at all, and you can continue by telling git | |
to skip the current unneeded commit (see below). | |
4. Difficult cases | |
" | |
} else { | |
$result .= " | |
3. Difficult cases | |
"; | |
} | |
$result .= " | |
You can run | |
eg ls-files --unmerged | |
to get a list of all files in the unmerged state. This will list up to | |
three lines for each file, and look like the following: | |
100644 45b983be36b73c0788dc9cbcb76cbb80fc7bb057 1 foo.C | |
100644 ce013625030ba8dba906f756967f9e9ca394464a 2 foo.C | |
100644 dd7e1c6f0fefe118f0b63d9f10908c460aa317a6 3 foo.C | |
The first line corresponds to a version of the file at some common point in | |
history, the second and third lines correspond to different versions of the | |
file being merged (relative to the common version). Each line is of the | |
form | |
mode internal-object-name stage filename | |
The mode represents the permission bits and or type (executable file, | |
symlink etc.), the internal-object-name is git's internal name for the | |
contents of the file, the stage is a simple integer, and you should | |
recognize the filename. | |
You can make use of this information to detect the following situations: | |
A) There's a conflict in mode change (e.g. removed the executable bit on | |
one side of history, turned the file into a symlink in another) | |
B) The file is deleted in one version and modified in another (when this | |
happens either the 2nd or 3rd stage line will be missing) | |
Further, you can view the different versions of the file easily, by using | |
either of: | |
eg show :STAGE:FILENAME | |
eg show INTERNAL-OBJECT-NAME | |
Some examples using the output above: | |
eg show :2:foo.C | |
eg show dd7e1c6f0fefe118f0b63d9f10908c460aa317a6 | |
************************** Resolve the conflicts ************************** | |
1. Standard case. | |
For each file with conflicts, edit the file to remove the conflict markers | |
and provide just the correct version of the merged file. Then run | |
eg stage FILE | |
to tell git that you have resolved the conflicts in FILE. | |
2. Special cases | |
Nearly all special cases (and even the standard case) boil down to making | |
sure the file has the correct contents, the correct permission bits and | |
type, and then running | |
eg stage FILE | |
If the file is a binary, then there will not be any conflict markers. In | |
such a case, simply ensure that the contents of the file are what you want | |
and then run eg stage, as noted above. | |
If the file is deleted on one side of history and changed in another, | |
decide what contents the file should have. If the correct resolution is to | |
delete the file, run | |
eg rm FILE | |
Otherwise, put the appropriate contents in the file and run eg stage as | |
noted above. | |
If the file has a mode conflict, then fix up the mode of the file (run | |
'man chmod' and 'man ln' for help on how to do so). Note that the modes | |
used by git are as follows: | |
100644 -- Normal, non-executable file | |
100755 -- File with the executable bit set | |
120000 -- symlink | |
160000 -- A git submodule (run 'git help submodule' for more info) | |
******************** Tell git to continue the operation ******************** | |
$opts->{continue_text} | |
*************************** Abort the operation *************************** | |
$opts->{abort_text} | |
"; | |
$result .= $opts->{final_text}; | |
return $result; | |
} | |
sub middle_of_bisect { | |
return " | |
When git is bisecting, it will pick commits that need to be tested, check | |
them out, and then let you test them. (Unless, of course, you give git a | |
script that it can run to automatically test commits.) At this point you | |
can test and then: | |
1) Continue | |
eg bisect good # Mark the current commit as good, give me a new commit | |
OR | |
eg bisect bad # Mark the current commit as bad, give me a new commit | |
2) Skip this particular commit | |
eg bisect skip # Can't test the current version; give me a new commit | |
3) Abort | |
eg bisect reset | |
See 'git help bisect' for more details." | |
} | |
sub refspecs { | |
return " | |
Before reading up on refspecs, be sure you understand all the following | |
help pages: | |
eg help merge | |
eg help pull | |
eg help push | |
eg help rebase | |
eg help remote | |
eg help topic storage | |
refspecs compress knowledge from pieces of all those things into a short | |
amount of space. | |
refspecs are command line parameters to eg push or eg pull, used at the end | |
of the command line. refspecs provide fine-grained control of pushing and | |
pulling changes in the following two areas: | |
Since branches, tags, and remote tracking branches are all implemented by | |
creating simple files consisting solely of a sha1sum, it is possible to | |
push to or pull from different reference names and different reference | |
types. | |
Pushing and pulling of (possibly remote tracking) branches are typically | |
accompanied by sanity checks to make sure the sha1sums on each end are | |
related (to make sure that updates don't throw away previous commits, for | |
example). In some cases it is desirable to ignore such checks, such as | |
when a branch has been rebased or commits have been amended. | |
The canonical format of a refspec is | |
[+]SRC:DEST | |
That is, an optional plus character followed by a source reference, then a | |
colon character, then the destination reference. There are a couple | |
special abbreviations, noted in the abbreviations section below. The | |
meaning and syntax of the parts of a refspec are discussed next. | |
General source and destination handling | |
Both the source and the destination reference are typically named by | |
their path specification under the .git directory. Examples: | |
refs/heads/bob # branch: bob | |
refs/tags/v2.0 # tag: v2.0 | |
refs/remotes/jill/stable # remote-tracking branch: jill/stable | |
Leading directory paths can be omitted if no ambiguity would result. | |
The refspec specifies that the push or pull operation should take the | |
sha1sum from SRC in the source repository, and use it to fast-foward DEST | |
in the destination repository. The operation will fail if updating DEST | |
would not be a fast-foward, unless the optional plus in the refspec is | |
present. | |
Pull operations are somewhat unusual. For a pull, DEST is usually not | |
the current branch. In such cases, the current branch is also updated | |
after DEST is. The method of updating depends on whether --rebase was | |
specified, and whether the latest revision of the current branch is an | |
ancestor of the revision stored by DEST: | |
If --rebase is specified: | |
Rebase the current branch against DEST | |
If --rebase is not specified, current branch is an ancestor of DEST: | |
Fast-forward the current branch to DEST | |
If --rebase is not specified, current branch is not an ancestor of DEST: | |
Merge DEST into the current branch | |
Overriding push and pull sanity checks | |
For both push and pull operations, the operation will fail if updating | |
DEST to SRC is not a fast-forward. This tends to happen in a few | |
different circumstances: | |
For pushes: | |
* If someone else has pushed updates to the specified location | |
already -- in such cases one should resolve the problem by doing a | |
pull before attempting a push rather than overriding the safety | |
check. | |
* If one has rewritten history (e.g. using rebase, commit --amend, | |
reset followed by subsequent commits) | |
For pulls: | |
* If one is pulling to a branch instead of a remote tracking branch | |
-- in such a case, one should instead either specify a remote | |
tracking branch for DEST or specify an empty DEST rather than | |
overriding the safety check. | |
* If one has somehow recorded commits directly to a remote tracking | |
branch | |
* If history has been rewritten on the remote end (e.g. by using | |
rebase, commit --amend, reset followed by subsequent commits). | |
In all such cases, users can choose to throw away any existing unique | |
commits at the DEST end and make DEST record the same sha1sum as SRC, by | |
using a plus character at the beginning of the refspec. | |
Abbreviations of refspecs | |
Globbing syntax | |
For either pushes or pulls, one can use a globbing syntax, such as | |
refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/jim/* | |
or | |
refs/heads/*:refs/heads/* | |
in order to specify pulling or pushing multiple locations at once. | |
The following special abbreviations are allowed for both pushes and pulls: | |
tag TAG | |
This is equivalent to specifying refs/tags/TAG:refs/tags/TAG. | |
The following special abbreviations are allowed for pushes: | |
:REFERENCE | |
This specifies delete the reference at the remote end (think of it as | |
\"using nothing to update the remote reference\") | |
REFERENCE | |
This is the same as REFERENCE:REFERENCE | |
The following special abbreviations are allowed for pulls: | |
REFERENCE: | |
This is used to merge REFERENCE into the current branch directly | |
without storing the remote branch in some remote tracking branch. | |
REFERENCE | |
This is the same as REFERENCE: which is explained above. | |
"; | |
} | |
sub remote_urls { | |
# | |
# NOTE: The help for remote_urls is basically lifted from the git manpages, | |
# which are licensed under GPLv2 (as is eg). | |
# | |
return " | |
Any of the following notations can be used to name a remote repository: | |
rsync://host.xz/path/to/repo.git/ | |
http://host.xz/path/to/repo.git/ | |
https://host.xz/path/to/repo.git/ | |
git://host.xz/path/to/repo.git/ | |
git://host.xz/~user/path/to/repo.git/ | |
ssh://[user@]host.xz[:port]/path/to/repo.git/ | |
ssh://[user@]host.xz/path/to/repo.git/ | |
ssh://[user@]host.xz/~user/path/to/repo.git/ | |
ssh://[user@]host.xz/~/path/to/repo.git | |
You can also use any of the following, which are identical to the last | |
three above, respectively | |
[user@]host.xz:/path/to/repo.git/ | |
[user@]host.xz:~user/path/to/repo.git/ | |
[user@]host.xz:path/to/repo.git | |
Finally, you can also use the following notation to name a not-so-remote | |
repository: | |
/path/to/repo.git/ | |
file:///path/to/repo.git/ | |
These last two are identical other than that the latter disables some local | |
optimizations (such as hardlinking copies of history when cloning, in order | |
to save disk space). | |
"; | |
} | |
sub revisions { | |
# | |
# NOTE: The pictoral example of revision suffixes is taken from the | |
# git-rev-parse manpage, which is licensed under GPLv2 (as is eg). | |
# | |
return " | |
There are MANY different ways to refer to revisions (also referred to as | |
commits) of the repository. Most are only needed for fine-grained control | |
in very large projects; the basics should be sufficient for most. | |
Basics | |
The most common ways of referring to revisions (or commits), are: | |
- Branch or tag name (e.g. stable, v0.77, master, 2.28branch, version-1-0) | |
- Counting back from another revision (e.g. stable~1, stable~2, stable~3) | |
- Cryptographic checksum (e.g. dae86e1950b1277e545cee180551750029cfe735) | |
- Abbreviated checksum (e.g. dae86e) | |
The output of 'eg log' shows (up to) two names for each revision: its | |
cryptographic checksum and the count backward relative to the currently | |
active branch (if the revision being shown in eg log is not part of the | |
currently active branch then only the cryptographic checksum is shown). | |
One can always check the validity of a revision name and what revision | |
it refers to using 'eg log -1 REVISION' (the -1 to show only one revision). | |
Branches and Tags | |
Users can specify a tag name to refer to the revision marked by that tag. | |
Run 'eg tag' to get a list of existing tags. | |
Users can specify a branch name to refer to the most recent revision of | |
that branch. Use 'eg branch' to get a list of existing branches. | |
Cryptographic checksums | |
Each revision of a repository has an associated cryptographic checksum | |
(in particular, a sha1sum) identifying it. This cryptographic checksum | |
is a sequence of 40 letters and numbers from 0-9 and a-f. For example, | |
dae86e1950b1277e545cee180551750029cfe735 | |
In addition to using these sha1sums to refer to revisions, one can also | |
use an abbreviation of a sha1sum so long as enough characters are used to | |
uniquely identify the revision (typically 6-8 characters are enough). | |
Special Names | |
There are a few special revision names. | |
Names that always exist: | |
HEAD - A reference to the most recent revision of the current branch | |
(thus HEAD refers to the same revision as using the branch | |
name). If there is no active branch, such as after running | |
'eg switch TAG', then HEAD refers to the revision switched to. | |
Note that the files in the working copy are always considered to | |
be a (possibly modifed) copy of the revision pointed to by HEAD. | |
Names that only exist in special cases: | |
ORIG_HEAD - Some operations (such as merge or reset) change which | |
revision the working copy is relative to. These will | |
record the old value of HEAD in ORIG_HEAD. This allows | |
one to undo such operations by running | |
eg reset --working-copy ORIG_HEAD | |
FETCH_HEAD - When downloading branches from other repositories (via | |
the fetch or pull commands), the tip of the last fetched | |
branch is stored in FETCH_HEAD. | |
MERGE_HEAD - If a merge operation results in conflicts, then the merge | |
will stop and wait for you to manually fix the conflicts. | |
In such a case, MERGE_HEAD will store the tip of the | |
branch(es) being merged into the current branch. (The | |
current branch can be accessed, as always, through HEAD.) | |
Suffixes for counting backwards | |
There are two suffixes for counting backwards from revisions to other | |
revisions: ~ and ^. | |
Adding ~N after a revision, with N a non-negative integer, means to count | |
backwards N commits before the specified revision. If any revision along | |
the path has more than one parent (i.e. if any revision is a merge | |
commit), then the first parent is always followed. Thus, if stable is a | |
branch, then | |
stable means the last revision on the stable branch | |
stable~1 means one revision before the last on the stable branch | |
stable~2 means two revisions before the last on the stable branch | |
stable~3 means three revisions before the last on the stable branch | |
In short, ~N goes back N generation of parents, always following the | |
first parent. | |
Adding ^N after a revision, with N a non-negative integer, means the Nth | |
parent of the specified revision. N can be omitted in which case it is | |
assumed to have the value 1. Thus, if stable is a branch, then | |
stable means the last revision on the stable branch | |
stable^1 means the first parent of the last revision on the stable branch | |
stable^2 means the second parent of the last revision on the stable branch | |
stable^3 means the third parent of the last revision on the stable branch | |
In short, ^N picks out one parent from the first generation of parents. | |
Revisions with suffixes can themselves have suffixes, thus | |
stable~5 = stable~3~2 | |
Here is an illustration with an unusually high amount of merging. The | |
illustration has 10 revisions each tagged with a different letter of the | |
alphabet, with A referring to the most recent revision: | |
A | |
/ \\ | |
/ \\ | |
B C | |
/|\\ | | |
/ | \\ | | |
/ | \\ / | |
D E F | |
/ \\ / \\ | |
G H I J | |
From the illustration, the following equalities hold: | |
A = = A^0 | |
B = A^ = A^1 = A~1 | |
C = A^2 = A^2 | |
D = A^^ = A^1^1 = A~2 | |
E = B^2 = A^^2 | |
F = B^3 = A^^3 | |
G = A^^^ = A^1^1^1 = A~3 | |
H = D^2 = B^^2 = A^^^2 = A~2^2 | |
I = F^ = B^3^ = A^^3^ | |
J = F^2 = B^3^2 = A^^3^2 | |
Revisions from logged branch tip history | |
By default, all changes to each branch and to the special identifier HEAD | |
are recorded in something called a reflog (short for \"reference log\", | |
because calling it a \"branch log\" would not have made the glossary of | |
special terms long enough). Each entry of the reflog records the | |
previous revision recorded by the branch, the new revision the branch was | |
changed to, the command used to make the change (commit, merge, reset, | |
pull, checkout, etc.), and when the change was made. One can get an | |
overview of the changes made to a branch (including the special branch | |
'HEAD') by running | |
eg reflog show BRANCHNAME | |
One can make use of the reflog to refer to revisions that a branch used | |
to point to. The format for referring to revisions from the reflog are | |
BRANCH\@{HISTORY_REFERENCE} | |
Examples follow. | |
Revisions that the branch pointed to, in order | |
Assuming that ultra-bling is the name of a branch, the following can be | |
used to refer to revisions ultra-bling used to point to: | |
ultra-bling\@{0} is the same as ultra-bling | |
ultra-bling\@{1} is the revision pointed to before the last change | |
ultra-bling\@{2} is the revision ultra-bling pointed to two changes ago | |
ultra-bling\@{3} is the revision ultra-bling pointed to three changes ago | |
Note that any of these beyond the first could easily refer to commits | |
that are no longer part of the ultra-bling branch (due to using a | |
command like reset or commit --amend). | |
Revisions that the branch pointed to at a previous time | |
Assuing that fixes is the name of a branch, the following can be used to | |
refer to revisions that fixes used to point to: | |
fixes\@{yesterday} - revision fixes pointed to yesterday | |
fixes\@{1 day 3 hours ago} - revision fixes pointed to 1 day 3 hours ago | |
fixes\@{2008-02-29 12:34:00} - revision fixes had at 12:34 on Feb 29, 2008 | |
Again, these could refer to revisions that are no longer part of the | |
fixes branch, | |
Using the branch log can be used to recover \"lost\" revisions that are | |
no longer part of (or have never been part of) any branch reported by 'eg | |
branch'. | |
Commit messages | |
One can also refer a revision using the beginning of the commit message | |
recorded in it. This is done using with the two-character prefix :/ | |
followed by the beginning of the commit message. Note that quotation marks | |
are also often used to avoid having the shell split the commit message into | |
different arguments. Examples: | |
:/\"Fix the biggest bug blocking the 1.0 release\" | |
:/\"Make the translation from url\" | |
:/\"Add a README file\" | |
Note that if the commit message starts with an exclamation mark ('!'), then | |
you need to type two of them; for example example: | |
:/\"!!Commit messages starting with an exclamation mark are retarded\" | |
Other methods | |
There are even more methods of referring to revisions. Run \"man | |
git-rev-parse\", and look for the \"SPECIFYING REVISIONS\" section for | |
more details. | |
"; | |
} | |
sub staging { | |
return " | |
Marking changes from certain files as ready for commit allows you to split | |
your changes into two distinct sets (those that are ready for commit, and | |
those that aren't). This includes support for limiting diffs to changes in | |
one of these two sets, and for committing just the changes that are ready. | |
It's a simple feature that comes in surprisingly handy: | |
* When doing conflict resolution from large merges, hunks of changes can | |
be categorized into known-to-be-good and still-needs-more-fixing | |
subsets. | |
* When reviewing a largish patch from someone else, hunks of changes can | |
be categorized into known-to-be-good and still-needs-review subsets. | |
* By staging your changes, you can go ahead and add temporary debugging | |
code and have less fear of forgetting to remove it before committing -- | |
you will be warned about having both staged and unstaged changes at | |
commit time, and you will have an easy way to locate the temporary | |
code. | |
* It makes it easier to keep \"dirty\" changes in your working copy for a | |
long time without committing them. | |
Staging changes and working with staged changes | |
Mark all changes in foo.py and baz.c as ready to be committed | |
eg stage foo.py baz.c | |
Selectively stage part of the changes | |
eg stage -p | |
(You will be asked whether to stage each change, listed in diff format; | |
the main options to know are \"y\" for yes, \"n\" for no, and \"s\" for | |
splitting the selected change into smaller changes; see 'git help add' for | |
more details). | |
Get all unstaged changes to bar.C and foo.pl | |
eg diff --unstaged foo.pl bar.C | |
Get all staged changes | |
eg diff --staged | |
Get all changes | |
eg diff | |
Revert the staged changes to bar.C, foo.pl and foo.py | |
eg unstage bar.C foo.pl foo.py | |
Commit just the staged changes | |
eg commit --staged | |
"; | |
} | |
sub storage { | |
return " | |
Basics | |
Each revision is referred to by a cryptographic checksum (in particular, | |
a sha1sum) of its contents. Each revision also knows which revision(s) | |
it was derived from, known as the revision's parent(s). | |
Each branch records the cryptographic checksum of the most recent commit | |
for the branch. Since each commit records its parent(s), a branch | |
consists of its most recent commit plus all ancestors of that commit. | |
When a new commit is made on a branch, the branch just replaces the | |
cryptographic checksum of the old commit with the new one. | |
Remote tracking branches, if used (see 'eg help remote'), differ from | |
normal branches only in that they have a slash in their name. For | |
example, the remote tracking branch that tracks the contents of the | |
stable branch of the remote named bob would be called bob/stable. By | |
their nature, remote tracking branches only track the contents of a | |
branch of a remote repository; one does not switch to and commit to these | |
branches. | |
Tags simply record a single revision, much like branches, but tags are | |
not advanced when additional commits are made. Tags are not stored as | |
part of a branch, though by default tags that point to commits which are | |
downloaded (as part of merging changes from a branch) are themselves | |
downloaded as well. | |
Neither branches nor tags are revision controlled, though there is a log | |
of changes made to each branch (known as a reflog, short for \"reference | |
log\", because calling it a \"branch log\" wouldn't make the glossary of | |
special terms long enough). | |
Pictorial explanation | |
Using the letters A-P as shorthand for different revisions and their | |
cryptographic checksums (which we'll assume were created in the order | |
A...P for purposes of illustration), an example of the kind of structure | |
built up by having commits track their parents is: | |
N | |
| | |
M P | |
| | | |
L O | |
| \\ | | |
J K | |
| | | |
H I | |
| / | |
G | |
| | |
F | |
/ \\ | |
C E | |
| | | |
B D | |
| | |
A | |
In this picture, F has two parents (C and E) and is thus a merge commit. | |
L is also a merge commit, having parents J and K. There are two branches | |
depicted here, which can be identified by N and P (due to the fact that | |
branches simply track their most recent commit). This history is | |
somewhat unusual in that there is no unique start of history; instead | |
there are two beginnings of history -- A and D. Such a history can be | |
created by pulling from, and merging with, a branch from another | |
repository that shares no common history. While unusual, it is fully | |
supported. | |
For further illustration, let's assume that the following branches exist: | |
stable: N | |
bling: P | |
Then the picture of each branch, side by side (using revision identifiers | |
explained in 'eg help topic revisions'), is: | |
stable | |
| | |
stable~1 bling | |
| | | |
stable~2 bling~1 | |
| \\ | | |
stable~3 stable~2^2 bling~2 | |
| | | | |
stable~4 stable~2^2~1 bling~3 | |
| / / | |
stable~6 bling~4 | |
| | | |
stable~7 bling~5 | |
/ \\ / \\ | |
stable~8 stable~7^2 bling~6 bling~5^2 | |
| | | | | |
stable~9 stable~7^2~1 bling~7 bling~5^2~1 | |
| | | |
stable~10 bling~8 | |
Note that there are many commits which are part of both branches, | |
including two commits (I and K in the original picture) which were | |
probably created after these two branches separated. This is simply due | |
to recording both parents in merge commits. | |
Note that this tree-like or graph-like structure of branches is an | |
example of something that computer scientists call a Directed Acyclic | |
Graph (DAG); referring to it as such provides us the opportunity to | |
make the glossary of special terminology longer. | |
Files and directories in a git repository (stuff under .git) | |
You may find the following files and directories in your git repository. | |
This document will discuss the highlights; see the repository-layout.html | |
page distributed with git for more details. | |
COMMIT_EDITMSG | |
A leftover file from previous commits; this is the file that commit | |
messages are recorded to when when you do not specify a -m or -F option | |
to commit (thus causing an editor to be invoked). | |
config | |
A simple text file recording configuration options; see 'eg help config'. | |
description | |
A file that is only used by gitweb, currently. If you use gitweb, this | |
files provides a description of the project tracked in the repository. | |
HEAD | |
ORIG_HEAD | |
FETCH_HEAD | |
MERGE_HEAD | |
See the Special Names section of 'eg help topic revisions'; these files | |
record these special revisions. | |
git-daemon-export-ok | |
This file is only relevant if you are using git-daemon, a server to | |
provide access to your repositories via the git:// protocol. | |
git-daemon refuses to provide access to any repository that does not | |
have a git-daemon-export-ok file. | |
hooks | |
A directory containing customizations scripts used by various commands. | |
These scripts are only used if they are executable. | |
index | |
A binary file which records the staging area. See 'eg help topic | |
staging' for more information. | |
info | |
A directory with additional info about the repository | |
info/exclude | |
An additional place to specify ignored files. Users typically use | |
.gitignore files in the relevant directories to ignore files, but | |
ignored files can also be listed here. | |
info/ignored-unknown | |
A list of unknown files known to exist previously, used to determine | |
whether unknown files should cause commit (or push or publish) to | |
abort. See 'eg help commit' for more information; this list is | |
updated whenever the -b flag is passed to commit. | |
info/refs | |
This is a file created by 'eg update-server-info' and is needed for | |
repositories accessed over http. | |
logs | |
History of changes to references (i.e. to branches, tags, or | |
remote-tracking branches). The file logs/PATH/TO/FILE in the | |
repository records the changes to the reference PATH/TO/FILE in the | |
repository. See also the 'Revisions from logged branch tip history' | |
section of 'eg help topic revisions'. | |
objects | |
Storage of actual user data (files, directory trees, commit objects). | |
Storage is done according to sha1sum of each object (splitting sha1sums | |
into a combination of directory name and file name). There are also | |
packs, which compress many objects into one file for tighter storage | |
and reduced disk usage. | |
packed-refs | |
The combination of paths, filenames, and sha1sums from many different | |
refs -- one per line; see refs below. | |
refs | |
Storage of references (branches, heads, or remote tracking branches). | |
Each reference is a simple file consisting of a sha1sum (see 'eg help | |
topic storage' for more information). The path provides the type of | |
the reference, the file name provides the name for the reference, and | |
the sha1sum is the revision the reference refers to. | |
Branches are stored under refs/heads/*, tags under refs/tags/*, and | |
remote tracking branches under refs/remotes/REMOTENAME/*. Note that | |
some of these references may appear in packed-refs instead of having | |
a file somewhere under the refs directory. | |
"; | |
} | |
sub help { | |
my $self = shift; | |
my $help_msg; | |
# Get the topic we want more info on (replace dashes, since they can't | |
# be in function names) | |
my $topic = shift @ARGV; | |
my $orig_topic = $topic; | |
$topic =~ s/-/_/g if $topic; | |
### FIXME: Add the following topics, plus maybe some others | |
# glossary <Not yet written; this is just a stub> | |
my $topics = " | |
middle-of-am How to resolve or abort an incomplete am (apply mail) | |
middle-of-bisect How to continue or abort a bisection | |
middle-of-merge How to resolve or abort an incomplete merge | |
middle-of-rebase How to resolve or abort an incomplete rebase | |
refspecs Advanced pushing and pulling: detailed control of storage | |
remote-urls Format for referring to remote (and not-so-remote) repositories | |
revisions Various methods for referring to revisions | |
staging Marking a subset of the local changes ready for committing | |
storage High level overview of how commits, tags, and branches are stored | |
"; | |
if (defined $topic) { | |
die "No topic help for '$topic' exists. Try 'eg help topic'.\n" | |
if !$self->can($topic); | |
$help_msg = $self->$topic(); | |
if ($topics =~ m#^(\Q$orig_topic\E.*)#m) { | |
$topic = $1; | |
} | |
} else { | |
$topic = "Topics"; | |
$help_msg = $topics; | |
} | |
$ENV{"LESS"} = "FRSX" unless defined $ENV{"LESS"}; | |
my $less = ($USE_PAGER == 1) ? "less" : | |
($USE_PAGER == 0) ? "cat" : | |
`$GIT_CMD config core.pager` || "less"; | |
chomp($less); | |
open(OUTPUT, "| $less"); | |
print OUTPUT "$topic\n"; | |
print OUTPUT $help_msg; | |
close(OUTPUT); | |
exit 0; | |
} | |
########################################################################### | |
# info # | |
########################################################################### | |
package info; | |
@info::ISA = qw(subcommand); | |
INIT { | |
$COMMAND{info} = { | |
new_command => 1, | |
section => 'discovery', | |
extra => 1, | |
about => 'Show some basic information about the current repository' | |
}; | |
} | |
sub new { | |
my $class = shift; | |
my $self = $class->SUPER::new(git_equivalent => '', git_repo_needed => 0, @_); | |
bless($self, $class); | |
$self->{'help'} = " | |
Usage: | |
eg info [/PATH/TO/REPOSITORY] | |
Description: | |
Shows information about the specified repository, or the current | |
repository if none is specified. | |
Most of the output of eg info is self-explanatory, but some fields | |
benefit from extra explanation or pointers about where to find related | |
information. These fields are: | |
Total commits | |
The total number of commits (or revisions) found in the repository. | |
eg log can be used to view revision authors, dates, and commit log | |
messages. | |
Local repository | |
eg has a number of files and directories it uses to track your data, | |
including (by default) a copy of the entire history of the project. | |
These files and directories are all stored below a single directory, | |
referred to as the local repository. See 'eg help topic storage' for | |
more details. | |
Named remote repositories | |
To make it easier to track changes from multiple remote repositories, | |
eg provides the ability to provide nicknames for and work with | |
multiple branches from a remote repository and even working with | |
multiple remote repositories at once. See 'eg help remote' for more | |
details, though you will want to make sure you understand 'eg help | |
pull' and 'eg help push' first. | |
Current branch | |
All development is done on a branch, though smaller projects may only | |
use one branch per repository (thus making the repository effectively | |
serve as a branch). In contrast to cvs and svn which refer to | |
mainline development as \"HEAD\" and \"TRUNK\", respectively, eg | |
calls the mainline development a branch as well, with the default | |
name of \"master\"). See 'eg help branch' and 'eg help topic | |
storage' for more details. | |
Cryptographic checksum | |
Each revision has an associated cryptographic checksum of both its | |
contents and the revision(s) it was derived from, providing strong | |
data consistency checks and guarantees. These checksums are shown in | |
the output of eg log, and serve as a way to refer to revisions. See | |
also 'eg help topic storage' for more details. | |
Default pull/push configuration options: | |
The default repository to push to or pull from defaults to 'origin', | |
if the 'origin' remote has been set up (see 'eg help remote' for | |
setting up remote repository nicknames). | |
However, the default repository can be set on a per-branch basis as a | |
configuration option (see 'eg help config'). In fact, a number of | |
default pull/push actions can be set as per-branch configuration | |
options: default merge options to use on a given branch, default | |
branch to merge with from the remote repository, and whether to | |
rebase (rewrite local commits on top of new remote commits; see 'eg | |
help rebase') rather than merge (keep local commits as they are and | |
just make a merge commit combining local and remote changes; see 'eg | |
help merge'). | |
"; | |
$self->{'differences'} = ' | |
eg info is unique to eg; git does not have a similar command. It | |
originally was intended just to do something nice if svn converts happen | |
to try this command, but I have found it to be a really nice way of | |
helping users get their bearings. It also provides some nice statistics | |
that git users may appreciate (particularly when it comes time to fill | |
out the Git User Survey). | |
'; | |
return $self; | |
} | |
sub preprocess { | |
my $self = shift; | |
my $path = shift @ARGV; | |
die "Aborting: Too many arguments to eg info.\n" if @ARGV; | |
if ($path) { | |
die "$path does not look like a directory.\n" if ! -d $path; | |
my ($ret, $useless_output) = | |
ExecUtil::execute_captured("$GIT_CMD ls-remote $path", ignore_ret => 1); | |
if ($ret != 0) { | |
die "$path does not appear to be a git archive " . | |
"(maybe it has no commits yet?).\n"; | |
} | |
chdir($path); | |
} | |
# Set git_dir | |
$self->{git_dir} = RepoUtil::git_dir(); | |
die "Must be run inside a git repository!\n" if !defined $self->{git_dir}; | |
} | |
sub run { | |
my $self=shift; | |
my $branch = RepoUtil::current_branch(); | |
# | |
# Special case the situation of no commits being present | |
# | |
if (RepoUtil::initial_commit()) { | |
if ($DEBUG < 2) { | |
print STDERR <<EOF; | |
Total commits: 0 | |
Local repository: $self->{git_dir} | |
There are no commits in this repository. Please use eg stage to mark new | |
files as being ready to commit, and eg commit to commit them. | |
EOF | |
} | |
exit 1; | |
} | |
# | |
# Repository-global information | |
# | |
# total commits | |
my $total_commits = ExecUtil::output("$GIT_CMD rev-list --all | wc -l"); | |
print "Total commits: $total_commits\n" if $DEBUG < 2; | |
# local repo | |
print "Local repository: $self->{git_dir}\n" if $DEBUG < 2; | |
# named remote repos | |
my %remotes; | |
my $longest = 0; | |
my @abbrev_remotes = split('\n', ExecUtil::output("$GIT_CMD remote")); | |
foreach my $remote (@abbrev_remotes) { | |
chomp($remote); | |
my $url = RepoUtil::get_config("remote.$remote.url"); | |
$remotes{$remote} = $url; | |
$longest = main::max($longest, length($remote)); | |
} | |
if (scalar keys %remotes > 0 && $DEBUG < 2) { | |
print "Named remote repositories: (name -> location)\n"; | |
foreach my $remote (sort keys %remotes) { | |
printf " %${longest}s -> %s\n", $remote, $remotes{$remote}; | |
} | |
} | |
# | |
# Stats for the current branch... | |
# | |
return if !defined($branch); | |
# File & directory stats only work if we're in the toplevel directory | |
my ($orig_dir, $top_dir, $git_dir) = RepoUtil::get_dirs(); | |
chdir($top_dir); | |
# Name | |
print "Current branch: $branch\n" if $DEBUG < 2; | |
# Sha1sum | |
my $current_commit = ExecUtil::output("$GIT_CMD show-ref -s -h | head -n 1"); | |
print " Cryptographic checksum (sha1sum): $current_commit\n" if $DEBUG < 2; | |
# Default pull/push options | |
my $default = "-None-"; | |
my $print_config_options = 0; | |
my ($ret, $options) = | |
ExecUtil::execute_captured("$GIT_CMD config --get-regexp " . | |
"^branch\.$branch\.*", ignore_ret => 1); | |
chomp($options); | |
my @lines; | |
if ($ret == 0) { | |
@lines = split('\n', $options); | |
my $line_count = scalar(@lines); | |
$print_config_options = ($line_count > 0); | |
if ($options =~ /^branch\.$branch\.remote (.*)$/m) { | |
$default = $1; | |
$print_config_options = ($line_count > 1); | |
} else { | |
my @output = `$GIT_CMD config --get-regexp remote.origin.*`; | |
$default = "origin" if @output; | |
} | |
} | |
print " Default pull/push repository: $default\n" if $DEBUG < 2; | |
if ($print_config_options && $DEBUG < 2) { | |
print " Default pull/push options:\n"; | |
foreach my $line (@lines) { | |
$line =~ s/\s+/ = /; | |
print " $line\n"; | |
} | |
} | |
# No. contributors | |
my $contributors = ExecUtil::output("$GIT_CMD shortlog -s -n HEAD | wc -l"); | |
print " Number of contributors: $contributors\n" if $DEBUG < 2; | |
# No. files | |
my $num_files = ExecUtil::output("$GIT_CMD ls-tree -r HEAD | wc -l"); | |
print " Number of files: $num_files\n" if $DEBUG < 2; | |
# No. dirs | |
my $num_dirs = ExecUtil::output( | |
"$GIT_CMD ls-tree -r -t HEAD " . | |
" | grep -E '[0-9]+ tree'" . | |
" | wc -l"); | |
print " Number of directories: $num_dirs\n" if $DEBUG < 2; | |
# Some ugly, nasty code to get the biggest file. Seems to be the only | |
# method I could find that would work given the corner case filenames | |
# (spaces and unicode chars) in the git.git repo (Try eg info on repo | |
# from 'git clone git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/git/git.git'). | |
my @files = `$GIT_CMD ls-tree -r -l --full-name HEAD`; | |
my %biggest = (name => '', size => 0); | |
foreach my $line (@files) { | |
if ($line =~ m#^[0-9]+ [a-z]+ [0-9a-f]+[ ]*(\d+)[ \t]*(.*)$#) { | |
my ($size, $file) = ($1, $2); | |
if ($file =~ m#^\".*\"#) { $file = eval "$file" }; # Unicode fix | |
if ($size >= $biggest{size}) { | |
$biggest{name} = $file; | |
$biggest{size} = $size; | |
} | |
} | |
} | |
my $biggest_file = "$biggest{size} ($biggest{name})"; | |
print " Biggest file size, in bytes: $biggest_file\n" if $DEBUG < 2; | |
# No. commits | |
my $branch_depth = ExecUtil::output("$GIT_CMD rev-list HEAD | wc -l"); | |
print " Commits: $branch_depth\n" if $DEBUG < 2; | |
# Other possibilities: | |
# Disk space used by respository (du -hs .git, or packfile size?) | |
# Disk space used by working copy (???) | |
# Number of unpacked objects? | |
chdir($orig_dir); | |
# Well, if we got this far, it must have worked, so... | |
return 0; | |
} | |
########################################################################### | |
# init # | |
########################################################################### | |
package init; | |
@init::ISA = qw(subcommand); | |
INIT { | |
$COMMAND{init} = { | |
unmodified_behavior => 1, | |
section => 'creation', | |
about => 'Create a new repository' | |
}; | |
} | |
sub new { | |
my $class = shift; | |
my $self = $class->SUPER::new(git_repo_needed => 0, @_); | |
bless($self, $class); | |
$self->{'help'} = " | |
Usage: | |
eg init [--shared] | |
Description: | |
Creates a new repository. | |
If you want to publish a copy of an existing repository so that others | |
can access it, use 'eg publish' instead. | |
Note for cvs/svn users: With cvs or svn it is common to create an empty | |
repository on \"the server\", then check it out locally and start adding | |
files and committing. With eg, it is more natural to create a repository | |
on your local machine and start creating and adding files, then later | |
(possibly as soon as one commit later) publishing your work to \"the | |
server\". git (and thus eg) does not currently allow cloning empty | |
repositories, so for now you must change habits. | |
Examples: | |
Create a new blank repository, then use it by creating and adding a file | |
to it: | |
\$ mkdir project | |
\$ cd project | |
\$ eg init | |
Create and edit a file called foo.py | |
\$ eg stage foo.py | |
\$ eg commit | |
Create a repository to track further changes to an existing project. Then | |
start using it right away | |
\$ cd cool-program | |
\$ eg init | |
\$ eg stage . # Recursively adds all files | |
\$ eg commit -m \"Initial import of all files\" | |
Make more changes to fix a bug or add a new feature or... | |
\$ eg commit | |
(Advanced) Create a new blank repository meant to be used in a | |
centralized fashion, i.e. a repository for many users to commit to. | |
\$ mkdir new-project | |
\$ cd new-project | |
\$ eg init --shared | |
Check repository ownership and user groups to ensure they are right | |
Options: | |
--shared | |
Set up a repository that will shared amongst several users; note that | |
you are responsible for creating a common group for developers so that | |
they can all write to the repository. Ask your sysadmin or see the | |
groupadd(8), usermod(8), chgrp(1), and chmod(1) manpages. | |
"; | |
return $self; | |
} | |
########################################################################### | |
# log # | |
########################################################################### | |
package log; | |
@log::ISA = qw(subcommand); | |
INIT { | |
$COMMAND{log} = { | |
section => 'discovery', | |
about => 'Show history of recorded changes' | |
}; | |
} | |
sub new { | |
my $class = shift; | |
my $self = $class->SUPER::new( | |
git_repo_needed => 1, | |
@_); | |
bless($self, $class); | |
$self->{'help'} = " | |
Usage: | |
eg log | |
Description: | |
Shows a history of recorded changes. Displays commit identifiers, | |
the authors of the changes, and commit messages. | |
"; | |
$self->{'differences'} = ' | |
eg log output differs from git log output by showing simpler revision | |
identifiers that will be easier for new users to understand and use. | |
In detail: | |
eg log | |
is essentially the same as | |
git log | git name-rev --stdin --refs=$(git symbolic-ref HEAD) | less | |
However, it implements the name-rev behavior internally to provide | |
incremental history processing (which avoids slow upfront full-history | |
analyses) in common cases. | |
'; | |
return $self; | |
} | |
sub _get_values ($$) { | |
my ($names, $sha1sum) = @_; | |
my ($name, $distance); | |
if (defined($names->{$sha1sum})) { | |
($name, $distance) = @{$names->{$sha1sum}}; | |
} | |
return ($name, $distance); | |
} | |
sub _path_count ($) { | |
my ($name) = @_; | |
my @matches = ($name =~ m/[~^]/g); | |
return scalar @matches; | |
} | |
sub _get_revision_name ($$$) { | |
my ($sha1sum, $filehandle, $names) = @_; | |
my ($name, $distance); | |
# If we've already determined teh name of this sha1sum before, just return it | |
($name, $distance) = _get_values($names, $sha1sum); | |
return $name if defined $name; | |
# Loop over rev-list output, naming the parents of each commit as we walk | |
# backward in history (breaking whenever if we hit our sha1sum) | |
while (<$filehandle>) { | |
# Each line of the rev-list output is of form | |
# sha1sum-of-commit sha1sum-of-parent1 sha1sum-of-parent2... | |
my ($child, $parent, @merge_parents) = split; | |
next if !$parent; | |
# Determine the name of the current commit, and its distance from the head | |
# of the current branch | |
my ($cur_name, $distance) = _get_values($names, $child); | |
die "Yikes! Your history is b0rken!\n" if (!$cur_name); | |
# Determine any name we previously determined for $parent, the name we | |
# would give it relative to $child, and determine which should "win" | |
my ($orig_parent_name, $orig_parent_distance) = _get_values($names, $parent); | |
my $parent_name; | |
if ($cur_name =~ /^(.*)~(\d+)$/) { | |
my $count = $2 + 1; | |
$parent_name = "$1~$count"; | |
} else { | |
$parent_name = "$cur_name~1"; | |
} | |
my $parent_distance = $distance + 1; | |
if (!$orig_parent_name || | |
_path_count($orig_parent_name) > _path_count($parent_name)) { | |
$names->{$parent} = [$parent_name, $parent_distance]; | |
} | |
# Do the same for other parents, though their naming scheme is slightly | |
# different | |
my $count=2; | |
foreach my $merge_parent (@merge_parents) { | |
($orig_parent_name, $orig_parent_distance) = | |
_get_values($names, $merge_parent); | |
if (!$orig_parent_name || | |
_path_count($orig_parent_name) > _path_count("$cur_name^$count")) { | |
$names->{$merge_parent} = ["$cur_name^$count", $parent_distance]; | |
} | |
$count++; | |
} | |
# Check if we found the needed sha1sum, and exit early if so | |
push(@merge_parents, $parent); | |
last if (grep {$_ eq $sha1sum} @merge_parents); | |
} | |
# Check if we found the needed sha1sum; if so, return it | |
($name, $distance) = _get_values($names, $sha1sum); | |
return $name if $name; | |
# We didn't find the wanted sha1sum; it has no name relative to the current | |
# branch using tildes and hats. | |
return ""; | |
} | |
sub run { | |
my $self = shift; | |
@ARGV = Util::quote_args(@ARGV); | |
my $branch = RepoUtil::current_branch(); | |
# Check whether to warn if there are no commits. We don't want to parse | |
# all the arguments to determine if there is a valid revision listed on the | |
# command line (or, failing that, whether HEAD reference a valid revision); | |
# instead, we just check for the simple case of no branches existing yet. | |
if (!`$GIT_CMD branch -a`) { | |
die "Error: No recorded commits to show yet.\n"; | |
} | |
# We can just run plain git log if there's not current branch | |
if (!$branch || !RepoUtil::valid_ref($branch)) { | |
return ExecUtil::execute("$GIT_CMD log @ARGV", ignore_ret => 1); | |
} | |
my ($ret, $revision) = | |
ExecUtil::execute_captured("$GIT_CMD rev-parse refs/heads/$branch"); | |
exit $ret if $ret; | |
chomp($revision); | |
# Show the user the essential equivalent to what we manually do | |
if ($DEBUG) { | |
print " >>Running: $GIT_CMD log @ARGV | \\\n" . | |
" $GIT_CMD name-rev --stdin " . | |
"--refs=refs/heads/$branch | \\\n" . | |
" less\n"; | |
return 0 if $DEBUG == 2; | |
} | |
# Setup name determination via output from git rev-list | |
my %names; | |
open(REV_LIST_INPUT, "$GIT_CMD rev-list --parents $branch -- | "); | |
$names{$revision} = [$branch, 0]; | |
# Loop over the output of git log, printing/modifying as we go | |
my $old_git_pager_in_use = $ENV{"GIT_PAGER_IN_USE"}; | |
if (-t STDOUT) { | |
# use colors | |
$ENV{"GIT_PAGER_IN_USE"} = "1"; | |
} | |
open(INPUT, "$GIT_CMD log @ARGV | "); | |
$ENV{"LESS"} = "FRSX" unless defined $ENV{"LESS"}; | |
my $less = ($USE_PAGER == 1) ? "less" : | |
($USE_PAGER == 0) ? "cat" : | |
`$GIT_CMD config core.pager` || "less"; | |
chomp($less); | |
my $pid = open(OUTPUT, "| $less"); | |
# Make sure that we don't leave the terminal in a weird state if the user | |
# hits Ctrl-C during eg log | |
local $SIG{INT} = | |
sub { kill 'SIGKILL', $pid; close(INPUT); close(OUTPUT); close(REV_LIST_INPUT); | |
exit(0); }; | |
#open(OUTPUT, ">&STDOUT"); | |
while (<INPUT>) { | |
# If it's a commit line, determine the name of the commit and print it too | |
# ANSI color escape sequences make this regex kind of ugly... | |
if (/^((?:\e\[.*?m)?commit ([0-9a-f]{40}))((?:\e\[m)?)$/) { | |
my $name = _get_revision_name($2, *REV_LIST_INPUT, \%names); | |
print OUTPUT "$1 ($name)$3\n" if $name; | |
print OUTPUT "$1$3\n" if !$name; | |
} else { | |
print OUTPUT; | |
} | |
} | |
my ($ret1, $ret2, $ret3); | |
close(INPUT); $ret1 = $? >> 8; | |
close(OUTPUT); $ret2 = $? >> 8; | |
$ENV{"GIT_PAGER_IN_USE"} = $old_git_pager_in_use; | |
# Make sure we close the pipe from rev-list too; We use "$? && $!" | |
# instead of "$?" because we don't care about the return value of the | |
# rev-list program -- which we prematurely close -- just whether the close | |
# succeeded. We can't just use "$!" because if --pretty="format:%s" is | |
# passed to eg log, then $! will be "Bad file descriptor" which translates | |
# to a nonzero exit status. | |
# (This is my best guess at what to do given the random failures from | |
# t1411-reflog-show.sh, and reading 'man perlfunc' under 'close'; it seems | |
# to work.) | |
close(REV_LIST_INPUT); $ret3 = ($? >> 8) && $!; | |
return $ret1 || $ret2 || $ret3; | |
} | |
########################################################################### | |
# merge # | |
########################################################################### | |
package merge; | |
@merge::ISA = qw(subcommand); | |
INIT { | |
$COMMAND{merge} = { | |
unmodified_behavior => 1, | |
section => 'projects', | |
about => 'Join two or more development histories (branches) together' | |
}; | |
} | |
sub new { | |
my $class = shift; | |
my $self = $class->SUPER::new(git_repo_needed => 1, @_); | |
bless($self, $class); | |
$self->{'help'} = " | |
Usage: | |
eg merge [-m MESSAGE] BRANCH... | |
Description: | |
Merges another branch (or more than one branch) into the current branch. | |
You may want to skip to the examples; the remainder of this description | |
section just has boring details about how merges work. | |
There are three different ways to handle merges depending on whether the | |
current branch or the specified merge branches have commits not found in | |
the other. These cases are: | |
1) The current branch contains all commits in the specified branch(es). | |
In this case, there is nothing to do. | |
2) Both the current branch and the specified merge branch(es) contain | |
commits not found in the other: | |
In this case, a new commit will be created which (a) includes | |
changes from both the current branch and the merge branch(es) and | |
(b) records the parents of the new commit as the last revision of | |
the current branch and the last revision(s) of the merge | |
branch(es). | |
3) The specified merge branch has all the commits found in the current | |
branch. | |
In this case, a new commit is not needed to merge the branches | |
together. Instead, the current branch simply changes the record | |
of its last revision to that of the specified merge branch. This | |
is known as a fast-forward update. | |
See 'eg help topic storage' for more information. | |
Examples: | |
Merge all changes from the stable branch that are not already in the | |
current branch, into the current branch. | |
\$ eg merge stable | |
Merge all changes from the refactor branch into the current branch (i.e. | |
same as the previous example but merging in a different branch) | |
\$ eg merge refactor | |
Options: | |
-m MESSAGE | |
Use MESSAGE as the commit message for the created merge commit, if | |
a merge commit is needed. | |
"; | |
return $self; | |
} | |
########################################################################### | |
# publish # | |
########################################################################### | |
package publish; | |
@publish::ISA = qw(subcommand); | |
INIT { | |
$COMMAND{publish} = { | |
extra => 1, | |
new_command => 1, | |
section => 'collaboration', | |
about => 'Publish a copy of the current repository on a remote machine' | |
}; | |
} | |
sub new { | |
my $class = shift; | |
my $self = $class->SUPER::new( | |
git_repo_needed => 1, | |
git_equivalent => '', | |
initial_commit_error_msg => "Error: No recorded commits to publish.", | |
@_); | |
bless($self, $class); | |
$self->{'help'} = " | |
Usage: | |
eg publish [-b|--bypass-modification-check] [-g|--group GROUP] | |
[REMOTE_ALIAS] SSH_URL | |
Description: | |
Publishes a copy of the current repository on a remote machine. Note | |
that local changes will be ignored; only committed changes will be | |
published. You must have ssh access to the remote machine and must have | |
both git and ssh installed on both local and remote machines. | |
After publishing the repository, it is accessible via the remote | |
REMOTE_ALIAS, thus allowing you to use REMOTE_ALIAS to push and pull | |
commands. If REMOTE_ALIAS is not specified, it defaults to 'origin'. | |
If the --group (or -g) option is specified, the given GROUP must be a | |
valid unix group on the remote machine, and the user must be a member of | |
that group. When this option is passed, eg publish will ensure that all | |
files are readable and writable by members of that group. | |
Note that the remote location is specified using a ssh url; see 'eg help | |
topic remote_urls' for a full list of valid possibilities, but the | |
general case is to use scp(1) syntax: [[USER@]MACHINE]:REMOTE_PATH. Note | |
that if any files or directories exist below the specified remote | |
directory, publish will abort. | |
Examples: | |
Publish a copy of the current repository on the machine myserver.com in | |
the directory /var/scratch/git-stuff/my-repo.git, and make it readable | |
and writable by the unix group 'gitters'. Then immediately make a clone | |
of the remote repository | |
\$ eg publish -g gitters myserver.com:/var/scratch/git-stuff/my-repo.git | |
\$ cd .. | |
\$ eg clone myserver.com:/var/scratch/git-stuff/my-repo.git | |
Publish a copy of the current repository on the machine www.gnome.org, in | |
the public_html/myproj subdirectory of the home directory of the remote | |
user fake, then immediately clone it again into a separate directory | |
named another-myproj. | |
\$ eg publish fake\@www.gnome.org:public_html/myproj | |
\$ cd .. | |
\$ eg clone http://www.gnome.org/~fake/myproj another-myproj | |
Options | |
--bypass-modification-check, -b | |
To prevent you from publishing an incomplete set of changes, publish | |
typically checks whether you have new unknown files or modified files | |
present and aborts if so. You can bypass these checks with this | |
option. | |
"; | |
$self->{'differences'} = ' | |
eg publish is unique to eg, designed to condense the multiple necessary | |
steps with git into one (or a few) commands. The steps that eg publish | |
performs are essentially: | |
if ( git config --get remote.REMOTE_ALIAS.url > /dev/null); then | |
echo "REMOTE_ALIAS already defined"; false; | |
fi && | |
ssh [USER@]MACHINE " | |
test -d REMOTE_PATH && echo "REMOTE_PATH already exists!" && exit 1; | |
if (! groups | grep "\bGROUP\b" > /dev/null); then | |
echo "Cannot change to group GROUP"; exit 1; | |
fi; | |
if (! type -p git>/dev/null);then echo "Cannot find git"; exit 1; fi && | |
newgrp GROUP; | |
mkdir -p REMOTE_PATH && | |
cd REMOTE_PATH && | |
git init [--shared] --bare && | |
touch git-daemon-export-ok && | |
(mv hooks/post-update.sample hooks/post-update || true) && | |
chmod u+x hooks/post-update" && | |
git remote add REMOTE_ALIAS [USER@]MACHINE:REMOTE_PATH && | |
git push | |
Note that the command involving git-daemon-export-ok is only needed if | |
you will be cloning/pulling from the repository via the git:// protocol | |
(in which case you are responsible for running git-daemon on the remote | |
machine), and the post-update hook related stuff is only necessary if you | |
are trying to clone/pull via the http:// protocol (in which case you are | |
responsible for running a webserver such as httpd on the remote machine); | |
neither of these steps are needed if you are cloning/pulling via ssh, but | |
they do not cause problems either. | |
MULTI-USER NOTE: If you want multiple people to be able to push to the | |
resulting repository, you will need to ensure that they all have ssh | |
access to the machine, that they are all part of the same unix group, and | |
that you use the --group option to ensure that the repository is set up | |
to be shared by the relevant group. | |
'; | |
return $self; | |
} | |
sub preprocess { | |
my $self = shift; | |
my $package_name = ref($self); | |
my $bypass_modification_check = 0; | |
my $group; | |
my $result = main::GetOptions( | |
"--help" => sub { $self->help() }, | |
"bypass-modification-check|b" => \$bypass_modification_check, | |
"group|g=s" => \$group, | |
); | |
die "Aborting: Need a URL to push to!\n" if @ARGV < 1; | |
die "Aborting: Too many args to eg publish: @ARGV\n" if @ARGV > 2; | |
my $extra_info = (@ARGV == 2) ? "" : ", please specify a REMOTE_ALIAS"; | |
$self->{remote} = (@ARGV == 2) ? shift @ARGV : "origin"; | |
$self->{repository} = shift @ARGV; | |
$self->{group} = $group; | |
die "Aborting: remote '$self->{remote}' already exists$extra_info!\n" | |
if RepoUtil::get_config("remote.$self->{remote}.url"); | |
if (!$bypass_modification_check) { | |
my $status = RepoUtil::commit_push_checks($package_name, | |
{unknown => 1, | |
changes => 1, | |
unmerged_changes => 1}); | |
} else { | |
# Record the set of unknown files we ignored with -b, so the -b flag | |
# isn't needed next time. | |
RepoUtil::record_ignored_unknowns(); | |
} | |
} | |
sub run { | |
my $self = shift; | |
my ($user, $machine, $port, $path) = | |
Util::split_ssh_repository($self->{repository}); | |
if (!defined $path) { | |
# It may be a local path rather than an ssh path... | |
if ($self->{repository} =~ m#^/[^:]*#) { | |
$path = $self->{repository}; | |
} else { | |
die "Aborting: Could not parse remote repository URL " . | |
"'$self->{repository}'.\n"; | |
} | |
} | |
my ($sg, $sge, $check_group, $shared) = ("", "", "", ""); | |
if (defined $self->{group}) { | |
$check_group = " | |
if (! groups | grep '\\b$self->{group}\\b' > /dev/null); then | |
echo 'Cannot change to group $self->{group}!'; exit 1; | |
fi;"; | |
$sg = "sg $self->{group} -c '"; | |
$sge = "'"; | |
$shared = "--shared "; | |
} | |
my $ret; | |
if (defined $machine) { | |
print "Setting up remote repository via ssh...\n"; | |
$ret = ExecUtil::execute(" | |
ssh $port -q $user$machine \" | |
test -d $path && echo '$path already exists!' && exit 1; $check_group | |
if (! which git>/dev/null);then echo 'Cannot find git'; exit 1; fi; | |
${sg}mkdir -p $path${sge} && | |
cd $path && | |
${sg}git init ${shared}--bare${sge} && | |
touch git-daemon-export-ok && | |
(mv hooks/post-update.sample hooks/post-update || true) && | |
chmod u+x hooks/post-update\"", | |
ignore_ret => 1); | |
} else { | |
print "Setting up not-so-remote repository...\n"; | |
$ret = ExecUtil::execute(" | |
test -d $path && echo '$path already exists!' && exit 1; $check_group | |
if (! which git>/dev/null);then echo 'Cannot find git'; exit 1; fi; | |
${sg}mkdir -p $path${sge} && | |
cd $path && | |
${sg}$GIT_CMD init ${shared}--bare${sge} && | |
touch git-daemon-export-ok && | |
(mv hooks/post-update.sample hooks/post-update || true) && | |
chmod u+x hooks/post-update", | |
ignore_ret => 1); | |
} | |
die "Remote repository setup failed!\n" if $ret != 0; | |
print "Creating new remote $self->{remote}...\n"; | |
#if ($self->{remote} ne "origin") { | |
# print "If $self->{remote} should be a default push/pull location, run:\n" . | |
# " eg track [LOCAL_BRANCH] $self->{remote}/REMOTE_BRANCH\n"; | |
#} | |
ExecUtil::execute("$GIT_CMD remote add $self->{remote} $self->{repository}"); | |
print "Pushing to new remote $self->{remote}...\n"; | |
$ret = ExecUtil::execute("$GIT_CMD push --mirror $self->{remote}"); | |
if ($ret) { | |
ExecUtil::execute("$GIT_CMD remote rm $self->{remote}"); | |
return $ret; | |
} | |
print "Done.\n"; | |
return 0; | |
} | |
########################################################################### | |
# pull # | |
########################################################################### | |
package pull; | |
@pull::ISA = qw(subcommand); | |
INIT { | |
$COMMAND{pull} = { | |
section => 'collaboration', | |
about => 'Get updates from another repository and merge them' | |
}; | |
} | |
sub new { | |
my $class = shift; | |
my $self = $class->SUPER::new(git_repo_needed => 1, @_); | |
bless($self, $class); | |
$self->{'help'} = " | |
Usage: | |
eg pull [--branch BRANCH] [--no-tags] [--all-tags] [--tag TAG] | |
[--no-commit] [--rebase] REPOSITORY | |
Description: | |
Pull changes from another repository and merge them into the local | |
repository. If there are no conflicts, the result will be committed. | |
See 'eg help topic remote-urls' for valid syntax for remote repositories. | |
If you frequently pull from the same repository, you may want to set up a | |
nickname for it (see 'eg help remote'), so that you can specify the | |
nickname instead of the full repository URL every time. If you want to | |
set a (different) default repository and branch to pull from, see 'eg | |
track'. | |
By default, tags in the remote repository associated with commits that | |
are pulled, will themselves be pulled. One can specify to pull | |
additional or fewer tags with the --all-tags, --no-tags, or --tag TAG | |
options. | |
If there is more than one branch (on either end): | |
If the local repository has more than one branch, the changes are | |
always merged into the active branch (use 'eg info' or 'eg branch' to | |
determine the active branch). | |
If you do not specify which remote branch to pull, and you have not | |
previously pulled a remote branch from the given repository, then eg | |
will abort and ask you to specify a remote branch (giving you a list to | |
choose from). | |
Note for users of named remote repositories and remote tracking branches: | |
If you set up named remote repositories (using 'eg remote'), you can | |
make 'eg pull' obtain changes from several branches at once. In such a | |
case, eg will take the changes and record them in special local | |
branches known as \"remote tracking branches\", a step which involves | |
no merging. Most of these branches will not be handled further after | |
this step. eg will then take changes from just the branch(es) | |
specified (with the --branch option, or with the | |
branch.CURRENTBRANCH.merge configuration variable, or by the last | |
branch(es) merged), and merge it/them into the active branch. | |
The advantage of pulling changes from branches that you do not | |
immediately merge with is that you can then later inspect, review, or | |
merge with such changes (using 'eg merge') even if not connected to the | |
network. Naming the remote repositories also allows you to use the | |
shorter name instead of the full location of the repository. (eg | |
remote also provides the ability to update from groups of remote | |
repositories simultaneously.) See 'eg help remote' and 'eg help topic | |
storage' for more information about named remote repositories and | |
remote tracking branches. | |
Examples: | |
Pull changes from myserver.com:git-stuff/my-repo.git | |
\$ eg pull myserver.com:git-stuff/my-repo.git | |
Pull changes from the stable branch of git://git.foo.org/whizbang into the | |
active local branch | |
\$ eg pull --branch stable git://git.foo.org/whizbang | |
Pull changes from the debug branch in the remote repository nicknamed | |
'carl' (see 'eg help remote' for more information about nicknames for | |
remote repositories) | |
\$ eg pull --branch debug carl | |
Pull changes from a remote repository that has multiple branches | |
Hmm, we don't know which branches the remote repository has. Just | |
try it. | |
\$ eg pull ssh://machine.fake.gov/~user/hack.git | |
That gave us an error telling us it didn't know which branch to pull | |
from, but it told us that there were 3 branches: 'master', 'stable', | |
and 'nasty-hack'. Let's get changes from the nasty-hack branch! | |
\$ eg pull --branch nasty-hack ssh://machine.fake.gov/~user/hack.git | |
Options | |
--branch BRANCH | |
Merge the changes from the remote branch BRANCH. May be used multiple | |
times to merge changes from multiple remote branches at once. | |
--no-tags | |
Do not download any tags from the remote repository | |
--all-tags | |
Download all tags from the remote repository. | |
--tag TAG | |
Download TAG from the remote repository | |
--no-commit | |
Perform the merge but do not commit even if the merge is clean. | |
--rebase | |
Instead of a merge, perform a rebase; in other words rewrite commit | |
history so that your recent local commits become commits on top of the | |
changes downloaded from the remote repository. | |
NOTE: This is a potentially dangerous operation if you have local | |
commits not found in the repository you are pulling from but which are | |
found in some other repository (e.g. your local commits have been | |
directly pulled from your copy by another developer, or to your copy | |
from another developer). In such a case, unless the other copy of | |
these commits are also rebased (or discarded), you will probably get | |
into trouble and need to thoroughly understand 'eg help rebase' before | |
using this option. | |
"; | |
$self->{'differences'} = " | |
eg pull and git pull are nearly identical. eg provides a slightly more | |
meaningful name for --tags (\"--all-tags\"), introduces a new option | |
named --branch, and tries to assist the user when no branch to | |
merge/rebase is specified on the command line or in the config. | |
The new --branch option (1) avoids the need to explain refspecs too early | |
to users, (2) makes command line examples more self-documenting. eg | |
still accepts refspecs at the end of the commandline the same as git | |
pull, however their explanation is deferred to 'eg help topic refspecs'. | |
When no branch to merge/rebase is specified, eg pull will provide a list | |
of known branches at the remote end. In the special case that the remote | |
has exactly one branch, eg will use that branch for merging/rebasing | |
rather than erroring out. | |
"; | |
return $self; | |
} | |
sub preprocess { | |
my $self = shift; | |
# | |
# Parse options | |
# | |
$self->{args} = []; | |
my $record_arg = | |
sub { my $prefix = ""; | |
$prefix = "no-" if defined $_[1] && $_[1] == 0; | |
push(@{$self->{args}}, "--$prefix$_[0]"); | |
}; | |
my $record_args = sub { $_[0] = "--$_[0]"; push(@{$self->{args}}, @_); }; | |
my ($no_tags, $all_tags) = (0, 0); | |
my @branches; | |
my @tags; | |
my $result = main::GetOptions( | |
"--help" => sub { $self->help() }, | |
"--branch=s" => sub { push(@branches, $_[1]) }, | |
"--tag=s" => sub { push(@tags, $_[1]) }, | |
"--all-tags" => \$all_tags, | |
"--no-tags" => \$no_tags, | |
"commit!" => sub { &$record_arg(@_) }, | |
"summary!" => sub { &$record_arg(@_) }, | |
"no-stat|n" => sub { &$record_arg(@_) }, | |
"squash!" => sub { &$record_arg(@_) }, | |
"ff!" => sub { &$record_arg(@_) }, | |
"strategy|s=s" => sub { &$record_args(@_) }, | |
"rebase!" => sub { &$record_arg(@_) }, | |
"quiet|q" => sub { &$record_arg(@_) }, | |
"verbose|v" => sub { &$record_arg(@_) }, | |
"append|a" => sub { &$record_arg(@_) }, | |
"upload-pack=s" => sub { &$record_args(@_) }, | |
"force|f" => sub { &$record_arg(@_) }, | |
"tags" => \$all_tags, | |
"keep|k" => sub { &$record_arg(@_) }, | |
"update-head-ok|u" => sub { &$record_arg(@_) }, | |
"--depth=i" => sub { &$record_args(@_) }, | |
); | |
die "Cannot specify both --all-tags and --no-tags!\n" | |
if $all_tags && $no_tags; | |
die "Cannot specify individual tags along with --all-tags or --no-tags!\n" | |
if @tags && ($all_tags || $no_tags); | |
my $repository = shift @ARGV; | |
my @git_refspecs = @ARGV; | |
# Record the tags or no-tags arguments | |
push(@{$self->{args}}, "--tags") if $all_tags; | |
push(@{$self->{args}}, "--no-tags") if $no_tags; | |
# | |
# Get the repository to pull from | |
# | |
my $repo_is_a_remote = 1; | |
my $repo_specified = defined($repository); | |
if ($repository) { | |
push(@{$self->{args}}, $repository); | |
$repo_is_a_remote = 0 if !RepoUtil::get_config("remote.$repository.url"); | |
} else { | |
$repository = RepoUtil::get_default_push_pull_repository(); | |
if (!$repository) { | |
# This line should never be reached | |
die "Don't know what to pull!" | |
} | |
push(@{$self->{args}}, $repository) if (!$repo_specified && @branches); | |
} | |
# | |
# Get the branch(es) to pull from | |
# | |
push(@branches, @git_refspecs); | |
# If we were given explicit branches or tags to pull, then we know what | |
# to pull. Also, for compatibility with git, if the repository specified | |
# is a url rather than a remotename, then we should pull from HEAD if | |
# no other refspecs are specified. | |
# | |
# In all other cases... | |
if ($repo_is_a_remote && !@branches && !@tags) { | |
my $dont_know_what_to_pull = 0; | |
# If we don't have a current branch, we can't tell what branch to merge | |
my $branch = RepoUtil::current_branch(); | |
if (!$branch) { | |
$dont_know_what_to_pull = 1; | |
goto PULL_CHECK; | |
} | |
# If there's no default remote, we must ignore branch.$branch.merge so | |
# we don't know what branch to merge | |
my ($merge_branch, $default_remote); | |
$default_remote = RepoUtil::get_config("branch.$branch.remote"); | |
if (!$default_remote) { | |
$dont_know_what_to_pull = 1; | |
goto PULL_CHECK; | |
} | |
# If the default remote doesn't match the specified repository, we must | |
# ignore branch.$branch.remote so we don't know what branch to merge | |
if ($repo_specified and $repository ne $default_remote) { | |
$dont_know_what_to_pull = 1; | |
goto PULL_CHECK; | |
} | |
# If branch.$branch.merge is not set we don't know what branch to merge | |
$merge_branch = RepoUtil::get_config("branch.$branch.merge"); | |
if (!$merge_branch) { | |
$dont_know_what_to_pull = 1; | |
goto PULL_CHECK; | |
} | |
PULL_CHECK: | |
# Even if we don't know what to pull, if the remote repository has exactly | |
# one branch, then we can just pull from that. | |
if ($dont_know_what_to_pull) { | |
my $location = $repository || $default_remote; | |
my $only_branch = RepoUtil::get_only_branch($location, "pull"); | |
push(@{$self->{args}}, $location) if !$repo_specified; | |
push(@branches, $only_branch); | |
} | |
} | |
foreach my $branch (@branches) { | |
push(@{$self->{args}}, $branch); | |
} | |
foreach my $tag (@tags) { | |
push(@{$self->{args}}, ("tag", $tag)); | |
} | |
} | |
sub run { | |
my $self = shift; | |
my @args = Util::quote_args(@{$self->{args}}); | |
return ExecUtil::execute("$GIT_CMD pull @args", ignore_ret => 1); | |
} | |
########################################################################### | |
# push # | |
########################################################################### | |
package push; | |
@push::ISA = qw(subcommand); | |
INIT { | |
$COMMAND{push} = { | |
section => 'collaboration', | |
about => 'Push local commits to a published repository' | |
}; | |
} | |
sub new { | |
my $class = shift; | |
my $self = $class->SUPER::new( | |
git_repo_needed => 1, | |
initial_commit_error_msg => "Error: No recorded commits to push.", | |
@_); | |
bless($self, $class); | |
$self->{'help'} = " | |
Usage: | |
eg push [--bypass-modification-check] [--branch BRANCH] [--tag TAG] | |
[--all-branches] [--all-tags] [--mirror] REPOSITORY | |
Description: | |
Push committed changes in the current repository to a published remote | |
repository. Note that this command cannot be used to create a new remote | |
repository; use 'eg publish' (which both creates a remote repository and | |
pushes to it) if you need to do that. | |
The push can fail if the remote repository has commits not | |
in the current repository; this can be fixed by pulling and merging | |
changes from the remote repository (use eg pull for this) and then | |
repeating the push. Note that for getting changes directly to a fellow | |
developer's clone, you should have them use 'eg pull' rather than trying | |
to use 'eg push' on your end. | |
Branches and tags are typically considered private; thus only the current | |
branch will be involved by default (no tags will be sent). The | |
--all-branches, --matching-branches, --all-tags, and --mirror options | |
exist to extend the list of changes included. The --branch and --tag | |
options can be used to specifically send different changes. | |
See 'eg help topic remote-urls' for valid syntax for remote repositories. | |
If you frequently push to the same repository, you may want to set up a | |
nickname for it (see 'eg help remote'), so that you can specify the | |
nickname instead of the full repository URL every time. Also, if you want | |
to change the default repository and branch to push to, see 'eg track'. | |
Examples: | |
Push commits in the current branch | |
\$ eg push myserver.com:git-stuff/my-repo.git | |
Push commits in all branches that already exist both locally and remotely | |
\$ eg push --matching-branches ssh://web.site/path/to/project.git | |
Push commits in all branches, including branches that do no already exist | |
remotely, and all tags, to the remote nicknamed 'alice' | |
\$ eg push --all-branches --all-tags alice | |
Push all local branches and tags and delete anything on the remote end | |
that is not in the current repository | |
\$ eg push --mirror ssh://jim\@host.xz:22/~jim/project/published | |
Create a two new tags locally, then push both | |
\$ eg tag MY_PROJECT_1_0 | |
\$ eg tag USELESS_ALIAS_FOR_1_0 | |
\$ eg push --tag MY_PROJECT_1_0 --tag USELESS_ALIAS_FOR_1_0 | |
Push the changes in just the stable branch | |
\$ eg push --branch stable | |
Options | |
--bypass-modification-check, -b | |
To prevent you from pushing an incomplete set of changes, push | |
typically checks whether you have new unknown files or modified files | |
present and aborts if so. You can bypass these checks with this | |
option. | |
--branch BRANCH | |
Push commits in the specified branch. May be reused multiple times to | |
push commits in multiple branches. | |
As an advanced option, one can use the syntax LOCAL:REMOTE for the | |
branch. For example, \"--branch my_bugfix:stable\" would mean to use | |
the my_bugfix branch of the current repository to update the stable | |
branch of the remote repository. | |
--tag TAG | |
Push the specified tag to the remote repository. | |
--all-branches | |
Push commits from all branches, including branches that do not yet exist | |
in the remote repository | |
--matching-branches | |
Push commits from all branches that exist locally and remotely. Note that | |
this option is ignored if specific branches or tags are specified, or the | |
--all-branches or --all-tags options. | |
--all-tags | |
Push all tags to the remote repository. | |
--mirror | |
Make the remote repository a mirror of the local one. This turns on | |
both --all-branches and --all-tags, but it also means that tags and | |
branches that do not exist in the local repository will be deleted from | |
the remote repository. | |
"; | |
$self->{'differences'} = " | |
eg push is largely the same as git push, despite attempts to simplify in | |
a number of areas: | |
(1) push.default=tracking is the default if push.default is unset (git | |
uses push.default=matching if push.default is unset). This seems | |
to match the intuition of most former cvs/svn users, though it is | |
my one dangerous default change for existing git users. Tough | |
call, since the 'safe' defaults for each group are unsafe and/or | |
confusing for the other. A new --matching-branches flag is added | |
to get the old behavior (the plain ':' refspec from git does the | |
same, but --matching-branches is more self-documenting and also | |
predates the ':' refspec). | |
(2) eg prevents pushing into a bare repository as a push-side check | |
rather than a receive-side check (when it can determine that the | |
remote repository is bare -- i.e. if the repository url is for a | |
locally mounted filesystem or uses ssh). eg also allows the check | |
to be overridden on the push-side (by specifying a refspec | |
containing a ':' character). This means it can work for users of | |
existing repositories (created with git < 1.7), and it provides a | |
solution that both avoids working copy inconsistency for new users | |
while allowing more advanced users to do what they need on the same | |
repository, and without forcing users to twiddle with the | |
configuration of the remote repository. However, this method | |
doesn't work for repositories accessed via git://, and only works | |
for ssh-accessed repositories if users have ssh setup to not need a | |
password (kerberos, ssh-keys, etc.). | |
(3) eg performs checks for uncommitted changes and newly created | |
unknown files and warns/aborts if such exist when the user pushes | |
(most former cvs/svn users are not yet familiar with the fact that | |
only committed stuff gets pushed/pulled). As with eg commit, such | |
checks can be overridden with the -b flag. | |
(4) eg provides extra --tag and --branch flags to make command lines | |
more self-documenting and to avoid excessively early introduction | |
of refspecs (a very confusing topic for new users). However, | |
refspecs still work with eg push, and users can learn about them by | |
running 'eg help topic refspecs'. | |
"; | |
return $self; | |
} | |
sub _get_push_repository ($) { | |
my ($repository) = @_; | |
if (defined $repository) { | |
return RepoUtil::get_config("remote.$repository.pushurl") || | |
RepoUtil::get_config("remote.$repository.url") || | |
$repository; | |
} else { | |
return RepoUtil::get_config("remote.origin.url") | |
} | |
} | |
# _check_if_bare: Return whether the given repository is bare. Returns | |
# undef the repository doesn't specify a valid repository or the repository | |
# is not of a type where we can determine bare-ness. Otherwise returns | |
# either the string "true" or "false". | |
sub _check_if_bare ($) { | |
my $repository = shift; | |
# Don't know how to check rsync, http, https, or git repositories to see | |
# if they are bare. | |
return undef if $repository =~ m#^(rsync|http|https|git)://#; | |
# | |
# Check local directories | |
# | |
if ($repository =~ m#^file://(.*)#) { | |
$repository = $1; | |
} | |
if (-d $repository) { | |
my $orig_dir = main::getcwd(); | |
chdir($repository); | |
my ($ret, $output) = | |
ExecUtil::execute_captured("$GIT_CMD rev-parse --is-bare-repository", | |
ignore_ret => 1); | |
chdir($orig_dir); | |
return undef if $ret != 0; | |
chomp($output); | |
return $output; | |
} | |
# | |
# Check ssh systems | |
# | |
my ($user, $machine, $port, $path) = Util::split_ssh_repository($repository); | |
return undef if !defined $machine || !defined $path; | |
my ($ret, $output) = | |
ExecUtil::execute_captured( | |
"ssh $port -q -o BatchMode=yes $user$machine 'cd $path && $GIT_CMD rev-parse --is-bare-repository'", | |
ignore_ret => 1); | |
return undef if $ret != 0; | |
chomp($output); | |
my @lines = split('\n', $output); | |
my $result = $lines[-1]; | |
# If ssh or git itself failed, $ret could still be 0 but $result could be | |
# something other than "true" or "false" | |
return undef if (! grep {$_ eq $result} ["true", "false"]); | |
return $result; | |
} | |
sub preprocess { | |
my $self = shift; | |
my $package_name = ref($self); | |
# | |
# Parse options | |
# | |
$self->{args} = []; | |
my $record_arg = sub { push(@{$self->{args}}, "--$_[0]"); }; | |
my $record_args = sub { $_[0] = "--$_[0]"; push(@{$self->{args}}, @_); }; | |
my ($all_branches, $matching_branches, $all_tags, $mirror) = (0, 0, 0, 0); | |
my ($thin, $repo) = (0, 0); | |
my @branches; | |
my @tags; | |
my $bypass_modification_check = 0; | |
my $result = main::GetOptions( | |
"--help" => sub { $self->help() }, | |
"--branch=s" => sub { push(@branches, $_[1]) }, | |
"--tag=s" => sub { push(@tags, $_[1]) }, | |
"--all-branches|all" => \$all_branches, | |
"--matching-branches" => \$matching_branches, | |
"--all-tags" => \$all_tags, | |
"tags" => \$all_tags, | |
"--mirror" => \$mirror, | |
"--dry-run" => sub { &$record_arg(@_) }, | |
"--porcelain" => sub { &$record_arg(@_) }, | |
"--progress" => sub { &$record_arg(@_) }, | |
"--receive-pack=s" => sub { &$record_args(@_) }, | |
"force|f" => sub { &$record_arg(@_) }, | |
"repo=s" => \$repo, | |
"thin" => sub { &$record_arg(@_) }, | |
"no-thin" => sub { &$record_arg(@_) }, | |
"verbose|v" => sub { &$record_arg(@_) }, | |
"set-upstream|u" => sub { &$record_arg(@_) }, | |
"bypass-modification-check|b" => \$bypass_modification_check, | |
); | |
die "Cannot specify individual branches and request all branches too!\n" | |
if @branches && ($all_branches || $mirror); | |
die "Cannot specify individual tags and request all tags too!\n" | |
if @tags && ($all_tags || $mirror); | |
my $repository = shift @ARGV; | |
my @git_refspecs = @ARGV; | |
if (!$bypass_modification_check) { | |
my $status = RepoUtil::commit_push_checks($package_name, | |
{unknown => 1, | |
changes => 1, | |
unmerged_changes => 1}); | |
} else { | |
# Record the set of unknown files we ignored with -b, so the -b flag | |
# isn't needed next time. | |
RepoUtil::record_ignored_unknowns(); | |
} | |
push(@{$self->{args}}, "--all") if $all_branches; | |
push(@{$self->{args}}, "--tags") if $all_tags; | |
push(@{$self->{args}}, "--mirror") if $mirror; | |
my $default_specified = 0; | |
$default_specified = 1 if $all_branches; | |
$default_specified = 1 if $all_tags; | |
$default_specified = 1 if $mirror; | |
# | |
# Get the repository to push to | |
# | |
if (defined $repository && $repository =~ m#^-#) { | |
die "Invalid repository to push to: $repository\n"; | |
} | |
my $remote; | |
if ($repository) { | |
push(@{$self->{args}}, $repository); | |
} elsif (!$repository && (@branches || @tags || !$default_specified)) { | |
$repository = RepoUtil::get_default_push_pull_repository(); | |
push(@{$self->{args}}, $repository); | |
$remote = $repository; | |
} else { | |
# Just drop through to the git push defaults. | |
} | |
# | |
# Prevent pushing to a non-bare repository (on local filesystem or over | |
# ssh; I don't know how to detect other cases)...unless user explicitly | |
# specifies both source and destination references explicitly | |
# | |
my $remote_chk = $remote || $repository; | |
$repository = _get_push_repository($repository); | |
my $push_to_non_bare_repo; | |
if ($repository) { | |
# If the user uses a refspec including a colon character, assume | |
# they know what they are doing and skip the non-bare check | |
if (! grep {$_ =~ /:/} @git_refspecs) { | |
# Check if we have already determined this repository to be bare | |
my $is_bare; | |
$is_bare = RepoUtil::get_config("remote.$remote.bare") if $remote; | |
if (defined $is_bare) { | |
$push_to_non_bare_repo = ($is_bare eq "false"); | |
} else { | |
$is_bare = _check_if_bare($repository); | |
if (defined $is_bare && defined $remote) { | |
RepoUtil::set_config("remote.$remote.bare", $is_bare); | |
} | |
$push_to_non_bare_repo = (defined $is_bare && $is_bare eq "false"); | |
} | |
} | |
} | |
# Throw an error if the user is trying to push to a bare repository | |
# (and not using a refspec with a colon character) | |
if ($push_to_non_bare_repo) { | |
print STDERR <<EOF; | |
Aborting: You are trying to push to a repository with an associated working | |
copy, which will leave its working copy out of sync with its repository. | |
Rather than pushing changes to that repository, you should go to where that | |
repository is located and pull changes into it (using eg pull). If you | |
know what you are doing and know how to deal with the consequences, you can | |
override this check by explicitly specifying source and destination | |
references, e.g. | |
eg push REMOTE BRANCH:REMOTE_BRANCH | |
Please refer to | |
eg help topic refspecs | |
to learn what this syntax means and what the consequences of overriding this | |
check are. | |
EOF | |
exit 1; | |
} | |
# | |
# Get the default branch to push to, if needed | |
# | |
push(@{$self->{args}}, ":") if $matching_branches; | |
$default_specified = 1 if $matching_branches; | |
if (!@branches && !@tags && !@git_refspecs && !$default_specified) { | |
# User hasn't specified what to push; default choices: | |
# 1 - remote.$remote.(push|mirror) options | |
my $default_known = 0; | |
if (defined(RepoUtil::get_config("remote.$remote_chk.push")) || | |
defined(RepoUtil::get_config("remote.$remote_chk.mirror"))) { | |
$default_known = 1; | |
} | |
# 2 - push.default option | |
if (defined(RepoUtil::get_config("push.default"))) { | |
$default_known = 1; | |
} | |
# 3 - branch.$branch.merge option | |
if (!$default_known) { | |
my $branch = RepoUtil::current_branch(); | |
my $push_branch = RepoUtil::get_config("branch.$branch.merge"); | |
if (defined $push_branch) { | |
$push_branch =~ s#refs/heads/##; | |
push(@{$self->{args}}, "$branch:$push_branch"); | |
$default_known = 1; | |
} | |
} | |
# 4 - the only branch that exists at the remote end | |
if (!$default_known && defined $repository) { | |
my $only_branch = RepoUtil::get_only_branch($repository, "push"); | |
push(@{$self->{args}}, $only_branch); | |
} | |
} | |
# | |
# Get the branch(es) to push | |
# | |
push(@branches, @git_refspecs); | |
push(@{$self->{args}}, @branches); | |
foreach my $tag (@tags) { | |
push(@{$self->{args}}, ("tag", $tag)); | |
} | |
} | |
sub run { | |
my $self = shift; | |
my @args = Util::quote_args(@{$self->{args}}); | |
return ExecUtil::execute("$GIT_CMD push @args", ignore_ret => 1); | |
} | |
########################################################################### | |
# rebase # | |
########################################################################### | |
package rebase; | |
@rebase::ISA = qw(subcommand); | |
INIT { | |
$COMMAND{rebase} = { | |
extra => 1, | |
section => 'timesavers', | |
about => "Port local commits, making them be based on a different\n" . | |
" repository version" | |
}; | |
} | |
sub new { | |
my $class = shift; | |
my $self = $class->SUPER::new( | |
git_repo_needed => 1, | |
initial_commit_error_msg => "Error: No recorded commits to rewrite.", | |
@_); | |
bless($self, $class); | |
# | |
# Note: Parts of help were taken from the git-rebase manpage, which | |
# was also available under GPLv2. | |
# | |
$self->{'help'} = " | |
Usage: | |
eg rebase [-i | --interactive] [ --since SINCE ] [ --onto ONTO ] | |
[ --against AGAINST ] [BRANCH_TO_REBASE] | |
eg rebase [ --continue | --skip | --abort ] | |
Description: | |
Rewrites commits on a branch, making them be based on a different | |
repository version. Technically, the old commits are not overwritten or | |
deleted (only new ones are written), meaning that other branches sharing | |
the same commits will be unaffected and users can undo a rebase (until | |
the unused commits are cleaned up after a few weeks). | |
WARNING: | |
Rebasing commits in a branch is an advanced operation which changes | |
history in a way that will cause problems for anyone who already has a | |
copy of the branch in their repository when they try to pull updates | |
from you. This may cause them to experience many conflicts in their | |
merges and require them to resolve those conflicts manually, or rewrite | |
their own history, or even toss out their changes and simply accept | |
your version. (The last of those options is common enough that there | |
is a special method of pulling and pushing changes in such cases; see | |
'eg help topic refspecs' for more details.) | |
Non-interactive rebase (running without the --interactive or -i flags): | |
Specifying which commits to rewrite and what to rewrite them relative | |
to involves specifying up to three branches or revisions: SINCE, ONTO, | |
and BRANCH_TO_REBASE. eg will take all commits in the BRANCH_TO_REBASE | |
branch that are not in the SINCE branch, and record them as commits on | |
top of the tip of the ONTO branch. The ONTO and SINCE branches are not | |
changed by this operation. The BRANCH_TO_REBASE branch is changed to | |
record the tip of the newly written branch. | |
See also the \"If a conflict occurs\" section below. | |
Interactive rebase (running with the --interactive or -i flag): | |
Interactive rebasing allows you a chance to edit the commits which are | |
rebased, including | |
* reordering commits | |
* removing commits | |
* combining multiple commits into one commit | |
* amending commits to include different changes or log messages | |
* splitting one commit into multiple commits | |
When running interactively, eg rebase will begin by making a list of | |
the commits which are about to be rebased and allow you to change the | |
the list before rebasing. The list will include one commit per line, | |
allowing you to | |
* reorder commits by reordering lines | |
* removing commits by removing lines | |
* combining multiple commits into one, by changing 'pick' to 'squash' | |
at the beginning of each line of the commits you want combined | |
*except* the first | |
* amend a commit by changing the 'pick' at the beginning of the line | |
of the relevant commit to 'edit'. This will make eg rebase stop | |
after applying that commit, allowing you to make changes and run | |
'eg commit --amend' followed by 'eg rebase --continue'. | |
* split one commit into multiple commits by changing 'pick' at the | |
beginning of the line of the relevant commit to 'edit'. This will | |
make eg rebase stop *after* applying that commit, allowing you to | |
manually undo that commit while keeping the changes in the working | |
copy (with 'eg reset HEAD~1') and then make multiple commits (with | |
'eg commit') before running 'eg rebase --continue'. Note that eg | |
stash may come in handy for testing the split commits. | |
If a conflict occurs: | |
Rebase will stop at the first problematic commit and leave conflict | |
markers (<<<<<<) in the tree. You can use eg status and eg diff to | |
find the problematic files and locations. Once you edit the files to | |
fix the conflicts, you can run | |
eg resolved FILE | |
to mark the conflicts in FILE as resolved. Once you have resolved all | |
conflicts, you can run | |
eg rebase --continue | |
If you simply want to skip the problematic patch (and end up with one | |
less commit), you can instead run | |
eg rebase --skip | |
Alternatively, to abort the rebase and return to your previous state, | |
you can run | |
eg rebase --abort | |
Examples: | |
Take a branch named topic that was split off of the master branch, and | |
update it to be based on the new tip of master. | |
\$ eg rebase --since master --onto master topic | |
Pictorally, this changes: | |
A---B---C topic | |
/ | |
D---E---F---G master | |
into | |
A'--B'--C' topic | |
/ | |
D---E---F---G master | |
Same as the the above example, with less typing | |
\$ eg rebase --against master topic | |
Same as the last two examples, assuming topic is the current branch | |
\$ eg rebase --against master | |
Take a branch named topic that is based off of a branch named next, which | |
is in turn based off master, and rewrite topic so that it appears to be | |
based off the most recent version of master. | |
\$ eg rebase --since next --onto master topic | |
Pictorally, this changes | |
o---o---o---o---o master | |
\\ | |
o---o---o---o---o next | |
\\ | |
o---o---o topic | |
into | |
o---o---o---o---o master | |
| \\ | |
| o'--o'--o' topic | |
\\ | |
o---o---o---o---o next | |
Take just the last two commits of the current branch, and rewrite them | |
to be relative to the commit just before the most recent on the master | |
branch. | |
\$ eg rebase --since current~2 --onto master~1 current | |
Pictorally, this changes: | |
A---B---C---D---E current | |
/ | |
F---G---H---I---J---K master | |
into | |
D'---E' current | |
/ | |
F---G---H---I---J---K master | |
Reorder the last two commits on the current branch | |
\$ eg rebase --interactive --since HEAD~2 | |
(Then edit the file you are presented with and change the order of the | |
two lines beginning with 'pick') | |
Pictorally, this changes: | |
A---B---C---D---E---F master | |
into | |
A---B---C---D---F'---E' master | |
Options: | |
--since SINCE | |
Upstream branch to compare against; only commits not found in this | |
branch will be rebased. Note that if --onto is not specified, the | |
value of SINCE will be used for that as well. | |
The value of SINCE is not restricted to existing branch names; any | |
valid revision can be used (due to the fact that all revisions know | |
their parents and a revision plus its ancestors can define a branch). | |
--onto ONTO | |
Starting point at which to create the new commits. If the --onto | |
option is not specified, the starting point is whatever is provided by | |
the --since option. Any valid revision can be used for the value of | |
ONTO. | |
--against AGAINST | |
An alias for --since AGAINST, provided to make command lines clearer | |
when the --onto flag is not also used. (Typically, --against is used | |
if --onto is not, and --since is used if --onto is, but --against and | |
--since can be used interchangably.) | |
--interactive, -i | |
Make a list of the revisions which are about to be rebased and let the | |
user edit that list before rebasing. Can be used to split, combine, | |
remove, insert, reorder, or edit commits. | |
--continue | |
Restart the rebasing process after resovling a conflict | |
--skip | |
Restart the rebasing process by skipping the current patch (resulting | |
in a rewritten history with one less commit). | |
--abort | |
Abort the stopped rebase operation and restore the original branch | |
"; | |
$self->{'differences'} = " | |
The only differences between eg rebase and git rebase are cosmetic; | |
further, eg rebase accepts all options and flags that git rebase accepts. | |
eg adds the identically behaved flags --since and --against in | |
preference to using the position of the branch/revision name on the | |
command line. Note that | |
git rebase master | |
is somewhat confusing in that it isn't rebasing master but the current | |
branch. To make this clearer, eg allows (and encourages) the form | |
eg rebase --against master | |
The reason that both --against and --since flags were added (with | |
identical behavior), is that the former makes for clearer command lines | |
when the --onto flag is not also used. | |
"; | |
return $self; | |
} | |
sub preprocess { | |
my $self = shift; | |
# | |
# Parse options | |
# | |
$self->{args} = []; | |
my $record_arg = sub { push(@{$self->{args}}, "--$_[0]"); }; | |
my $record_args = sub { $_[0] = "--$_[0]"; push(@{$self->{args}}, @_); }; | |
my $since; | |
my $result = main::GetOptions( | |
"--help" => sub { $self->help() }, | |
"interactive|i" => sub { &$record_arg(@_) }, | |
"verbose|v" => sub { &$record_arg(@_) }, | |
"merge|m" => sub { &$record_arg(@_) }, | |
"C=i" => sub { &$record_args(@_) }, | |
"whitespace=s" => sub { push(@{$self->{args}},"--whitespace=$_[1]") }, | |
"preserve-merges|p" => sub { &$record_arg(@_) }, | |
"onto=s" => sub { &$record_args(@_) }, | |
"against=s" => sub { $since=$_[1] }, | |
"since=s" => sub { $since=$_[1] }, | |
"continue" => sub { &$record_arg(@_) }, | |
"skip" => sub { &$record_arg(@_) }, | |
"abort" => sub { &$record_arg(@_) }, | |
); | |
die "Too many branches/revisions specified\n" | |
if @ARGV > 1 && defined $since; | |
push(@{$self->{args}}, $since) if defined $since; | |
push(@{$self->{args}}, @ARGV); | |
} | |
sub run { | |
my $self = shift; | |
my @args = Util::quote_args(@{$self->{args}}); | |
return ExecUtil::execute("$GIT_CMD rebase @args", ignore_ret => 1); | |
} | |
########################################################################### | |
# remote # | |
########################################################################### | |
package remote; | |
@remote::ISA = qw(subcommand); | |
INIT { | |
$COMMAND{remote} = { | |
unmodified_behavior => 1, | |
extra => 1, | |
section => 'collaboration', | |
about => 'Manage named remote repositories', | |
}; | |
} | |
sub new { | |
my $class = shift; | |
my $self = $class->SUPER::new(git_repo_needed => 1, @_); | |
bless($self, $class); | |
$self->{'help'} = " | |
Usage: | |
eg remote | |
eg remote add REMOTENAME URL | |
eg remote rm REMOTENAME | |
eg remote update GROUPNAME | |
Description: | |
eg remote is a convenience utility to make it easy to track changes from | |
multiple remote repositories. It is used to | |
1) Set up | |
REMOTENAME -> URL | |
aliases that can be used in the place of full urls to simplify | |
commands such as push or pull | |
2) Pulling updates from multiple branches of a remote repository at | |
once and storing them in remote tracking branches (which differ from | |
normal branches only in that they have a prefix of REMOTENAME/ in | |
their name). | |
3) Pulling updates from multiple branches of multiple remote | |
repositories at once, storing them all in remote tracking branches. | |
Examples: | |
The examples section is split into three categories: | |
1) Managing which remotes exist: | |
2) Using one or more existing remotes | |
3) Using remote tracking branches created through usage of remotes | |
Category 1: Managing which remotes exist: | |
List which removes exist | |
\$ eg remote | |
or, list remotes and their urls (among other things) | |
\$ eg info | |
Add a new remote for the url ssh://some.machine.org//path/to/repo.git, | |
giving it the name jim | |
\$ eg remote add jim ssh://some.machine.org//path/to/repo.git | |
Add a new remote for the url git://composit.org//location/eyecandy.git, | |
giving it the name bling | |
\$ eg remote add bling git://composit.org//location/eyecandy.git | |
Delete the remote named bob, and remove all related remote tracking | |
branches (i.e. those branches whose names begin with \"bob/\"), as well | |
as any associated configuration settings | |
\$ eg remote rm bob | |
Category 2: Using one or more existing remotes | |
Pull updates for all branches of the remote jill, storing each in a | |
remote tracking branch of the local repository named jill/BRANCH. | |
\$ eg fetch jill | |
Pull changes from the magic branch of the remote merlin and merge it | |
into the current branch (i.e. standard pull behavior) AND also update | |
all remote tracking branches associated with the remote (i.e. act as if | |
'eg fetch merlin' was also run) | |
\$ eg pull --branch magic merlin | |
Grab updates from all remotes, i.e. run 'eg fetch REMOTE' for each | |
remote. | |
\$ eg remote update | |
(Technically, some remotes could be manually configured to be excluded | |
from this update.) | |
Grab updates from all remotes in the group named friends (created by | |
use of 'eg config remotes.friends \"REMOTE1 REMOTE2...\"'), i.e. run | |
'eg fetch REMOTE' for each remote in the friends group | |
\$ eg remote update friends | |
Category 3: Using remote tracking branches created through usage of remotes | |
List all remote tracking branches | |
\$ eg branch -r | |
Merge the remote tracking branch jill/stable into the current branch | |
\$ eg merge jill/stable | |
Get a history of the changes on the bling/explode branch | |
\$ eg log bling/explode | |
Create a new branch named my-testing based off of the remote tracking | |
branch jenny/testing | |
\$ eg branch my-testing jenny/testing | |
"; | |
return $self; | |
} | |
########################################################################### | |
# reset # | |
########################################################################### | |
package reset; | |
@reset::ISA = qw(subcommand); | |
INIT { | |
$COMMAND{reset} = { | |
extra => 1, | |
section => 'modification', | |
about => 'Forget local commits and (optionally) undo their changes' | |
}; | |
} | |
sub new { | |
my $class = shift; | |
my $self = $class->SUPER::new(git_repo_needed => 1, @_); | |
bless($self, $class); | |
$self->{'help'} = " | |
Usage: | |
eg reset [--working-copy | --no-unstaging] [REVISION] | |
Description: | |
Forgets local commits for the active branch and (optionally) undoes their | |
changes in the working copy. If you have staged changes (changes you | |
explictly marked as ready for commit) this function also unstages them by | |
default. See 'eg help topic staging' to learn about the staging area. | |
From a computer science point of view, eg reset moves the current branch | |
tip to point at an older commit, and also optionally changes the working | |
copy and staging area to match the version of the repository recorded in | |
the older commit. | |
Note that this function should be used with caution; it is often used to | |
discard unwanted data or to modify recent local \"history\" of commits. | |
You want to be careful to not also discard wanted data, and modifying | |
history is a bad idea if someone has already obtained a copy of that | |
local history from you (rewriting history makes merging and updating | |
problematic). | |
Examples: | |
Throw away all changes since the last commit | |
\$ eg reset --working-copy HEAD | |
Note that HEAD always refers to the current branch, and the current | |
branch always refers to its last commit. | |
Throw away the last three commits and all current changes (this is a bad | |
idea if someone has gotten a copy of these commits from you; this should | |
only be done for truly local changes that you no longer want). | |
\$ eg reset --working-copy HEAD~3 | |
Unrecord the last two commits, but keep the changes corresponding to these | |
commits in the working copy. (This can be used to fix a set of \"broken\" | |
commits.) | |
\$ eg reset HEAD~2 | |
While working on the \"stable\" branch, you decide that the last 5 commits | |
should have been part of a separate branch. Here's how you retroactively | |
make it so: | |
Verify that your working copy is clean...then | |
\$ eg branch difficult_bugfix | |
\$ eg reset --working-copy HEAD~5 | |
\$ eg switch difficult_bugfix | |
The first step creates a new branch that initially could be considered an | |
alias for the stable branch, but does not switch to it. The second step | |
moves the stable branch tip back 5 commits and modifies the working copy | |
to match. The last step switches to the difficult_bugfix branch, which | |
updates the working copy with the contents of that branch. Thus, in the | |
end, the working copy will have the same contents as before you executed | |
these three steps (unless you had local changes when you started, in | |
which case those local changes will be gone). | |
Stage files (mark changes in them as good and ready for commit but | |
without yet committing them), then change your mind and unstage all | |
files. | |
\$ eg stage foo.c bla.h | |
\$ eg reset HEAD | |
Note that using HEAD as the commit means to forget all commits since HEAD | |
(always an empty set) and undo any staged changes since that commit. | |
Options: | |
--working-copy | |
Also make the working tree match the version of the repository recorded | |
in the specified commit. If this option is not present, the working | |
copy will not be modified. | |
--no-unstaging | |
Do not modify the staging area; only change the current branch tip to | |
point to the older commit. | |
REVISION | |
A reference to a recorded version of the repository, defaulting to HEAD | |
(meaning the most recent commit on the current branch). See 'eg help | |
topic revisions' for more details. | |
"; | |
$self->{'differences'} = ' | |
The only differences between eg reset and git reset are cosmetic; | |
further, eg reset accepts all options and flags that git reset accepts. | |
git reset uses option names of --soft, --mixed, and --hard. While eg | |
reset will accept these option names for compatibility, it provides | |
alternative names that are more meaningful: | |
--working-copy <=> --hard | |
--no-unstaging <=> --soft | |
There is no alternate name for --mixed, since it is the default and thus | |
does not need to appear on the command line at all. | |
The modified revert command of eg is encouraged for reverting specific | |
files, though eg reset has the same file-specific reverting that git | |
reset does. | |
'; | |
return $self; | |
} | |
sub preprocess { | |
my $self = shift; | |
# | |
# Parse options | |
# | |
my ($hard, $soft) = (0, 0); | |
return if (scalar(@ARGV) > 0 && $ARGV[0] eq "--"); | |
my $result = main::GetOptions( | |
"--help" => sub { $self->help() }, | |
"--working-copy" => \$hard, | |
"--no-unstaging" => \$soft, | |
); | |
die "Cannot specify both --working-copy and --no-unstaging!\n" | |
if $hard && $soft; | |
unshift(@ARGV, "--hard") if $hard; | |
unshift(@ARGV, "--soft") if $soft; | |
} | |
########################################################################### | |
# resolved # | |
########################################################################### | |
package resolved; | |
@resolved::ISA = qw(subcommand); | |
INIT { | |
$COMMAND{resolved} = { | |
new_command => 1, | |
extra => 1, | |
section => 'compatibility', | |
about => 'Declare conflicts resolved and mark file as ready for commit' | |
}; | |
} | |
sub new { | |
my $class = shift; | |
my $self = $class->SUPER::new(git_repo_needed => 1, | |
git_equivalent => 'add', | |
@_); | |
bless($self, $class); | |
$self->{'help'} = " | |
Usage: | |
eg resolved PATH... | |
Description: | |
Declare conflicts resolved for the specified paths, and mark contents of | |
those files as ready for commit. | |
Examples | |
After fixing any update or merge conflicts in foo.c, declare the fixing to | |
be done and the contents ready to commit. | |
\$ eg resolved foo.c | |
"; | |
$self->{'differences'} = " | |
eg resolved is a command new to eg that is not part of git. It is | |
almost synonymous with git add; however, there are two differences: | |
(a) eg resolved will work on a locally deleted file in the unmerged | |
state (git add will complain that there's 'No such file or | |
directory', and some users have had difficulty trying to find out | |
that they needed to run git rm on such files), (b) eg resolved only | |
works on files in the unmerged state (reporting an error if files | |
not in such a state are specified). | |
"; | |
return $self; | |
} | |
sub run { | |
my $self = shift; | |
die "Error: Must specify paths to resolve.\n" if !@ARGV; | |
@ARGV = Util::quote_args(@ARGV); | |
# Determine which files are actually unmerged | |
my ($ret, $output) = | |
ExecUtil::execute_captured("$GIT_CMD ls-files -u --error-unmatch @ARGV", | |
ignore_ret => 1); | |
chomp($output); | |
my @lines = split('\n', $output); | |
# If there are some files that do not have conflicts, scream at the user | |
if ($ret != 0) { | |
my @not_unmerged_paths; | |
foreach my $line (@lines) { | |
if ($line =~ m/^error: pathspec '(.*?)' did not match any file/) { | |
push(@not_unmerged_paths, $1); | |
} | |
} | |
if (@not_unmerged_paths) { | |
die "Error: The following are not unmerged files and thus don't " . | |
"need resolving:\n " . join("\n ", @not_unmerged_paths) . "\n"; | |
} else { | |
die "$output\n"; | |
} | |
} | |
# Determine the unmerged files (users may have passed a directory which | |
# has both unmerged files and modified but unstaged ones; we only want | |
# to stage the unmerged files from such a directory). | |
my %files; | |
foreach my $line (@lines) { | |
$line =~ m/^\d+ [0-9a-f]+ \d\t(.*)$/; | |
$files{$1} = 1; | |
} | |
my @unmerged_files = keys %files; | |
# Run add -u instead of just add, since we want locally deleted files to | |
# be picked up as well. | |
return ExecUtil::execute("$GIT_CMD add -u @unmerged_files", ignore_ret => 1); | |
} | |
########################################################################### | |
# revert # | |
########################################################################### | |
package revert; | |
@revert::ISA = qw(subcommand); | |
INIT { | |
$COMMAND{revert} = { | |
section => 'modification', | |
about => 'Revert local changes and/or changes from previous commits' | |
}; | |
} | |
sub new { | |
my $class = shift; | |
my $self = $class->SUPER::new(git_repo_needed => 1, git_equivalent => '', @_); | |
bless($self, $class); | |
$self->{'help'} = " | |
Usage: | |
eg revert [[-m PARENT_NUMBER] --in REVISION | --since REVISION] | |
[--staged | --unstaged] [--] [PATH...] | |
Description: | |
eg revert undoes edits to your files, without changing the commit history | |
or changing which commit is active. (If you are looking for a different | |
kind of 'undo'; they are discussed and contrasted below.) There are many | |
options for what to revert; you may want to jump ahead to the examples | |
section below and then come back and read the full description. | |
The work eg revert does includes discarding local modifications, removing | |
recorded conflict states, undoing add or stage operations (i.e. unstaging | |
files), and restoring deleted files to the previously recorded version. | |
If you revert changes since some revision prior to the most recent, | |
revert will also remove any files which were added in a later revision. | |
By default, eg revert will revert edits since the last commit(*). One | |
can specify a different revision to revert file contents back to, or | |
revert edits made in a single previous commit(**). (Advanced usage note: | |
eg revert will undo both staged and unstaged changes by default; you can | |
request only one of these; see 'eg help topic staging' for more details | |
on what staged and unstaged changes are.) | |
(*) For an initial or root commit, eg revert will simply undo adds. When | |
in an uncompleted merge state, it is an error to not specify which commit | |
to revert relative to (with the --since flag). | |
. (**) When reverting the changes made *in* a merge commit, the revert | |
command needs to know which parent of the merge the revert should be | |
relative to. This can be specified using the -m option. | |
To avoid accidental loss of local changes, nothing will be done when no | |
arguments are provided to eg revert. However, eg revert will check for | |
various special cases (from the different types of 'undo' below), and try | |
to provide an error message tailored to any special circumstances | |
relevant to you. | |
=== Comparison of different types of 'undo' available === | |
* Back up or switch to an earlier commit (eg switch) | |
* Make a new commit to reverse the changes of a previous commit (eg | |
cherry-pick -R) | |
* Remove commits from history (eg reset OR eg rebase --interactive) | |
* Reverting edits, without switching commits or changing commit history | |
(eg revert) | |
* Abort an incomplete operation | |
* Incomplete merge: eg revert --since HEAD | |
* Unfinished rebase: eg rebase --abort | |
* Unfinished apply mail: eg am --abort | |
* Unfinished bisect: eg bisect reset | |
Examples: | |
Undo changes since the last commit on the current branch to bar.h and | |
foo.c. This can be done with either of the following methods: | |
\$ eg revert bar.h foo.c # Method #1 | |
\$ eg revert --since HEAD bar.h foo.c # Method #2, more explicit | |
While on the bling branch, revert the changes in the last 3 commits (as | |
well as any local changes) to any file under the directory docs. This | |
can be done by: | |
\$ eg revert --since bling~3 docs | |
While on the stable branch, you determine that the seventh commit prior | |
to the most recent had a faulty change to foosubdir and baz.txt and you | |
simply want to undo it. This can be accomplished by: | |
\$ eg revert --in stable~7 -- foosubdir baz.txt | |
You decide that all changes to foobar.cpp in your working copy and in the | |
last 2 commits are bad and want to revert them. This is done by: | |
of: | |
\$ eg revert --since HEAD~2 -- foobar.c | |
You decide that some of the changes in the merge commit HEAD~4 are bad. | |
You would like to revert the changes to baz.py in HEAD~4 relative to its | |
second parent. This can be accomplished as follows: | |
\$ eg revert -m 2 --in HEAD~4 baz.py | |
(Advanced) Undo a previous stage, marking changes in foo.c as not | |
being ready for commit (this is equivalent to eg unstage foo.c): | |
\$ eg revert --staged foo.c | |
(Advanced) Undo changes since the most recent stage to soopergloo.f77 | |
\$ eg revert --unstaged soopergloo.f77 | |
(Advanced) You decide that the changes to abracadabra.xml made in commit | |
HEAD~8 are bad. You want to revert those changes in the version of | |
abracadabra.xml but only to your working copy. This is done by: | |
\$ eg revert --unstaged --in HEAD~8 -- abracadabra.xml | |
Options: | |
--since | |
Revert the changes made since the specified commit, including any local | |
changes. This takes the difference between the specified commit and | |
the current version of the files and reverses these changes. | |
--in | |
Revert the changes made in the specified commit. This takes the | |
difference between the parent of the specified commit and the specified | |
commit and reverse applies it. | |
REVISION | |
A reference to a recorded version of the repository, defaulting to HEAD | |
(meaning the most recent commit on the current branch). See 'eg help | |
topic revisions' for more details. | |
-m PARENT_NUMBER | |
When reverting the changes made in a merge commit, the revert command | |
needs to know which parent of the merge the revert should be relative | |
to. Use this flag with the parent number (1, 2, 3...) to specify which | |
parent commit to revert relative to. | |
Can only be used with the --in option. | |
--staged | |
Make changes only to the staged (explicitly marked as ready to be | |
committed) version of files. | |
--unstaged | |
Make changes only to the unstaged version of files, i.e. only to the | |
working copy. | |
-- | |
This option can be used to separate command-line options and commits | |
from the list of files, (useful when filenames might be mistaken for | |
command-line options or be mistaken as a branch or tag name). | |
PATH... | |
One or more files or directories. The changes reverted will be limited | |
to the listed files or files below the listed directories. | |
"; | |
$self->{'differences'} = ' | |
eg revert is similar to the revert command of svn, hg, bzr, or darcs. It | |
is not provided by any one git command; it overlaps with about five | |
different git commands in specific cases. git users wanting the | |
functionality in eg revert will typically be guided by expert git users | |
towards whichever git command seems like the most natural fit for the | |
particular case the user asks about. Quite often, such users will | |
continue using the command they are given for subsequent situations...and | |
will often stumble across multiple cases where the git command no longer | |
matches the wanted revert behavior. | |
git does provide a command called revert, which is a subset of the | |
behavior of eg cherry-pick: | |
git revert COMMIT | |
is the same as | |
eg cherry-pick -R COMMIT | |
which is, modulo the automatic commit message provided by git revert, the | |
same as | |
eg revert --in COMMIT && eg commit | |
Note that while eg revert --in may look similar to git revert, the former | |
is about undoing changes in just the working copy, is typically | |
restricted to a specific subset of files, and is usually just one change | |
of many towards testing or creating something new to be committed. The | |
latter is always concerned with reverse applying an entire commit, and is | |
almost always used to immediately record that change. | |
Note that git revert commands are invalid syntax in eg (since eg revert | |
always requires the --since or --in flags to be specified whenever a | |
commit is). This means that eg can catch such cases and notify git | |
users to adopt the eg cherry-pick -R command. | |
Due to these changes, eg revert should be much more welcoming to users of | |
svn, hg, bzr, or darcs. It also provides a simple discovery mechanism | |
for existing git users to allow them to easily work with eg. | |
Additionally, these changes also make the reset and checkout/switch | |
subcommands of eg easier to understand by limiting their scope instead of | |
each having two very different capabilities. (Technically, eg reset and | |
eg checkout still have those capabilities for backwards compatibility, I | |
just omit them in the documentation.) | |
It seems that perhaps eg revert could be extended further, to accept | |
things like | |
\$ eg revert --in HEAD~8..HEAD~5 foo.c | |
to allow reverting changes made in a range of commits. The --in could | |
even be optional in such a case, since the range makes it clear what is | |
wanted. | |
'; | |
return $self; | |
} | |
sub preprocess { | |
my $self = shift; | |
my ($cur_dir, $top_dir, $git_dir) = RepoUtil::get_dirs(); | |
my $initial_commit = RepoUtil::initial_commit(); | |
# Parsing opts | |
my ($staged, $unstaged, $in) = (0, 0, -1); | |
my $m; | |
my $rev; | |
my $result = main::GetOptions( | |
"--help" => sub { $self->help() }, | |
"-m=i" => \$m, | |
"--staged" => \$staged, | |
"--unstaged" => \$unstaged, | |
"--in=s" => sub { $in = 1; $rev = $_[1]; }, | |
"--since=s" => sub { $in = 0; $rev = $_[1]; }, | |
); | |
# Parsing revs and files | |
my ($opts, $revs, $files) = RepoUtil::parse_args([], @ARGV); | |
unshift(@$revs, $rev) if defined($rev); | |
# | |
# Big ol' safety checks and warnings | |
# | |
if (!@$revs && !@$files) { | |
my $files_modified = RepoUtil::files_modified(); | |
if (-f "$self->{git_dir}/MERGE_HEAD") { | |
print STDERR<<EOF; | |
Aborting: no revisions or files specified to revert. If you want to abort | |
your incomplete merge, try 'eg reset --working-copy HEAD'. | |
EOF | |
exit 1; | |
} | |
elsif (-d "$self->{git_dir}/rebase-merge" || | |
-d "$self->{git_dir}/rebase-apply") { | |
print STDERR<<EOF; | |
Aborting: no revisions or files specified to revert. If you want to abort | |
your incomplete rebase, try: | |
eg rebase --abort | |
EOF | |
exit 1; | |
} | |
elsif (!$files_modified && !$initial_commit) { | |
my $active_branch = RepoUtil::current_branch() || 'HEAD'; | |
print STDERR<<EOF; | |
There are no local changes to revert and you specified no revisions to revert | |
(or revert back to). Please specify a revision with --in or --since. | |
Alternatively, if you want to modify commits instead of just the working copy | |
then use reset instead of revert: | |
If you want to undo a rebase (or a 'pull --rebase'), try: | |
eg rebase --abort | |
If you want to undo a merge (or a plain 'pull'), try: | |
eg merge --abort | |
If you want to undo the last commit (but keep its changes in the working copy), | |
try: | |
eg reset $active_branch~1 | |
If you just want to amend the last commit without undoing it, make the | |
additional changes you want and run: | |
eg commit --amend | |
If you want to undo previous reset commands, get the appropriate reflog | |
reference from eg reflog (for example, using HEAD\@{1} for <REF>) and run: | |
eg reset --working-copy <REF> | |
EOF | |
exit 1; | |
} | |
elsif (!$initial_commit) { | |
print STDERR<<EOF; | |
Aborting: no revisions or files specified. If you want to revert and lose | |
all changes since the last commit, try adding the arguments | |
--since HEAD | |
to the end of your command. | |
EOF | |
exit 1; | |
} else { | |
print STDERR<<EOF; | |
Aborting: no files specified. | |
EOF | |
exit 1; | |
} | |
} | |
# Sanity checks | |
die "Cannot specify -m without specifying --in.\n" if !$in && defined($m); | |
die "Can only specify one revision\n" if @$revs > 1; | |
die "No revision specified after --in\n" if ($in == 1 && !@$revs); | |
die "No revision specified after --since\n" if ($in == 0 && !@$revs); | |
if ($in == -1 && @$revs) { | |
die "You must specify either --in or --since when specifying a revision.\n". | |
"(git users:) If you are used to git revert; try running\n". | |
" eg cherry-pick -R @ARGV\n"; | |
} | |
die "Unrecognized options: @$opts\n" if @$opts; | |
$in = 0 if $in == -1; | |
if (!$staged && !$unstaged) { | |
$staged = 1; | |
$unstaged = 1; | |
} | |
# Special checks in the case of an incomplete merge to make sure we know | |
# what to revert back to; if no --since or --in specified then we can only | |
# proceed if the user is only reverting unstaged changes | |
if (!@$revs && $staged && -f "$self->{git_dir}/MERGE_HEAD") { | |
my @merge_branches = RepoUtil::merge_branches(); | |
my $list = join(", ", @merge_branches); | |
print STDERR <<EOF; | |
Aborting: Cannot revert the changes since the last commit, since you are in | |
the middle of a merge and there are multiple last commits. Please add | |
--since BRANCH | |
to your flags to eg revert, where BRANCH is one of | |
$list | |
If you simply want to abort your merge and undo its conflicts, run | |
eg merge --abort | |
EOF | |
exit 1; | |
} | |
if ($initial_commit) { | |
die "Cannot revert a previous commit since there are no previous " . | |
"commits.\n" if $in; | |
die "Cannot revert to a previous commit since there are no previous " . | |
"commits.\n" if !$in && @$revs; | |
} | |
my @quoted_files = Util::quote_args(@$files); | |
my @unmerged_files = `$GIT_CMD ls-files --full-name -u -- @quoted_files`; | |
if (@unmerged_files && $in) { | |
die "Aborting: please clear conflicts from @unmerged_files before " . | |
"proceeding.\n"; | |
} | |
# Record needed information | |
$self->{staged} = $staged; | |
$self->{unstaged} = $unstaged; | |
$self->{just_recent_unstaged} = !$in && !$staged && !@$revs; | |
$self->{in} = $in; | |
$self->{revs} = "@$revs"; | |
$self->{revs} = "HEAD" if !@$revs; | |
$self->{initial_commit} = $initial_commit; | |
if ($in) { | |
# Get the revision whose changes we want to revert, and its parents | |
Util::push_debug(new_value => 0); | |
my $links = ExecUtil::output( | |
"$GIT_CMD rev-list --parents --max-count=1 $self->{revs}"); | |
Util::pop_debug(); | |
my @list = split(' ', $links); # commit id + parent ids | |
# Get a symbolic name for the parent revision we will diff against | |
my $first_rev = $self->{revs}; | |
my $parent = $m || 1; | |
$first_rev .= "^$parent"; | |
# Reverting changes in merge commits can only be done against one parent | |
die "Cannot revert a merge commit without specifying a parent!\n" | |
if !defined($m) && @list > 2; | |
# Reverting relative to a parent can only be done with existing parents | |
if ($parent + 1 > scalar(@list)) { | |
die "Cannot revert the changes made in a commit that has no prior " . | |
"commit\n" if !defined($m); | |
die "The specified commit does not have $m parents; try a lower " . | |
"value for -m\n" if defined($m); | |
} | |
# The combination of revs to diff between | |
$self->{revs} = "$first_rev $self->{revs}"; | |
} | |
# Determine some other stuff needed | |
$self->{files} = \@quoted_files; | |
my ($new_files, $newish_files, $revert_files); | |
my ($newly_added_files, $new_since_rev_files, $other_files); | |
if (!$in && !$initial_commit) { | |
my $revision = (@$revs) ? $revs->[0] : "HEAD"; | |
($newly_added_files, $new_since_rev_files, $other_files) = | |
RepoUtil::get_revert_info($revision, @quoted_files); | |
} elsif ($initial_commit) { | |
$newly_added_files = $files; | |
$new_since_rev_files = []; | |
$other_files = []; | |
} | |
$self->{newly_added_files} = $newly_added_files; | |
$self->{new_since_rev_files} = $new_since_rev_files; | |
$self->{other_files} = $other_files; | |
} | |
sub run { | |
my $self = shift; | |
my $git_dir = RepoUtil::git_dir(); | |
my $paths_specified = scalar(@{$self->{files}}) > 0; | |
my $ret = 0; | |
if (!$self->{in}) { | |
my $revision = $self->{revs}; | |
my @newly_added_files = @{$self->{newly_added_files}}; | |
my @new_since_rev_files = @{$self->{new_since_rev_files}}; | |
my @other_files = @{$self->{other_files}}; | |
my @all_files = @{$self->{files}}; | |
# | |
# Case: Initial commit | |
# | |
if ($self->{initial_commit}) { | |
$ret = ExecUtil::execute("$GIT_CMD rm --cached --quiet -- " . | |
"@newly_added_files", ignore_ret => 1); | |
exit $ret if $ret; | |
} | |
# | |
# Set: Reverting both staged and unstaged changes | |
# | |
elsif ($self->{staged} && $self->{unstaged}) { | |
# | |
# Case: ALL staged and unstaged changes since some revision | |
# | |
if (!$paths_specified) { | |
if (@newly_added_files) { | |
# git reset is not quiet even when requested and has idiotic return | |
# state; if three files have conflicts and I try to reset some | |
# file other than those three, the command is successful but it | |
# spews warnings and gives a bad exit status | |
ExecUtil::execute("$GIT_CMD reset -q $revision --" . | |
" @newly_added_files >/dev/null", | |
ignore_ret => 1); | |
} | |
my ($revision_sha1, $head_sha1, $temp_ret); | |
if ($revision ne "HEAD") { | |
Util::push_debug(new_value => 0); | |
($temp_ret, $revision_sha1) = | |
ExecUtil::execute_captured("$GIT_CMD rev-parse --verify $revision", | |
ignore_ret => 1); | |
($temp_ret, $head_sha1) = | |
ExecUtil::execute_captured("$GIT_CMD rev-parse --verify HEAD", | |
ignore_ret => 1); | |
Util::pop_debug(); | |
} | |
$ret = ExecUtil::execute("$GIT_CMD reset --hard $revision", | |
ignore_ret => 1); | |
exit $ret if $ret; | |
if ($revision ne "HEAD" && $revision_sha1 ne $head_sha1) { | |
# Note, cannot git reset --soft HEAD, since HEAD has changed in | |
# the above reset... | |
$ret = ExecUtil::execute("$GIT_CMD reset --soft HEAD\@{1}", | |
ignore_ret => 1); | |
exit $ret if $ret; | |
} | |
} | |
# | |
# Case: Selected staged and unstaged changes since some revision | |
# | |
if ($paths_specified) { | |
if (@newly_added_files) { | |
# See rant above about 'git reset is not quiet even when requested' | |
ExecUtil::execute("$GIT_CMD reset -q $revision --" . | |
" @newly_added_files >/dev/null", | |
ignore_ret => 1); | |
} | |
if (@new_since_rev_files) { | |
# Ugh, when --quiet doesn't actually mean "quiet". | |
# (Reproduce with git-1.6.0.6 on incomplete merge handling testcase) | |
$ret = ExecUtil::execute("$GIT_CMD rm --quiet --force " . | |
"--ignore-unmatch -- @new_since_rev_files" . | |
" > /dev/null", | |
ignore_ret => 1); | |
exit $ret if $ret; | |
} | |
if (@other_files) { | |
$ret = ExecUtil::execute("$GIT_CMD checkout $revision -- " . | |
"@other_files", ignore_ret => 1); | |
exit $ret if $ret; | |
} | |
} | |
} | |
# | |
# Set: Reverting just staged changes | |
# | |
elsif ($self->{staged}) { | |
if ($paths_specified) { | |
$ret = ExecUtil::execute("$GIT_CMD reset -q $revision -- @all_files", | |
ignore_ret => 1); | |
exit $ret if $ret; | |
} else { | |
$ret = ExecUtil::execute("$GIT_CMD read-tree $revision", | |
ignore_ret => 1); | |
exit $ret if $ret; | |
} | |
} | |
# | |
# Set: Reverting just unstaged changes | |
# | |
elsif ($self->{unstaged}) { | |
if ($self->{just_recent_unstaged}) { | |
die "Assertion failed: Paths not specified.\n" if (!$paths_specified); | |
$ret = ExecUtil::execute("$GIT_CMD checkout -- @all_files", | |
ignore_ret => 1); | |
exit $ret if $ret; | |
} | |
else { | |
if (@newly_added_files) { | |
# This results in a no-op essentially, but at least it shows the | |
# equivalent commands when no new_since_rev_files and no other_files | |
push(@other_files, @newly_added_files); | |
} | |
if (@new_since_rev_files) { | |
$ret = ExecUtil::execute("rm -f @new_since_rev_files", | |
ignore_ret => 1); | |
exit $ret if $ret; | |
} | |
if (@other_files || !$paths_specified) { | |
my $cf = "@other_files"; | |
if (!$paths_specified) { | |
my ($cur_dir, $top_dir, $git_dir) = RepoUtil::get_dirs(); | |
($cf) = Util::reroot_paths__from_to_files($top_dir, $cur_dir, '.'); | |
} | |
my $old_git_index_file = $ENV{"GIT_INDEX_FILE"}; | |
$ENV{"GIT_INDEX_FILE"} = "$git_dir/tmp_index"; | |
$ret = ExecUtil::execute("$GIT_CMD checkout $revision " . | |
"-- $cf", ignore_ret => 1); | |
$ENV{"GIT_INDEX_FILE"} = $old_git_index_file; | |
exit $ret if $ret; | |
my ($tmp_index) = Util::quote_args("$git_dir/tmp_index"); | |
$ret = ExecUtil::execute("rm $tmp_index"); | |
exit $ret if $ret; | |
} | |
} | |
} | |
} | |
if ($self->{in}) { | |
# Must do unstaged changes first, or extra unknown files can "appear" | |
my $location_flag; | |
$location_flag = "" if $self->{unstaged}; | |
$location_flag = "--cached" if $self->{staged}; | |
$location_flag = "--index" if ($self->{staged} && $self->{unstaged}); | |
my @files = @{$self->{files}}; | |
my $marker = ""; | |
$marker = "-- " if (@files); | |
my ($cur_dir, $top_dir, $git_dir) = RepoUtil::get_dirs(); | |
my @diff_flags = ("--binary"); | |
my @apply_flags = ("--whitespace=nowarn", "--reject"); | |
push(@apply_flags, $location_flag) if $location_flag; | |
# Print out the (nearly) equivalent commands if the user asked for | |
# debugging information | |
if ($DEBUG) { | |
print " >>Running: " . | |
"$GIT_CMD diff @diff_flags $self->{revs} ${marker}@files | "; | |
print "(cd $top_dir && " if ($top_dir ne $cur_dir); | |
print "$GIT_CMD apply @apply_flags -R"; | |
print ")" if ($top_dir ne $cur_dir); | |
print "\n"; | |
} | |
# Sadly, using "git diff... | git apply ... -R" doesn't quite work, | |
# because apply complains very loudly if the diff is empty. So, | |
# we have to run diff, slurp in its output, check if its nonempty, | |
# and then only pipe that output back out to git apply if we have | |
# an actual diff to revert. | |
if ($DEBUG < 2) { | |
open(DIFF, "$GIT_CMD diff @diff_flags $self->{revs} ${marker}@files |"); | |
my @output = <DIFF>; | |
my $diff = join("", @output); | |
# Listing unmerged paths doesn't count as nonempty | |
$diff =~ s/\* Unmerged path.*\n//g; | |
close(DIFF); | |
$ret = $?; | |
exit $ret >> 8 if $ret; | |
if ($diff) { | |
chdir($top_dir) if $top_dir ne $cur_dir; | |
open(APPLY, "| $GIT_CMD apply @apply_flags -R"); | |
print APPLY $diff; | |
close(APPLY); | |
chdir($cur_dir) if $top_dir ne $cur_dir; | |
} | |
} | |
} | |
return 0; | |
} | |
########################################################################### | |
# rm # | |
########################################################################### | |
package rm; | |
@rm::ISA = qw(subcommand); | |
INIT { | |
$COMMAND{rm} = { | |
extra => 1, | |
section => 'modification', | |
about => 'Remove files from subsequent commits and the working copy' | |
}; | |
} | |
sub new { | |
my $class = shift; | |
my $self = $class->SUPER::new(git_repo_needed => 1, @_); | |
bless($self, $class); | |
$self->{'help'} = " | |
Usage: | |
eg rm [-f] [-r] [--staged] FILE... | |
Description: | |
Marks the contents of the specified files for removal from the next | |
commit. Also removes the given files from the working copy, unless | |
otherwise specified with the --staged flag. | |
To prevent data loss, the removal will be aborted if the file has | |
modifications. This check can be overriden with the -f flag. | |
Examples: | |
Mark the content of the files foo and bar for removal from the next | |
commit, and delete these files from the working copy. | |
\$ eg rm foo bar | |
Mark the content of the file baz.c for removal from the next commit, but | |
keep baz.c in the working copy as an unknown file. | |
\$ eg rm --staged baz.c | |
(Advanced) Remove all *.txt files under the Documentation directory OR | |
any of its subdirectories. Note that the asterisk must be preceded with | |
a backslash to prevent standard shell expansion. (Google for 'shell | |
expansion' if that makes no sense to you.) | |
\$ eg rm Documentation/\\*.txt | |
Options: | |
-f | |
Override the file-modification check. | |
-r | |
Allow recursive removal when a directory name is given. Without this | |
option attempted removal of directories will fail. | |
--staged | |
Only remove the files from the staging area (the area with changes | |
marked as ready to be recorded in the next commit; see 'eg help topic | |
staging' for more details). When using this flag, the given files will | |
not be removed from the working copy and will instead become | |
\"unknown\" files. | |
-- | |
This option can be used to separate command-line options from the list | |
of files, (useful when filenames might be mistaken for command-line | |
options). | |
"; | |
$self->{'differences'} = ' | |
eg rm is identical to git rm except that it accepts --staged as a synonym | |
for --cached. | |
'; | |
return $self; | |
} | |
sub preprocess { | |
my $self = shift; | |
return if (scalar(@ARGV) > 0 && $ARGV[0] eq "--"); | |
my $result = main::GetOptions("--help" => sub { $self->help() }); | |
foreach my $i (0..$#ARGV) { | |
$ARGV[$i] = "--cached" if $ARGV[$i] eq "--staged"; | |
} | |
} | |
########################################################################### | |
# squash # | |
########################################################################### | |
package squash; | |
@squash::ISA = qw(subcommand); | |
INIT { | |
$COMMAND{squash} = { | |
new_command => 1, | |
extra => 1, | |
section => 'modification', | |
about => 'Combine all changes since a given revision into a new commit' | |
}; | |
} | |
sub new { | |
my $class = shift; | |
my $self = $class->SUPER::new(git_repo_needed => 1, git_equivalent => '', @_); | |
bless($self, $class); | |
$self->{'help'} = " | |
Usage: | |
eg squash [--against REVISION] | |
Description: | |
Combines all commits since REVISION into a single commit, and open an | |
editor with the concatenation of log messages for the user to edit to | |
create a new log message. | |
REVISION must be an ancestor of the current commit. If REVISION is | |
not specified, the remote tracking branch for the current branch is | |
assumed. (If there is no such branch, eg squash will abort with an | |
error.) | |
Examples: | |
Combine all commits in the current branch that aren't in origin/master | |
into a single commit | |
\$ eg squash --against origin/master | |
Options: | |
--against | |
An optional command line argument that makes it clearer what is | |
happening. (In the example above, we are not \"squashing origin/master\", | |
we are squashing all changes since origin/master on top of origin/master. | |
"; | |
$self->{'differences'} = ' | |
eg squash is a command new to eg that is not part of git. | |
'; | |
return $self; | |
} | |
sub preprocess { | |
my $self = shift; | |
my $since; | |
my $result = main::GetOptions( | |
"--help" => sub { $self->help() }, | |
"against=s" => sub { $since=$_[1] }, | |
); | |
$since = shift @ARGV if !defined($since); | |
die "Aborting: Too many revisions specified.\n" if @ARGV > 1; | |
if (!defined($since)) { | |
my $branch = RepoUtil::current_branch(); | |
die "Aborting: No revision specified.\n" if !defined($branch); | |
my $merge_remote = RepoUtil::get_config("branch.$branch.remote"); | |
my $merge_branch = RepoUtil::get_config("branch.$branch.merge"); | |
die "Aborting: No revision specified.\n" if !defined($merge_branch); | |
$merge_branch =~ s#^refs/heads/##; | |
$since = "$merge_remote/$merge_branch"; | |
} | |
$self->{since} = $since; | |
Util::push_debug(new_value => 0); | |
my ($retval, $orig_head, $since_sha1sum); | |
# Get the sha1sum where HEAD points now, make sure HEAD is valid | |
($retval, $orig_head) = | |
ExecUtil::execute_captured("$GIT_CMD rev-parse HEAD", ignore_ret => 1); | |
die "Aborting: You have no commits on HEAD.\n" if $retval != 0; | |
chomp($orig_head); | |
$self->{orig_head} = $orig_head; | |
# Get the sha1sum where $since points now, make sure it is valid | |
($retval, $since_sha1sum) = | |
ExecUtil::execute_captured("$GIT_CMD rev-parse $self->{since}", | |
ignore_ret => 1); | |
die "Invalid revision reference: $self->{since}\n" if $retval != 0; | |
chomp($since_sha1sum); | |
# Make sure user has no staged changes | |
my $output = `$GIT_CMD diff --cached --quiet`; | |
die "Aborting: You have staged changes; please commit them first.\n" if $?; | |
# Ensure $self->{since} is an ancestor of HEAD | |
my $command = "$GIT_CMD rev-list HEAD..$self->{since} | wc -l"; | |
my ($ret, $unique_to_since) = ExecUtil::execute_captured($command); | |
die "Couldn't parse '$command' output '$unique_to_since'" | |
unless ($unique_to_since =~ /^\s*([0-9]+)$/); | |
my $need_commits = $1; | |
die "Aborting: $self->{since} is not an ancestor of HEAD.\n" if $need_commits; | |
die "Aborting: There are no commits since $self->{since}.\n" | |
if $orig_head eq $since_sha1sum; | |
Util::pop_debug(); | |
} | |
sub run { | |
my $self = shift; | |
# Fill out a basic log message | |
my ($fh, $filename) = main::tempfile(); | |
print $fh <<EOF; | |
# Please combine the following commit messages into a single commit message. | |
# Lines starting with a '#' will be ignored. | |
EOF | |
close($fh); | |
my $ret = ExecUtil::execute("$GIT_CMD log --reverse --no-merges --pretty=format:" . | |
"'#commit %H%n#Author: %an <%ae>%n#Date: %ad%n%n%s%n%n%b' " . | |
" $self->{since}..$self->{orig_head} >> $filename"); | |
exit $ret if $ret; | |
# Now, reset and commit | |
$ret = ExecUtil::execute("$GIT_CMD reset --soft $self->{since}"); | |
exit $ret if $ret; | |
$ret = ExecUtil::execute("$GIT_CMD commit -F $filename --edit", | |
ignore_ret => 1); | |
# Restore the branch pointer if the commit failed (e.g. empty log message) | |
ExecUtil::execute("$GIT_CMD reset --soft $self->{orig_head}") if $ret != 0; | |
unlink($filename); | |
return 0; | |
} | |
########################################################################### | |
# stage # | |
########################################################################### | |
package stage; | |
@stage::ISA = qw(subcommand); | |
INIT { | |
$COMMAND{stage} = { | |
new_command => 1, | |
section => 'modification', | |
about => 'Mark content in files as being ready for commit' | |
}; | |
} | |
sub new { | |
my $class = shift; | |
my $self = $class->SUPER::new(git_repo_needed => 1, | |
git_equivalent => 'add', | |
@_); | |
bless($self, $class); | |
$self->{'help'} = " | |
Usage: | |
eg stage [--] PATH... | |
Description: | |
Marks the contents of the specified files as being ready to commit, | |
scheduling them for addition to the repository. (This is also known as | |
staging.) This step is often not neccessary, since 'eg commit' will fall | |
back to unstaged changes if you have not staged anything. When a | |
directory is passed, all files in that directory or any subdirectory are | |
recursively added. | |
You can use 'eg unstage PATH...' to unstage files. | |
See 'eg help topic staging' for more details, including situations where | |
you might find staging useful. | |
Examples: | |
Create a new file, and mark it for addition to the repository. | |
\$ echo hi > there | |
\$ eg stage there | |
(Advanced) Mark some changes as good, add some verbose sanity checking code, | |
then commit just the good changes. | |
Implement some cool new feature in somefile.C | |
\$ eg stage somefile.C | |
Add some verbose sanity checking code to somefile.C | |
Decide to commit the new feature code but not the sanity checking code: | |
\$ eg commit --staged | |
(Advanced) Show changes in a file, split by those that you have marked as | |
good and those that you haven't: | |
Make various edits | |
\$ eg stage file1 file2 | |
Make more edits, include some to file1 | |
\$ eg diff # Look at all the changes | |
\$ eg diff --staged # Look at the \"ready to be committed\" changes | |
\$ eg diff --unstaged # Look at the changes not ready to be commited | |
Options: | |
-- | |
This option can be used to separate command-line options from the list | |
of files, (useful when filenames might be mistaken for command-line | |
options). | |
"; | |
$self->{'differences'} = ' | |
eg stage is a command new to eg that is not part of git (update: it is | |
part of newer versions of git, with identical meaning to eg). eg stage | |
merely calls git add. | |
'; | |
return $self; | |
} | |
sub run { | |
my $self = shift; | |
@ARGV = Util::quote_args(@ARGV); | |
return ExecUtil::execute("$GIT_CMD add @ARGV", ignore_ret => 1); | |
} | |
########################################################################### | |
# stash # | |
########################################################################### | |
package stash; | |
@stash::ISA = qw(subcommand); | |
INIT { | |
$COMMAND{stash} = { | |
section => 'timesavers', | |
about => 'Save and revert local changes, or apply stashed changes', | |
}; | |
} | |
sub new { | |
my $class = shift; | |
my $self = $class->SUPER::new( | |
git_repo_needed => 1, | |
initial_commit_error_msg => "Error: Cannot stash away changes when there " . | |
"is no commit yet.", | |
@_); | |
bless($self, $class); | |
$self->{'help'} = " | |
Usage: | |
eg stash list [--details] | |
eg stash [save DESCRIPTION] | |
eg stash apply [DESCRIPTION] | |
eg stash show [OPTIONS] [DESCRIPTION] | |
eg stash (drop [DESCRIPTION] | clear) | |
Description: | |
This command can be used to remove any changes since the last commit, | |
stashing these changes away so they can be reapplied later. It can also | |
be used to apply any previously stashed away changes. This command can | |
be used multiple times to have multiple sets of changes stashed away. | |
Unknown files (files which you have never run 'eg stage' on) are | |
unaffected; they will not be stashed away or reverted. | |
When no arguments are specified to eg stash, the current changes are | |
saved away with a default description. | |
WARNING: Using the default description can be a bad idea if you will not | |
be reapplying the stash very soon. The default description provided for | |
you is based on the commit message of the most recent commit, which has | |
confused some users into believing that they have already incorporated | |
changes from a stash and throwing the stash away (something that can be | |
recovered from, but which involves some sleuthing and low-level commands | |
like git-fsck and git-cat-file). | |
Examples: | |
You have lots of changes that you're working on, then get an important | |
but simple bug report. You can stash away your current changes, fix the | |
important bug, and then reapply the stashed changes: | |
\$ eg stash | |
fix, fix, fix, build, test, etc. | |
\$ eg commit | |
\$ eg stash apply | |
You can provide a description of the changes being stashed away, and | |
apply previous stashes by their description (or a unique substring of the | |
description). | |
make lots of changes | |
\$ eg stash save incomplete refactoring work | |
work on something else that you think will be a quick fix | |
\$ eg stash save longer fix than I thought | |
fix some important but one-liner bug | |
\$ eg commit | |
\$ eg stash list | |
\$ eg stash apply incomplete refactoring work | |
finish off the refactoring | |
\$ eg commit | |
\$ eg stash apply fix than I | |
etc., etc. | |
You want to get some details about an existing stash created above: | |
\$ eg stash show incomplete refactoring | |
\$ eg stash show -p incomplete refactoring | |
Options: | |
list [--details] | |
Show the saved stash descriptions. If the --details flag is present, | |
provide more information about each stash. | |
save DESCRIPTION | |
Save current changes with the description DESCRIPTION. The | |
description cannot start with \"-\". | |
apply [DESCRIPTION] | |
Apply the stashed changes with the specified description. If no | |
description is specified, and more than one stash has been saved, an | |
error message will be shown. The description cannot start with \"-\". | |
show [OPTIONS] [DESCRIPTION] | |
Show the stashed changes with the specified description. If no | |
description is specified, and more than one stash has been saved, an | |
error message will be shown. The description cannot start with \"-\". | |
Note that the output shown is the output from diff --stat. If you | |
want the full patch, pass the -p option. Other options for | |
controlling diff output (such as --name-status or --dirstat, see | |
'git help diff') are also possible options. | |
drop [DESCRIPTION] | |
Delete the specified stash. The description cannot start with | |
\"-\". | |
clear | |
Delete all stashed changes. | |
"; | |
$self->{'differences'} = ' | |
eg stash is only cosmetically different than git stash, and is fully | |
backwards compatible. | |
eg stash list, by default, only shows the saved description -- not | |
the reflog syntax or branch the change was made on. | |
eg stash apply and eg stash show also accept any string and will | |
apply or show the stash whose description contains that string. | |
Although stash and apply accept reflog syntax (like their git stash | |
counterparts), i.e. while | |
$ eg stash apply stash@{3} | |
will work, I think it will be easier for the user to run | |
$ eg stash apply rudely interrupted changes | |
'; | |
return $self; | |
} | |
sub preprocess { | |
my $self = shift; | |
my $package_name = ref($self); | |
# | |
# Parse options | |
# | |
my @args; | |
if (scalar(@ARGV) > 0 && $ARGV[0] ne "--") { | |
main::GetOptions("--help" => sub { $self->help() }); | |
} | |
# Get the (sub)subcommand | |
if (scalar @ARGV == 0) { | |
$self->{subcommand} = 'save'; | |
} elsif ($ARGV[0] =~ /^--/) { | |
$self->{subcommand} = "save"; | |
} else { | |
$self->{subcommand} = shift @ARGV; | |
if ($self->{subcommand} eq '-k') { | |
$self->{subcommand} = "save"; | |
unshift @ARGV, '-k'; | |
} | |
push(@args, $self->{subcommand}); | |
# Pass all flags on to git | |
while(@ARGV > 0 && $ARGV[0] =~ /^-/ && $ARGV[0] !~ /^--$/) { | |
if ($self->{subcommand} eq 'list' && $ARGV[0] eq '--refs') { | |
$self->{show_refs} = 1; | |
shift @ARGV; | |
} elsif ($self->{subcommand} eq 'list' && $ARGV[0] eq '--details') { | |
$self->{show_details} = 1; | |
shift @ARGV; | |
} else { | |
push(@args, shift @ARGV); | |
} | |
} | |
if ($self->{subcommand} eq 'branch') { | |
push(@args, shift @ARGV); # Pull off the branch name | |
} | |
} | |
# Show a help message if they picked a bad stash subaction. | |
my @valid_commands = qw(list show apply clear save drop pop branch create); | |
if (! grep {$_ eq $self->{subcommand}} @valid_commands) { | |
print STDERR<<EOF; | |
Aborting; invalid stash subcommand: $self->{subcommand} | |
EOF | |
exit 1; | |
} | |
# Translate the description passed to apply or show into a reflog reference | |
my @commands_accepting_existing_stash = qw(show drop pop apply branch); | |
if ((grep {$_ eq $self->{subcommand}} @commands_accepting_existing_stash) && | |
scalar @ARGV > 0) { | |
my $stash_description = "@ARGV"; | |
my $single_word_desc = (scalar(@ARGV) == 1); | |
@ARGV = (); | |
if ($stash_description =~ m#^stash\@\{[^{]+\}$# || | |
($single_word_desc && RepoUtil::valid_ref($stash_description))) { | |
push(@args, $stash_description) | |
} else { | |
# Will need to compare arguments to existing stash descriptions... | |
print " >>Getting stash descriptions to compare to arguments:\n" | |
if $DEBUG; | |
my ($retval, $output) = | |
ExecUtil::execute_captured("$EG_EXEC stash list --refs"); | |
my @lines = split('\n', $output); | |
my %refs; | |
my %bad_refs; | |
while (@lines) { | |
my $desc = shift @lines; | |
my $ref = shift @lines; | |
$bad_refs{$desc}++ if defined $refs{$desc}; | |
$refs{$desc} = $ref; | |
} | |
# See if the stash description matches zero, one, or more existing | |
# stash descriptions; convert it to a reflog entry if only one | |
my @matches = grep {$_ =~ m#\Q$stash_description\E#} (keys %refs); | |
if (scalar @matches == 0) { | |
die "No stash matching '$stash_description' exists! Aborting.\n"; | |
} elsif (scalar @matches == 1) { | |
# Only one regex match; use it | |
$stash_description = $matches[0]; | |
} else { | |
# See if our string matches one stash description exactly; if so, | |
# we can use it. | |
if (!grep {$_ eq $stash_description} (keys %refs)) { | |
die "Stash description '$stash_description' matches multiple " . | |
"stashes:\n " . join("\n ", @matches) . "\n" . | |
"Aborting.\n"; | |
} | |
} | |
die "Stash description '$stash_description' matches multiple stashes.\n" | |
if $bad_refs{$stash_description}; | |
push(@args, $refs{$stash_description}); | |
} | |
} | |
# Add any unprocessed args to the arguments to use | |
push(@args, @ARGV); | |
# Reset @ARGV with the built up list of arguments | |
@ARGV = @args; | |
} | |
sub run { | |
my $self = shift; | |
my $package_name = ref($self); | |
my $ret; | |
@ARGV = Util::quote_args(@ARGV); | |
if ($self->{subcommand} eq 'list') { | |
my $output = ""; | |
open($OUTFH, '>', \$output) || | |
die "eg $package_name: cannot open \$OUTFH: $!"; | |
$ret = ExecUtil::execute("$GIT_CMD $package_name @ARGV", ignore_ret => 1); | |
my @lines = split('\n', $output); | |
my $regex = | |
qr#(stash\@\{[^}]+\}): (?:WIP )?[Oo]n [^:]*: (?:[0-9a-f]+\.\.\. )?#; | |
foreach my $line (@lines) { | |
if ($self->{show_details}) { | |
print "$line\n"; | |
} else { | |
$line =~ s/$regex//; | |
print "$line\n"; | |
print "$1\n" if $self->{show_refs}; | |
} | |
} | |
} else { | |
$ret = ExecUtil::execute("$GIT_CMD $package_name @ARGV", ignore_ret => 1); | |
} | |
return $ret; | |
} | |
########################################################################### | |
# status # | |
########################################################################### | |
package status; | |
@status::ISA = qw(subcommand); | |
INIT { | |
$COMMAND{status} = { | |
section => 'discovery', | |
about => 'Summarize current changes' | |
}; | |
$ALIAS{'st'} = "status"; | |
} | |
sub new { | |
my $class = shift; | |
my $self = $class->SUPER::new(git_repo_needed => 1, @_); | |
bless($self, $class); | |
$self->{'help'} = " | |
Usage: | |
eg status | |
Description: | |
Show the current state of the project. In addition to showing the | |
currently active branch, whether you have unpushed local commits, | |
whether you have stashed any sets of changes away (see 'eg help | |
stash'), this command will list files with content in any of the | |
following states: | |
Unknown files | |
Files that are not explicitly ignored (i.e. do not appear in an | |
ignore list such as a .gitignore file) but whose contents are still | |
not tracked by git. | |
These files can become known by running 'eg stage FILENAME', or | |
ignored by having their name added to a .gitignore file. | |
Newly created unknown files | |
Same as unknown files; the reason for splitting unknown files into | |
two sets is to make it easier to find the files users are more | |
likely to want to add. Also, 'eg commit' will by default error out | |
with a warning message if there are any newly created unknown files | |
in order to prevent forgetting to add files that should be included | |
in a commit. | |
Modified submodules: | |
subdirectories that are tracked under their own git repository, and | |
that are being tracked via use of the 'git submodule' command. | |
Changes not staged for commit (\"unstaged\") | |
Files whose contents have been modified in the working copy. | |
(Advanced usage note) If you explicitly mark all the changes in a | |
file as ready to be committed, then the file will not appear in this | |
list and will instead appear in the \"staged\" list (see below). | |
However, a file can appear in both the unstaged and staged lists if | |
only part of the changes in the file are marked as ready for commit. | |
Unmerged paths (files with conflicts) | |
Files which could not be automatically merged. If such files are | |
text files, they will have the typical conflict markers. These | |
files need to be manually edited to give them the correct contents, | |
and then the user should inform git that the conflicts are resolved | |
by running 'eg resolved FILENAME'. | |
Changes ready to be committed (\"staged\") | |
Files with content changes that have explicitly been marked as ready | |
to be committed. This state only typically appears in advanced | |
usage. | |
Files enter this state through the use of 'eg stage'. Files can | |
return to the unstaged state by running 'eg unstage' See 'eg help | |
topic staging' to learn about the staging area. | |
"; | |
$self->{'differences'} = " | |
eg status output is essentially just a streamlined and cleaned version of | |
git status output, with the addition of a new section (newly created | |
untracked files) and an extra status message being displayed when in the | |
middle of a special state (am, bisect, merge, or rebase). | |
The streamlining serves to avoid information overload to new users (which | |
is only possible with a less error prone \"commit\" command) and the | |
cleaning (removal of leading hash marks) serves to make the system more | |
inviting to new users. | |
A slight wording change was done to transform \"untracked\" to \"unknown\" | |
since, as Havoc pointed out, the word \"tracked\" may not be very self | |
explanatory (in addition to the real meaning, users might think of: | |
\"tracked in the index?\", \"related to remote tracking branches?\", \"some | |
fancy new monitoring scheme unique to git that other vcses do not have?\", | |
\"is there some other meaning?\"). I do not know if \"known\" will fully | |
solve this, but I suspect it will be more self-explanatory than | |
\"tracked\". | |
There are also slight changes to the section names to reinforce | |
consistent naming when referring to the same concept (staging, in this | |
case), but the changes are very slight. | |
The extra status message when in the middle of an am, bisect, merge, | |
or rebase serves two purposes: to remind users that they are in the | |
middle of some operation (some people don't use the special prompt | |
from git's bash-completion support), and to provide a command users | |
can run to get help resolving such situations. (Many users were | |
confused about or unaware how to resolve incomplete merges and | |
rebases; providing them with a specially written help page they | |
could access seemed to effectively assist them figure out the | |
appropriate steps to take -- especially in tricky or special cases.) | |
"; | |
return $self; | |
} | |
sub preprocess { | |
my $self = shift; | |
my @old_argv = @ARGV; | |
my $no_filter = 0; | |
Getopt::Long::Configure("permute"); | |
my $result = main::GetOptions( | |
"help|h" => sub { $self->help() }, | |
"short|s" => sub { $no_filter = 1 }, | |
"suno|sunormal|suall" => sub { $no_filter = 1 }, # git status parser allows combining -s and -u options, somewhat weirdly | |
"porcelain" => sub { $no_filter = 1 }, | |
"z" => sub { $no_filter = 1 }, | |
); | |
@ARGV = @old_argv; | |
$self->{no_filter} = $no_filter; | |
} | |
sub run { | |
my $self = shift; | |
-t STDOUT and $ENV{"GIT_PAGER_IN_USE"}=1; | |
return $self->SUPER::run() if $self->{no_filter}; | |
$self->{special_state} = RepoUtil::get_special_state($self->{git_dir}); | |
@ARGV = Util::quote_args(@ARGV); | |
return ExecUtil::execute("$GIT_CMD status @ARGV", ignore_ret => 1); | |
} | |
sub postprocess { | |
my $self = shift; | |
my $output = shift; | |
# If we can't parse the git status output, what we tell the user... | |
my $workaround_msg = | |
"You'll need to use an older git or a newer eg or 'git status'."; | |
if ($DEBUG == 2) { | |
print " >>(No commands to run, just data to print)<<\n"; | |
return; | |
} | |
if ($self->{no_filter}) { | |
print $output; | |
return; | |
} | |
my $branch; | |
my $initial_commit = 0; | |
my @sections; | |
my %files; | |
my %section_mapping = ( | |
'Untracked files:' => 'Unknown files:', | |
'Changes to be committed:' => 'Changes ready to be committed ("staged"):', | |
'Changed but not updated:' => 'Changes not staged for commit ("unstaged"):', | |
'Changes not staged for commit:' => 'Changes not staged for commit ("unstaged"):', | |
'Unmerged paths:' => 'Unmerged paths (files with conflicts):' | |
); | |
my @basic_info; | |
my @diff_info; | |
# Exit early if git status had an error | |
if ($output =~ m/^fatal:/) { | |
print STDERR $output; | |
exit 128; | |
} | |
my $status_hints = RepoUtil::get_config("advice.statusHints"); | |
$status_hints = (!defined($status_hints) || $status_hints eq "true"); | |
# Parse the output | |
my @lines = split('\n', $output); | |
my $cur_state = -1; | |
while (@lines) { | |
my $line = shift @lines; | |
my $section = undef; | |
my $title; | |
if ($line =~ m/^# On branch (.*)$/) { | |
$branch = $1; | |
} elsif ($line =~ m/^# Initial commit$/) { | |
$initial_commit = 1; | |
} elsif ($line =~ m/^# ([A-Z].*:)$/) { | |
$cur_state = 1; | |
$title = $section_mapping{$1} || $1; | |
$section = $title; | |
} elsif ($cur_state < 0) { | |
next if $line !~ m/^# (.+)/; | |
push(@basic_info, $1); | |
} elsif ($line =~ m/^no changes added to commit/ || | |
$line =~ m/^# Untracked files not listed/) { | |
next; # Skip this line | |
} elsif ($line =~ m#^(?:\e\[.*?m)?diff --git a/#) { | |
push(@diff_info, $line); | |
push(@diff_info, @lines); | |
last; | |
} else { | |
die "ERROR: Cannot parse git status output.\n" . | |
"$workaround_msg\n" . | |
"Remaining unparsed lines:\n$line\n" . join("\n", @lines) . "\n"; | |
} | |
# If we're inside a section type, parse it | |
if ($cur_state > 0) { | |
push (@sections, $section); | |
my @section_files; | |
my $hints; | |
# Parse the hints first | |
$line = shift @lines; | |
if ($status_hints) { | |
while ($line =~ m/^#\s+\((?:use "|commit).*/) { | |
$hints .= $line; | |
$line = shift @lines; | |
} | |
die("Bug parsing git status output.\n$workaround_msg\n") if $line ne '#'; | |
$line = shift @lines; # Get rid of blank line | |
} | |
while (defined $line && $line =~ m/^(?:\e\[.*?m)?#.+$/) { | |
if ($line =~ m/^(?:\e\[.*?m)?#(\s+)(.*)/) { | |
my $space = $1; | |
my $file = $2; | |
# Remove leading space character for submodule changes | |
# (There's no real reason to do this other than laziness in | |
# updating test file results; output looks fine either way.) | |
$space =~ s/^[ ]//; | |
# Workaround the file not have proper terminating color escape sequence | |
if ($file =~ /^\s*\e\[.*?m/ && $file !~ /\e\[m$/) { | |
$file .= "\e[m"; | |
} | |
push @section_files, "$space$file"; | |
} | |
$line = shift @lines; | |
unshift(@lines, $line) if $line && $line =~ m#^(?:\e\[.*?m)?diff --git a/#; | |
} | |
if (defined($files{$section})) { | |
push(@{$files{$section}{'file_list'}}, @section_files); | |
} else { | |
$files{$section} = { title => $title, # may be undef | |
hint => $hints, | |
file_list => \@section_files }; | |
} | |
# Record that we finished parsing this section | |
$cur_state = 0; | |
} | |
} | |
# Split the unknown files into those that are newly created and those that | |
# have been around | |
if (defined($files{'Unknown files:'})) { | |
# Get the list of unknown files that have been around for a while | |
my ($cur_dir, $top_dir, $git_dir) = RepoUtil::get_dirs(); | |
my %old_unknown; | |
if (-f "$git_dir/info/ignored-unknown") { | |
my @old_unknown_files = `cat "$git_dir/info/ignored-unknown"`; | |
chomp(@old_unknown_files); | |
@old_unknown_files = | |
Util::reroot_paths__from_to_files($top_dir, $cur_dir, @old_unknown_files); | |
map { $old_unknown{$_} = 1 } @old_unknown_files; | |
} | |
my @new_unknowns; | |
my @old_unknowns; | |
foreach my $fileline (@{$files{'Unknown files:'}{'file_list'}}) { | |
$fileline =~ m#(\s+(?:\e\[.*?m)?)(.*?)((?:\e\[m)?)$# || | |
die "Failed parsing git status output: '$fileline'\n$workaround_msg\n"; | |
if ($old_unknown{$2}) { | |
push(@old_unknowns, $fileline); | |
} else { | |
push(@new_unknowns, $fileline); | |
} | |
} | |
my ($index) = grep $sections[$_] eq "Unknown files:", 0 .. $#sections; | |
splice(@sections, $index, 1); | |
if (@new_unknowns) { | |
$files{'new_unknowns'} = { title => 'Newly created unknown files:', | |
file_list => \@new_unknowns }; | |
splice(@sections, $index++, 0, 'new_unknowns'); | |
} | |
if (@old_unknowns) { | |
$files{'old_unknowns'} = { title => 'Unknown files:', | |
file_list => \@old_unknowns }; | |
splice(@sections, $index, 0, 'old_unknowns'); | |
} | |
} | |
# Print out the branch we are on | |
if (defined $branch) { | |
print "(On branch $branch"; | |
print ", no commits yet" if $initial_commit; | |
print ")\n"; | |
} | |
foreach my $line (@basic_info) { | |
print "($line)\n"; | |
} | |
my ($retval, $num_stashes) = | |
ExecUtil::execute_captured("$GIT_CMD stash list | wc -l"); | |
chomp($num_stashes); | |
if ($num_stashes > 0) { | |
print "(You have $num_stashes stash(es). Use 'eg stash list' to see them.)\n"; | |
} | |
# Print out info about any special state we're in | |
my $notice = ""; | |
if (defined $self->{special_state}) { | |
my ($highlight, $reset) = ("", ""); | |
if (-t STDOUT) { | |
$highlight=`$GIT_CMD config --get-color color.status.header "red reverse"`; | |
$reset=`$GIT_CMD config --get-color "" "reset"`; | |
} | |
$notice .= "($highlight"; | |
$notice .= "YOU ARE IN THE MIDDLE OF A $self->{special_state}; "; | |
$notice .= "RUN 'eg help topic middle-of-"; | |
if ($self->{special_state} eq "APPLY MAIL OR REBASE") { | |
# FIXME: How do we get into this state anyway, and what should they run? | |
# Well, printing nothing will just get them the general topic page, then | |
# they can pick between am and rebase | |
} elsif ($self->{special_state} =~ /REBASE$/) { | |
$notice .= "rebase"; | |
} elsif ($self->{special_state} eq "APPLY MAIL") { | |
$notice .= "am"; | |
} elsif ($self->{special_state} eq "MERGE") { | |
$notice .= "merge"; | |
} elsif ($self->{special_state} eq "BISECT") { | |
$notice .= "bisect"; | |
} | |
$notice .= "' FOR MORE INFO."; | |
$notice .= "$reset)\n"; | |
print $notice; | |
} | |
# Print out all the various changes | |
my $linecount = 0; | |
foreach my $section (@sections) { | |
if (defined($files{$section})) { | |
print "$files{$section}{'title'}\n"; | |
$linecount += 1; | |
foreach my $fileline (@{$files{$section}{'file_list'}}) { | |
print "$fileline\n"; | |
$linecount += 1; | |
} | |
} | |
} | |
# Repeat the notice so users will see it | |
if (defined $self->{special_state} && $linecount > 0) { | |
print $notice; | |
} | |
# Print the diff if we're running with the -v option | |
print join("\n", @diff_info)."\n" if (@diff_info); | |
} | |
########################################################################### | |
# switch # | |
########################################################################### | |
package switch; | |
@switch::ISA = qw(subcommand); | |
INIT { | |
$COMMAND{switch} = { | |
new_command => 1, | |
section => 'projects', | |
about => 'Switch the working copy to another branch' | |
}; | |
$ALIAS{'sw'} = "switch"; | |
} | |
sub new { | |
my $class = shift; | |
my $self = $class->SUPER::new( | |
git_repo_needed => 1, | |
git_equivalent => 'checkout', | |
initial_commit_error_msg => "Error: Cannot create or switch branches " . | |
"until a commit has been made.", | |
@_); | |
bless($self, $class); | |
$self->{'help'} = " | |
Usage: | |
eg switch BRANCH | |
eg switch REVISION | |
Description: | |
Switches the working copy to another branch, or to another tag or | |
revision. (Switch is an operation that can be done locally, without any | |
network connectivity). | |
To list, create, or delete branches to switch to, use eg branch. To | |
list, create, or delete tags to switch to, use eg tag. To list, create, | |
or delete revisions, use eg log, eg commit, or eg reset, respectively. | |
:-) | |
Examples: | |
Switch to the 4.8 branch | |
\$ eg switch 4.8 | |
Switch the working copy to the v4.3 tag | |
\$ eg switch v4.3 | |
"; | |
$self->{'differences'} = ' | |
eg switch is a subset of the functionality of git checkout; the abilities | |
and flags for creating and switching branches are identical between the | |
two, just the name of the function is different. | |
The ability of git checkout to get older versions of files is not part of | |
eg switch; instead that ability can be found with eg revert. | |
'; | |
return $self; | |
} | |
sub preprocess { | |
my $self = shift; | |
if (scalar(@ARGV) == 0) { | |
print STDERR<<EOF; | |
No branch (or revision) to switch to specified! See the help for eg switch | |
and eg branch. The following branches exist, with the current branch marked | |
with an asterisk: | |
EOF | |
my $branch_obj = "branch"->new(); | |
$branch_obj->run(); | |
exit 1; | |
} | |
# Don't let them try to use eg switch to check out older revisions of files; | |
# this is just supposed to be a subset of git checkout | |
if (!grep {$_ =~ /^-/} @ARGV) { | |
die "Invalid arguments to eg switch: @ARGV\n" if @ARGV > 1; | |
Util::push_debug(new_value => 0); | |
my $valid_ref = RepoUtil::valid_ref($ARGV[0]); | |
Util::pop_debug(); | |
die "Invalid branch/revision reference: $ARGV[0]\n" if !$valid_ref; | |
} | |
$self->SUPER::preprocess(); | |
} | |
sub run { | |
my $self = shift; | |
@ARGV = Util::quote_args(@ARGV); | |
return ExecUtil::execute("$GIT_CMD checkout @ARGV", ignore_ret => 1); | |
} | |
########################################################################### | |
# tag # | |
########################################################################### | |
package tag; | |
@tag::ISA = qw(subcommand); | |
INIT { | |
$COMMAND{tag} = { | |
unmodified_behavior => 1, | |
extra => 1, | |
section => 'modification', | |
about => 'Provide a name for a specific version of the repository' | |
}; | |
} | |
sub new { | |
my $class = shift; | |
my $self = $class->SUPER::new(git_repo_needed => 1, @_); | |
bless($self, $class); | |
$self->{'help'} = " | |
Usage: | |
eg tag TAG [REVISION] | |
eg tag -d TAG | |
Description: | |
Create or delete a tag (i.e. a nickname) for a specific version of the | |
project. (Tags can also be annotated or digitally signed; see the 'See | |
Also section.) | |
Note that tags are local; creation of tags in a remote repository can be | |
accomplished by first creating a local tag and then pushing the new tag | |
to the remote repository using eg push. | |
Examples | |
List the available local tags | |
\$ eg tag | |
Create a new tag named good-version for the last commit. | |
\$ eg tag good-version | |
Create a new tag named version-2.0.3 for 3 versions before the last commit | |
(assuming one is on a branch named project-2.0) | |
\$ eg tag version-2.0.3 project-2.0~3 | |
Delete the tag named gooey | |
\$ eg tag -d gooey | |
Create a new tag named look_at_me in the default remote repository | |
\$ eg tag look_at_me | |
\$ eg push --tag look_at_me | |
Options: | |
-d | |
Delete the specified tag | |
"; | |
return $self; | |
} | |
########################################################################### | |
# track # | |
########################################################################### | |
package track; | |
@track::ISA = qw(subcommand); | |
INIT { | |
$COMMAND{track} = { | |
new_command => 1, | |
extra => 1, | |
section => 'projects', | |
about => 'Set which remote branch a local branch tracks' | |
}; | |
} | |
sub new { | |
my $class = shift; | |
my $self = $class->SUPER::new(git_repo_needed => 1, git_equivalent => '', @_); | |
bless($self, $class); | |
$self->{'help'} = " | |
Usage: | |
eg track (--show [LOCAL_BRANCH] | --show-all) | |
eg track [LOCAL_BRANCH] REMOTE_TRACKING_BRANCH | |
eg track --unset [LOCAL_BRANCH] | |
Description: | |
eg track helps manage which remote branches your local branches | |
track. Having a local branch track a remote branch means that when | |
the local branch is the active branch, that the corresponding remote | |
branch is the default push or pull location for eg push or eg pull. | |
There are three different things eg track can do, each corresponding to | |
one of the usage forms listed above: list which remote branch a local | |
branch tracks, make a local branch track some remote branch, or make a | |
local branch no longer track any remote branch. | |
If LOCAL_BRANCH is not specified, the currently active branch is | |
assumed. | |
Examples: | |
Show which remote branches all local branches are tracking | |
\$ eg track --show-all | |
Show which remote branch the local branch 'stable' tracks | |
\$ eg track --show stable | |
Make your currently active branch track the 'magic' branch of the 'jim' | |
repository (see 'eg help remote' for setting up nicknames like 'jim' for | |
remote repositories) | |
\$ eg track jim/magic | |
Make your branch 'bugfix' track the 'master' branch of the 'origin' | |
repository (note that 'origin' is the repository you cloned from, unless | |
you've explicitly changed that using the eg remote command or some other | |
low-level means): | |
\$ eg track bugfix origin/master | |
Have your 'random-changes' branch stop tracking any remote branch: | |
\$ eg track --unset random-changes | |
"; | |
$self->{'differences'} = ' | |
eg track is unique to eg; git does not have a similar command. | |
'; | |
return $self; | |
} | |
sub preprocess { | |
my $self = shift; | |
# Check for the --help arg | |
my $mode = "set"; | |
my ($local_branch, $remote_branch, $remote); | |
Getopt::Long::Configure("permute"); | |
my $result = main::GetOptions( | |
"--help" => sub { $self->help() }, | |
"show" => sub { $mode = "show"; }, | |
"show-all" => sub { $mode = "show-all"; }, | |
"unset" => sub { $mode = "unset"; }); | |
# Get the remote branch to track, if we're setting up tracking info | |
if ($mode eq "set") { | |
my ($ret, $remote_tracking_branch); | |
# Sanity checks | |
die "Error: Too many arguments. Run 'eg help track'.\n" if (@ARGV > 2); | |
die "Error: Insufficient arguments. Run 'eg help track'.\n" if (@ARGV < 1); | |
# Get the remote tracking branch, and sanity check it | |
$remote_tracking_branch = pop @ARGV; | |
die "Error: Invalid remote tracking branch '$remote_tracking_branch'\n" . | |
"Correct format for remote tracking branches is:\n" . | |
" REMOTENAME/REMOTEBRANCHNAME\n" if $remote_tracking_branch !~ '/'; | |
# Split remote tracking branch into remote name and remote branch name | |
($remote, $remote_branch) = split('/', $remote_tracking_branch, 2); | |
# Make sure the remote is a valid name | |
Util::push_debug(new_value => 0); | |
$ret = ExecUtil::execute("$GIT_CMD remote | grep '^$remote\$' > /dev/null", | |
ignore_ret => 1); | |
die "Error: '$remote' is not a valid remote name.\n" . | |
"(Use 'eg remote' to find valid remote names).\n" if $ret; | |
Util::pop_debug(); | |
} | |
# Get the local branch to operate on | |
$local_branch = shift @ARGV; | |
if (!$local_branch && $mode ne "show-all") { | |
$local_branch = RepoUtil::current_branch(); | |
} | |
# Make sure $local_branch is defined and has a valid value | |
Util::push_debug(new_value => 0); | |
if (!$local_branch) { | |
die "Error: There is no active branch, so it cannot track anything.\n"; | |
} elsif (!RepoUtil::valid_ref("refs/heads/$local_branch")) { | |
die "Error: The branch '$local_branch' is not (yet) a valid local branch.\n"; | |
} | |
Util::pop_debug(); | |
$self->{mode} = $mode; | |
$self->{branch} = $local_branch; | |
if ($mode eq "set") { | |
$self->{remote_branch} = "refs/heads/$remote_branch"; | |
$self->{remote} = $remote | |
} | |
} | |
sub run { | |
my $self = shift; | |
my ($ret, $output); | |
my ($mode, $branch, $remote_branch, $remote) = | |
($self->{mode}, $self->{branch}, $self->{remote_branch}, $self->{remote}); | |
if ($mode eq "show-all") { | |
$branch = ".*"; | |
$mode = "show"; | |
} | |
if ($mode eq "show") { | |
my %tracking; | |
# Get the remote tracking flags | |
($ret, $output) = ExecUtil::execute_captured( | |
"$GIT_CMD config --get-regexp '^branch\.$branch\.(remote|merge)'", | |
ignore_ret => 1); | |
chomp($output); | |
# Exit early if we're in --translate mode | |
if ($DEBUG == 2) { | |
print " >>(No more commands to run, " . | |
"just output to parse and print)<<\n"; | |
} | |
# Check if there are no matches | |
if ($ret) { | |
my $message = "Branch $branch is not"; | |
$message = "No branches are" if $branch eq ".*"; | |
print "$message set to track anything.\n"; | |
return 0; | |
} | |
# Fill the %tracking hash | |
my @lines = split('\n', $output); | |
foreach my $line (@lines) { | |
$line =~ /^branch\.(.*)\.(remote|merge) (.*)$/ | |
or die "Bad output '$line'!\n"; | |
$tracking{$1}{$2} = $3; | |
} | |
# Show all the tracking information | |
foreach my $bname (sort keys %tracking) { | |
my $remote = $tracking{$bname}{'remote'} || "''"; | |
my $remote_branch = $tracking{$bname}{'merge'} || "''"; | |
print "Branch $bname tracks $remote_branch of remote $remote.\n"; | |
} | |
return 0; | |
} elsif ($mode eq "set") { | |
$ret = ExecUtil::execute( | |
"$GIT_CMD config branch.$branch.remote $remote", ignore_ret => 1); | |
$ret |= ExecUtil::execute( | |
"$GIT_CMD config branch.$branch.merge $remote_branch", ignore_ret => 1); | |
if (!$ret && $DEBUG < 2) { | |
print "$branch now set to track " . | |
"branch $remote_branch of remote $remote.\n"; | |
} | |
return $ret; | |
} elsif ($mode eq "unset") { | |
ExecUtil::execute( | |
"$GIT_CMD config --unset branch.$branch.remote", ignore_ret => 1); | |
ExecUtil::execute( | |
"$GIT_CMD config --unset branch.$branch.merge", ignore_ret => 1); | |
if ($DEBUG < 2) { | |
print "$branch no longer tracks any remote branch.\n"; | |
} | |
return 0; | |
} | |
} | |
########################################################################### | |
# unstage # | |
########################################################################### | |
package unstage; | |
@unstage::ISA = qw(revert); | |
INIT { | |
$COMMAND{unstage} = { | |
new_command => 1, | |
extra => 1, | |
section => 'modification', | |
about => 'Mark changes in files as no longer ready for commit' | |
}; | |
} | |
sub new { | |
my $class = shift; | |
my $self = $class->SUPER::new(git_repo_needed => 1, git_equivalent => '', @_); | |
bless($self, $class); | |
unshift(@ARGV, "--") if scalar(@ARGV) > 0 && $ARGV[0] ne "--"; | |
unshift(@ARGV, "--staged"); | |
$self->{'help'} = " | |
Usage: | |
eg unstage [--] PATH... | |
Description: | |
Marks the changes in the specified files as not being ready to commit. | |
When a directory is passed, all files in that directory or any | |
subdirectory are recursively unstaged. | |
Note that this command is equivalent to 'eg revert --staged PATH...' | |
See 'eg help topic staging' for more details, including situations where | |
you might find staging useful. | |
Examples: | |
Create a new file, and mark it for addition to the repository, then change | |
your mind | |
\$ echo hi > there | |
\$ eg stage there | |
\$ eg unstage there | |
Modify an existing file, mark the modified version as being ready for commit, | |
then change your mind | |
\$ echo some extra info at end of file >> foo | |
\$ eg stage foo | |
\$ eg unstage foo | |
"; | |
$self->{'differences'} = ' | |
eg unstage is a command new to eg that is not part of git; it is implemented | |
on top of eg revert --staged, though it could as easily simply call through | |
to git reset. | |
'; | |
return $self; | |
} | |
# unstage inherits from revert, and simply modifies @ARGV in new(), so that | |
# revert will get run with the right arguments | |
########################################################################### | |
# update # | |
########################################################################### | |
package update; | |
@update::ISA = qw(subcommand); | |
INIT { | |
$COMMAND{update} = { | |
new_command => 1, | |
extra => 1, | |
section => 'compatibility', | |
about => 'Use antiquated workflow for refreshing working copy, if safe' | |
}; | |
} | |
sub new { | |
my $class = shift; | |
my $self = $class->SUPER::new( | |
git_repo_needed => 1, | |
git_equivalent => 'pull', | |
@_); | |
bless($self, $class); | |
$self->{'help'} = " | |
Usage: | |
eg update | |
Description: | |
Gets updates from the default remote repository if updating is safe, and | |
provides suggestions on proceeding otherwise. | |
eg update does not accept any options...other than --help. | |
Examples: | |
Get any updates from the remote repository | |
\$ eg update | |
"; | |
$self->{'differences'} = ' | |
eg update is unique to eg; it exists primarily to ease the transition for | |
cvs/svn users and to do something useful for them. In particular, eg | |
update is used just to do fast-forward updates when there are no local | |
changes; if anything more than this is needed, eg advises users to run | |
other commands. | |
Here are the special cases eg update detects and provides tailored | |
messages for: | |
* User has local commits => ask user to use eg pull instead | |
* User provides argument to update => tell user to use eg switch for | |
checking out an older revision or | |
eg revert to undo changes to a file | |
* User has locally deleted files => tell user to use eg revert to | |
undo local changes (and that they do | |
not need to delete the file first as | |
they did with cvs) | |
* User has local modifications => Tell user to stash or commit their | |
changes before pulling updates | |
* No default repository to contact => Tell user to run "eg remote add | |
origin REPOSITORY_URL" | |
* branch.BRANCH.merge not set and => Warn user that we do not know which | |
more than one remote branch branch to pull from and suggest eg | |
present pull or setting branch.BRANCH.merge | |
'; | |
return $self; | |
} | |
sub preprocess { | |
my $self = shift; | |
# Check for the --help arg | |
my $result=main::GetOptions("--help" => sub { $self->help() }); | |
# Abort if the user specified any args other than --help | |
if (@ARGV) { | |
print STDERR <<EOF; | |
Aborting: No arguments to update are allowed. If you are trying to switch | |
to a different revision, use eg switch. If you are trying to undo the changes | |
to a particular file, use eg revert. | |
EOF | |
exit 1; | |
} | |
# Check if there are local changes | |
my $status = RepoUtil::commit_push_checks(); | |
my $has_changes = $status->{has_staged_changes} || | |
$status->{has_unstaged_changes} || $status->{has_unmerged_changes}; | |
if ($has_changes) { | |
print STDERR <<EOF; | |
Aborting: You have local changes, and pulling updates could put your | |
working copy in a nonworking state. Consider committing your changes | |
before updating, or using eg stash to stash the changes away and reapply | |
them after the update. | |
EOF | |
if ($status->{output} =~ /^\s+deleted:/m) { | |
print STDERR "\n"; | |
print STDERR <<EOF; | |
NOTE: If you are trying to undo the changes in a file, just run | |
eg revert FILE | |
This works whether or not the file has been deleted. | |
EOF | |
} | |
exit 1; | |
} | |
if ($DEBUG) { | |
print " >>Commands to determine where to update from:\n"; | |
} | |
# Check if there is a default repository to pull from | |
# <This code mostly taken from pull, but "origin" serves as extra backup> | |
my $branch = RepoUtil::current_branch() || "HEAD"; | |
my $repo = RepoUtil::get_default_push_pull_repository(); | |
$self->{repository} = $repo; | |
$self->{local_branch} = $branch; | |
# Check if there is a default branch to pull | |
my $merge_branch = RepoUtil::get_config("branch.$branch.merge"); | |
if (!$merge_branch) { | |
# Check if the remote repository has exactly 1 branch...if so, return it, | |
# otherwise throw an error | |
my ($quoted_repo) = Util::quote_args("$self->{repository}"); | |
my ($ret, $output) = | |
ExecUtil::execute_captured("$GIT_CMD ls-remote -h $quoted_repo"); | |
if ($ret == 0) { | |
my @remote_refs = split('\n', $output); | |
if (@remote_refs == 1) { | |
# git ls-remote -h output changed at some point to include the sha1sum; | |
# we only want the refspec | |
if ($remote_refs[0] =~ /^[0-9a-f]+\s+(.*)/) { | |
$merge_branch = $1; | |
} else { | |
$merge_branch = $remote_refs[0]; | |
} | |
} | |
} | |
} | |
if (!$merge_branch) { | |
print STDERR <<EOF; | |
Error: It is not clear which remote branch to update from. | |
You can either use eg pull instead, or run | |
eg config branch.$branch.merge BRANCHANME | |
EOF | |
exit 1; | |
} | |
$self->{merge_branch} = $merge_branch; | |
} | |
sub run { | |
my $self = shift; | |
my $package_name = ref($self); | |
# Get value to set ORIG_HEAD to (unless we are on the initial commit) | |
Util::push_debug(new_value => 0); | |
my ($retval, $orig_sha1sum) = | |
ExecUtil::execute_captured("$GIT_CMD rev-parse HEAD", ignore_ret => 1); | |
my $has_orig_head = ($retval == 0); | |
Util::pop_debug(); | |
# Do the fetch && reset, making sure to set ORIG_HEAD | |
my ($ret, $output) = | |
ExecUtil::execute_captured("$GIT_CMD fetch $self->{repository} " . | |
"$self->{merge_branch}:$self->{local_branch}", | |
ignore_ret => 1); | |
if ($output =~ /\[rejected\].*\(non fast forward\)/) { | |
die "fatal: Cannot update because you have local commits; " . | |
"try 'eg pull' instead.\n"; | |
} elsif ($ret != 0) { | |
die "Error updating (output = $output); please report the bug, and\n" . | |
"try using 'eg pull' instead.\n"; | |
} else { | |
$ret = ExecUtil::execute_captured("$GIT_CMD reset --hard " . | |
"$self->{local_branch}"); | |
if ($has_orig_head && $DEBUG < 2) { | |
open(ORIG_HEAD, "> $self->{git_dir}/ORIG_HEAD"); | |
print ORIG_HEAD $output; | |
close(ORIG_HEAD); | |
} | |
print "Updated the current branch.\n" if ($DEBUG < 2); | |
} | |
return $ret; | |
} | |
########################################################################### | |
# version # | |
########################################################################### | |
package version; | |
@version::ISA = qw(subcommand); | |
BEGIN { | |
undef *version::new unless $] < 5.010; # avoid name clashing | |
} | |
sub new { | |
my $class = shift; | |
my $self = $class->SUPER::new(git_repo_needed => 0, @_); | |
bless($self, $class); | |
} | |
# Override help because we don't want to both definining $COMMAND{help} | |
sub help { | |
my $self = shift; | |
$self->{'help'} = " | |
Usage: | |
eg version | |
Description: | |
Show the current version of eg. | |
"; | |
open(OUTPUT, ">&STDOUT"); | |
print OUTPUT $self->{'help'}; | |
close(OUTPUT); | |
exit 0; | |
} | |
sub run { | |
my $self = shift; | |
print "eg version $VERSION\n" if $DEBUG < 2; | |
print " >>(We can print the eg version directly)<<\n" if $DEBUG == 2; | |
return $self->SUPER::run(); | |
} | |
#*************************************************************************# | |
#*************************************************************************# | |
#*************************************************************************# | |
# UTILITY CLASSES # | |
#*************************************************************************# | |
#*************************************************************************# | |
#*************************************************************************# | |
########################################################################### | |
# ExecUtil # | |
########################################################################### | |
package ExecUtil; | |
# _execute_impl is the guts for execute() and execute_captured() | |
sub _execute_impl ($@) { | |
my ($command, @opts) = @_; | |
my ($ret, $output); | |
my %options = ( ignore_ret => 0, capture_output => 0, @opts ); | |
if ($DEBUG) { | |
print " >>Running: '$command'<<\n"; | |
return $options{capture_output} ? (0, "") : 0 if $DEBUG == 2; | |
} | |
# | |
# Execute the relevant command, in a subdirectory if needed, and capturing | |
# stdout and stderr if wanted | |
# | |
if ($options{capture_output}) { | |
if ($options{capture_stdout_only}) { | |
$output = `$command`; | |
} else { | |
$output = `$command 2>&1`; | |
} | |
$ret = $?; | |
} elsif (defined $OUTFH) { | |
open(OUTPUT, "$command 2>&1 |"); | |
while (<OUTPUT>) { | |
print $OUTFH $_; | |
} | |
close(OUTPUT); | |
$ret = $?; | |
} else { | |
system($command); | |
$ret = $?; | |
} | |
# | |
# Determine retval | |
# | |
if ($ret != 0) { | |
if (($? & 127) == 2) { | |
print STDERR "eg: interrupted\n"; | |
} | |
elsif ($? & 127) { | |
print STDERR "eg: received signal ".($? & 127)."\n"; | |
} | |
else { | |
$ret = ($ret >> 8); | |
if (! $options{ignore_ret}) { | |
print STDERR "eg: failed ($ret)\n" if $DEBUG; | |
if ($ret >> 8 != 0) { | |
print STDERR "eg: command ($command) failed\n"; | |
} | |
elsif ($ret != 0) { | |
print STDERR "eg: command ($command) died (retval=$ret)\n"; | |
} | |
} | |
} | |
} | |
return $options{capture_output} ? ($ret, $output) : $ret; | |
} | |
# executes a command, capturing its output (both STDOUT and STDERR), | |
# returning both the return value and the output | |
sub execute_captured ($@) { | |
my ($command, @options) = @_; | |
return _execute_impl($command, capture_output => 1, @options); | |
} | |
# executes a command, returning its chomped output | |
sub output ($@) { | |
my ($command, @options) = @_; | |
my ($ret, $output) = execute_captured($command, @options); | |
die "Failed executing '$command'!\n" if $ret != 0; | |
chomp($output); | |
return $output | |
} | |
# executes a command (output not captured), returning its return value | |
sub execute ($@) { | |
my ($command, @options) = @_; | |
return _execute_impl($command, @options); | |
} | |
########################################################################### | |
# RepoUtil # | |
########################################################################### | |
package RepoUtil; | |
# current_branch: Get the currently active branch | |
sub current_branch () { | |
Util::push_debug(new_value => $DEBUG ? 1 : 0); | |
my ($ret, $output) = ExecUtil::execute_captured("$GIT_CMD symbolic-ref HEAD", | |
ignore_ret => 1); | |
Util::pop_debug(); | |
return undef if $ret != 0; | |
chomp($output); | |
$output =~ s#refs/heads/## || die "Current branch ($output) is funky.\n"; | |
return $output; | |
} | |
sub git_dir (%) { | |
my $options = {force => 0, @_}; # Hashref initialized as we're told | |
if (!$options->{force}) { | |
return $GITDIR if ($GITDIR); | |
} | |
Util::push_debug(new_value => 0); | |
my ($ret, $output) = | |
ExecUtil::execute_captured("$GIT_CMD rev-parse --git-dir", ignore_ret => 1); | |
Util::pop_debug(); | |
return undef if $ret != 0; | |
chomp($output); | |
return $output; | |
} | |
sub get_dirs () { | |
my $options = {force => 0, @_}; # Hashref initialized as we're told | |
if ($CURDIR && !$options->{force}) { | |
return ($CURDIR, $TOPDIR, $GITDIR); | |
} | |
Util::push_debug(new_value => 0); | |
$CURDIR = main::getcwd(); | |
# Get the toplevel repository directory | |
$TOPDIR = $CURDIR; | |
my ($ret, $rel_dir) = | |
ExecUtil::execute_captured("$GIT_CMD rev-parse --show-prefix", | |
ignore_ret => 1); | |
chomp($rel_dir); | |
if ($ret != 0) { | |
$TOPDIR = undef; | |
} elsif ($rel_dir) { | |
$rel_dir =~ s#/$##; # Remove trailing slash | |
$TOPDIR =~ s#\Q$rel_dir\E$##; | |
$TOPDIR =~ s#/$##; # Remove trailing slash | |
} | |
$GITDIR = git_dir(force => $options->{force}); | |
Util::pop_debug(); | |
return ($CURDIR, $TOPDIR, $GITDIR); | |
} | |
sub initial_commit () { | |
my @output = `$GIT_CMD rev-parse --verify -q HEAD`; | |
return $?; | |
} | |
sub valid_ref ($) { | |
my ($ref) = @_; | |
my ($ret, $sha1sum) = | |
ExecUtil::execute_captured("$GIT_CMD rev-parse --verify -q $ref", | |
ignore_ret => 1); | |
return $ret == 0; | |
} | |
sub files_modified () { | |
my @output = `$GIT_CMD commit --dry-run -a`; | |
return $? == 0; | |
} | |
sub merge_branches () { | |
my $git_dir = RepoUtil::git_dir(); | |
my $active_branch = RepoUtil::current_branch() || 'HEAD'; | |
my @merge_branches = | |
`cat "$git_dir/MERGE_HEAD" | $GIT_CMD name-rev --stdin`; | |
@merge_branches = map { /^[0-9a-f]* \((.*)\)$/ && $1 } @merge_branches; | |
my @all_merge_branches = ($active_branch, @merge_branches); | |
return @all_merge_branches; | |
} | |
sub get_special_state ($) { | |
my $git_dir = shift; | |
my $special_state; | |
if ( -d "$git_dir/rebase-apply" ) { | |
if ( -f "$git_dir/rebase-apply/rebasing" ) { | |
return "REBASE"; | |
} elsif ( -f "$git_dir/rebase-apply/applying" ) { | |
return "APPLY MAIL"; | |
} else { | |
return "APPLY MAIL OR REBASE"; | |
} | |
} elsif ( -f "$git_dir/rebase-merge/interactive" ) { | |
return "INTERACTIVE REBASE"; | |
} elsif ( -d "$git_dir/rebase-merge" ) { | |
return "MERGE REBASE"; | |
} elsif ( -f "$git_dir/MERGE_HEAD" ) { | |
return "MERGE"; | |
} elsif ( -f "$git_dir/BISECT_LOG" ) { | |
return "BISECT"; | |
} | |
return $special_state; | |
} | |
sub get_config ($) { | |
my $key = shift; | |
my ($ret, $output) = ExecUtil::execute_captured("$GIT_CMD config --get $key", | |
ignore_ret => 1); | |
return undef if $ret != 0; | |
chomp($output); | |
return $output; | |
} | |
sub set_config ($$) { | |
my $key = shift; | |
my $value = shift; | |
ExecUtil::execute("$GIT_CMD config $key \"$value\""); | |
} | |
# XXX unused? | |
sub unset_config ($) { | |
my $key = shift; | |
ExecUtil::execute("$GIT_CMD config --unset $key", ignore_ret => 1); | |
} | |
sub get_only_branch ($$) { | |
my $repository = shift; | |
my $check_type = shift; | |
if ($DEBUG == 2) { | |
print " >>Running: '$GIT_CMD ls-remote -h $repository'<<\n"; | |
return; | |
} | |
# Check if the remote repository has exactly 1 branch...if so, return it, | |
# otherwise throw an error | |
my ($quoted_repo) = Util::quote_args("$repository"); | |
my ($ret, $output) = | |
ExecUtil::execute_captured("$GIT_CMD ls-remote -h $quoted_repo", | |
capture_stdout_only => 1, ignore_ret => 1); | |
die "Aborting: Could not determine remote branches " . | |
"from repository '$repository'\n" if $ret != 0; | |
my @remote_refs = split('\n', $output); | |
die "'$repository' has no branches to $check_type!\n" if @remote_refs == 0; | |
my @remote_branches = map { m#[0-9a-f]+.*/(.*)$# && $1 } @remote_refs; | |
if (@remote_branches > 1) { | |
if ($check_type && $check_type eq "push") { | |
print STDERR <<EOF; | |
Aborting: It is not clear which remote branch to push changes to. Please | |
retry, specifying which branch(es) you want to push into from your current | |
EOF | |
} else { | |
print STDERR <<EOF; | |
Aborting: It is not clear which remote branch to pull changes from. Please | |
retry, specifying which branch(es) you want to be merged into your current | |
EOF | |
} | |
print STDERR <<EOF; | |
branch. Existing remote branches of | |
$repository | |
are | |
@remote_branches | |
EOF | |
exit 1; | |
} | |
return $remote_branches[0]; | |
} | |
sub get_default_push_pull_repository () { | |
my $branch = current_branch(); | |
if ($branch) { | |
my $default_remote = `$GIT_CMD config --get branch.$branch.remote`; | |
if ($default_remote) { | |
chomp($default_remote); | |
return $default_remote; | |
} | |
} | |
my @output = `$GIT_CMD config --get-regexp remote\.origin\.*`; | |
if (@output) { | |
return "origin"; | |
} else { | |
print STDERR <<EOF; | |
Aborting: No repository specified, and "origin" is not set up as a remote | |
repository. Please specify a repository or setup "origin" by running | |
eg remote add origin URL | |
EOF | |
exit 1; | |
} | |
} | |
sub print_new_unknowns ($) { | |
my ($new_unknowns) = @_; | |
my $num = scalar(@$new_unknowns); | |
print STDERR "New unknown files"; | |
print STDERR " include" if $num > 5; | |
print STDERR ":\n"; | |
my $i = 0; | |
foreach my $file (@$new_unknowns) { | |
print STDERR " $file\n"; | |
last if (++$i >= 5); | |
} | |
if ($num > 5) { | |
print STDERR "Run 'eg status' to see a full list of new unknown files.\n"; | |
} | |
exit 1; | |
} | |
# Error messages spewed by commit with non-clean working copies | |
sub commit_error_message_checks ($$$$) { | |
my ($commit_type, $check_for, $status, $new_unknown) = @_; | |
if ($check_for->{unmerged_changes} && $status->{has_unmerged_changes}) { | |
print STDERR <<EOF; | |
Aborting: You have unresolved conflicts from your merge (run 'eg status' to get | |
the list of files with conflicts). You must first resolve any conflicts and | |
then mark the relevant files as being ready for commit (see 'eg help stage' to | |
learn how to do so) before proceeding. | |
EOF | |
exit 1; | |
} | |
if ($check_for->{no_changes} && $status->{has_no_changes}) { | |
# There doesn't need to be any changes for a commit if we're trying to | |
# make a merge commit. | |
my $gitdir = git_dir(); | |
if ( ! -f "$gitdir/MERGE_HEAD" ) { | |
die "Aborting: Nothing to commit (run 'eg status' for details).\n"; | |
} | |
} | |
elsif ($check_for->{unknown} && $check_for->{partially_staged} && | |
$status->{has_new_unknown_files} && | |
$status->{has_unstaged_changes} && $status->{has_staged_changes}) { | |
print STDERR <<EOF; | |
Aborting: It is not clear which changes should be committed; you have new | |
unknown files, staged (explictly marked as ready for commit) changes, and | |
unstaged changes all present. Run 'eg help $commit_type' for details (in | |
particular, the -b option and either the -a or --staged options). | |
EOF | |
print_new_unknowns($new_unknown); | |
} | |
elsif ($check_for->{unknown} && $status->{has_new_unknown_files}) { | |
print STDERR <<EOF; | |
Aborting: You have new unknown files present and it is not clear whether | |
they should be committed. Run 'eg help $commit_type' for details (in | |
particular the -b option). | |
EOF | |
print_new_unknowns($new_unknown); | |
} | |
elsif ($check_for->{partially_staged} && | |
$status->{has_unstaged_changes} && $status->{has_staged_changes}) { | |
print STDERR <<EOF; | |
Aborting: It is not clear which changes should be committed; you have both | |
staged (explictly marked as ready for commit) changes and unstaged changes | |
present. Run 'eg help $commit_type' for details (in particular, the -a and | |
--staged options). | |
EOF | |
exit 1; | |
} | |
} | |
# Error messages spewed by push, publish for non-clean working copies | |
sub push_error_message_checks ($$$$) { | |
my ($clean_check_type, $check_for, $status, $new_unknown) = @_; | |
if ($check_for->{unmerged_changes} && $status->{has_unmerged_changes}) { | |
print STDERR <<EOF; | |
Aborting: You have unresolved conflicts from your merge (run 'eg status' to get | |
the list of files with conflicts). You should first resolve any conflicts | |
before trying to $clean_check_type your work elsewhere. | |
EOF | |
exit 1; | |
} | |
if ($check_for->{unknown} && $check_for->{changes} && | |
$status->{has_new_unknown_files} && | |
($status->{has_unstaged_changes} || $status->{has_staged_changes})) { | |
print STDERR <<EOF; | |
Aborting: You have new unknown files and changed files present. You should | |
first commit any such changes (and/or use the -b flag to bypass this check) | |
before trying to $clean_check_type your work elsewhere. | |
EOF | |
print_new_unknowns($new_unknown); | |
} | |
elsif ($check_for->{unknown} && $status->{has_new_unknown_files}) { | |
print STDERR <<EOF; | |
Aborting: You have new unknown files present. You should either commit these | |
new files before trying to $clean_check_type your work elsewhere, or use the | |
-b flag to bypass this check. | |
EOF | |
print_new_unknowns($new_unknown); | |
} | |
elsif ($check_for->{changes} && | |
($status->{has_unstaged_changes} || $status->{has_staged_changes})) { | |
print STDERR <<EOF; | |
Aborting: You have modified your files since the last commit. You should | |
first commit any such changes before trying to $clean_check_type your work | |
elsewhere, or use the -b flag to bypass this check. | |
EOF | |
exit 1; | |
} | |
} | |
# XXX called with 0 args or 2 args | |
sub commit_push_checks (;$$) { | |
my $clean_check_type = shift; | |
my $check_for = shift || {}; | |
my %status; | |
# Determine some useful directories | |
my ($cur_dir, $top_dir, $git_dir) = RepoUtil::get_dirs(); | |
# Save debug mode, print out commands used up front | |
if ($DEBUG) { | |
Util::push_debug(new_value => 0); | |
if ($clean_check_type) { | |
print " >>Commands to gather data for pre-$clean_check_type sanity checks:\n"; | |
} else { | |
print " >>Commands to gather data for sanity checks:\n"; | |
} | |
print " $GIT_CMD status\n"; | |
print " $GIT_CMD ls-files --unmerged\n"; | |
print " $GIT_CMD symbolic-ref HEAD\n" if $check_for->{no_branch}; | |
print " cd $top_dir && $GIT_CMD ls-files --exclude-standard --others --directory --no-empty-directory\n"; | |
} else { | |
Util::push_debug(new_value => 0); | |
} | |
# | |
# Determine which types of changes are present | |
# | |
my ($ret, $output) = ExecUtil::execute_captured("$EG_EXEC status", | |
ignore_ret => 1); | |
my @unmerged_files = `$GIT_CMD ls-files --unmerged`; | |
$status{has_new_unknown_files} = ($output =~ /^Newly created unknown files:$/m); | |
$status{has_unstaged_changes} = ($output =~ /^Changes not staged for commit/m); | |
$status{has_staged_changes} = ($output =~ /^Changes ready to be commit/m); | |
$status{has_unmerged_changes} = (scalar @unmerged_files > 0); | |
$status{has_no_changes} = !$status{has_unstaged_changes} && | |
!$status{has_staged_changes} && | |
!$status{has_unmerged_changes}; | |
$status{output} = $output; | |
# | |
# Determine which unknown files are "newly created" | |
# | |
my @new_unknown = `(cd "$top_dir" && $GIT_CMD ls-files --exclude-standard --others --directory --no-empty-directory)`; | |
chomp(@new_unknown); | |
if ($check_for->{unknown} && $status{has_new_unknown_files} && | |
-f "$git_dir/info/ignored-unknown") { | |
my @old_unknown_files = `cat "$git_dir/info/ignored-unknown"`; | |
chomp(@old_unknown_files); | |
@new_unknown = Util::difference(\@new_unknown, \@old_unknown_files); | |
$status{has_new_unknown_files} = (scalar(@new_unknown) > 0); | |
} | |
@new_unknown = | |
Util::reroot_paths__from_to_files($top_dir, $cur_dir, @new_unknown); | |
Util::pop_debug(); | |
if ($check_for->{no_branch}) { | |
my $rc = system('$GIT_CMD symbolic-ref -q HEAD >/dev/null'); | |
$status{has_no_branch} = $rc >> 8; | |
} | |
return \%status if !defined $clean_check_type; | |
if ($clean_check_type =~ /commit/) { | |
commit_error_message_checks($clean_check_type, | |
$check_for, | |
\%status, | |
\@new_unknown); | |
} elsif ($clean_check_type eq "push" || $clean_check_type eq "publish") { | |
push_error_message_checks($clean_check_type, | |
$check_for, | |
\%status, | |
\@new_unknown); | |
} else { | |
die "Unrecognized clean_check_type: $clean_check_type"; | |
} | |
return \%status; | |
} | |
sub record_ignored_unknowns () { | |
# Determine some useful directories | |
my ($cur_dir, $top_dir, $git_dir) = RepoUtil::get_dirs(); | |
mkdir "$git_dir/info" unless -d "$git_dir/info"; | |
open(OUTPUT, "> $git_dir/info/ignored-unknown"); | |
my @unknown_files = `cd "$top_dir" && $GIT_CMD ls-files --exclude-standard --others --directory --no-empty-directory`; | |
foreach my $file (@unknown_files) { | |
print OUTPUT $file; | |
} | |
close(OUTPUT); | |
} | |
sub parse_args ($@) { | |
my $multi_args = shift; | |
my (@args) = @_; | |
Util::push_debug(new_value => 0); | |
my (@opts, @revs, @files); | |
my $stop_marker_found; | |
# Get the opts | |
while (@args) { | |
my $arg = shift @args; | |
if ($arg eq "--") { | |
$stop_marker_found = 1; | |
last; | |
} | |
if ($arg =~ /^-/) { | |
push(@opts, $arg); | |
push(@opts, shift @args) if (grep {$arg eq $_} @$multi_args); | |
} else { | |
unshift(@args, $arg); | |
last; | |
} | |
} | |
# Get the revisions | |
if (!$stop_marker_found) { | |
while (@args) { | |
my $arg = shift @args; | |
if ($arg eq "--") { | |
$stop_marker_found = 1; | |
last; | |
} | |
my @revs_to_check = split('\.\.\.?', $arg); | |
my $found_invalid_ref = 0; | |
foreach my $ref (@revs_to_check) { | |
if (!RepoUtil::valid_ref($ref)) { | |
$found_invalid_ref = 1; | |
last; | |
} | |
} | |
if ($found_invalid_ref) { | |
unshift(@args, $arg); | |
last; | |
} else { | |
push(@revs, $arg); | |
} | |
} | |
} | |
# Get the files | |
@files = @args; | |
if (!$stop_marker_found && @files && $files[0] eq "--") { | |
shift @files; | |
} else { | |
# If "--" appears in argument list and not at front, then some bad | |
# revisions specified by the user showed up in our @files list since | |
# they didn't validate as existing revisions. | |
my $i = -1; | |
foreach my $file (@files) { | |
if ($file eq "--") { | |
die "Bad revision(s): @files[0..$i]\n"; | |
} | |
++$i; | |
} | |
} | |
## FIXME: I should add sanity checking: whether there are too many revs | |
## specified (or too few), whether any of @revs are also valid filenames, | |
## and maybe whether all @files refer to valid paths (maybe including | |
## only allowing files instead of also directories) | |
Util::pop_debug(); | |
return (\@opts, \@revs, \@files); | |
} | |
sub get_revert_info ($@) { | |
my ($revision, @quoted_files) = @_; | |
my $marker = ""; | |
$marker = "--" if (@quoted_files); | |
my @newly_added_files; | |
my @new_since_rev_files; | |
my @other_files = @quoted_files; | |
# If this is a merge commit... | |
my ($cur_dir, $top_dir, $git_dir) = RepoUtil::get_dirs(); | |
my @merge_branches; | |
if (-f "$git_dir/MERGE_HEAD") { | |
@merge_branches = `cat "$git_dir/MERGE_HEAD"`; | |
chomp(@merge_branches); | |
} | |
# Define how to get newly added files since a commit, or new files added | |
# between two commits | |
my $get_newish_files = sub { | |
my $ref1 = shift; | |
my $ref2 = shift; | |
my (@files, @lines); | |
if (defined $ref2) { | |
@lines = `$GIT_CMD diff-tree -r $ref1 $ref2 $marker @quoted_files`; | |
} else { | |
@lines = `$GIT_CMD diff-index --cached $ref1 $marker @quoted_files`; | |
} | |
foreach my $line (@lines) { | |
# Check for newly added files (not previously tracked but now staged) | |
if ($line =~ /:000000 [0-9]+ 0{40} [0-9a-f]{40} A\t(.*)/) { | |
push(@files, $1); | |
} | |
} | |
# git diff-tree and diff-index return files relative to $top_dir, but | |
# we want filenames relative to $cur_dir | |
if ($top_dir ne $cur_dir) { | |
return Util::reroot_paths__from_to_files($top_dir, $cur_dir, @files); | |
} else { | |
return @files; | |
} | |
}; | |
# Now, get the files added to the index since the "last commit" | |
@newly_added_files = &$get_newish_files("HEAD"); | |
for my $branch (@merge_branches) { | |
my @files = &$get_newish_files($branch); | |
@newly_added_files = Util::intersect(\@newly_added_files, \@files); | |
} | |
if (@newly_added_files) { | |
@newly_added_files = Util::quote_args(@newly_added_files); | |
@other_files = Util::difference(\@quoted_files, \@newly_added_files); | |
} | |
# Now, get the files that exist in the "last commit" but not the specified | |
# revision. | |
if ($revision ne "HEAD" || @merge_branches) { | |
my @branches; | |
push(@branches, "HEAD"); | |
push(@branches, @merge_branches); | |
foreach my $branch (@branches) { | |
my @files = &$get_newish_files($revision, $branch); | |
@new_since_rev_files = Util::union(\@new_since_rev_files, \@files); | |
} | |
if (@new_since_rev_files) { | |
@new_since_rev_files = Util::quote_args(@new_since_rev_files); | |
@other_files = Util::difference(\@other_files, \@new_since_rev_files); | |
} | |
} | |
return (\@newly_added_files, \@new_since_rev_files, \@other_files); | |
} | |
########################################################################### | |
# Util # | |
########################################################################### | |
package Util; | |
# Return items in @$lista but not in @$listb | |
sub difference ($$) { | |
my ($lista, $listb) = @_; | |
my %count; | |
foreach my $item (@$lista) { $count{$item}++ }; | |
foreach my $item (@$listb) { $count{$item}-- }; | |
my @ret = grep { $count{$_} == 1 } keys %count; | |
} | |
# Return items in both @$lista and in @$listb | |
sub intersect ($$) { | |
my ($lista, $listb) = @_; | |
my %original; | |
my @both = (); | |
map { $original{$_} = 1 } @$lista; | |
@both = grep { $original{$_} } @$listb; | |
return @both; | |
} | |
# Return items in either @$lista or @$listb | |
sub union ($$) { | |
my ($lista, $listb) = @_; | |
my %either; | |
map { $either{$_} = 1 } @$lista; | |
map { $either{$_} = 1 } @$listb; | |
return keys %either; | |
} | |
# Returns whether @$list contains $item | |
sub contains ($$) { | |
my ($list, $item) = @_; | |
my $found = 0; | |
foreach my $elem (@$list) { | |
if ($item eq $elem) { | |
$found = 1; | |
last; | |
} | |
} | |
return $found; | |
} | |
sub uniquify_list (@) { | |
my @list = @_; | |
my %unique; | |
@unique{@list} = @list; | |
return keys %unique; | |
} | |
sub split_ssh_repository ($) { | |
my ($repository) = @_; | |
my ($user, $machine, $port, $path); | |
if ($repository =~ m#^ssh://((?:.*?@)?)([^/:]*)(?::(\d+))?(.*)$#) { | |
$user = $1; | |
$machine = $2; | |
$port = defined $3 ? "-p $3" : ""; | |
$path = $4; | |
$path =~ s#^/~#~#; # Change leading /~ into plain ~ | |
} elsif ($repository =~ m#^((?:.*?@)?)([^:]*):(.*)$#) { | |
$user = $1; | |
$machine = $2; | |
$port = ""; | |
$path = $3; | |
} | |
return ($user, $machine, $port, $path); | |
} | |
sub quote_args (@) { | |
my @args = @_; | |
# Quote arguments with special characters so that when we | |
# do something like | |
# system("$command hardcoded_arg1 @args") | |
# that the @args will get passed correctly to the shell command $command | |
my @newargs; | |
foreach my $arg (@args) { | |
my $quotes_needed = 0; | |
if (!$arg || $arg =~ /[;'"<>()\[\]|`* \n\$\\~]/) { | |
$quotes_needed = 1; | |
} | |
$arg =~ s#\\#\\\\#g; # Backslash escape backslashes | |
$arg =~ s#"#\\"#g; # Backslash escape quotes | |
$arg =~ s#`#\\`#g; # Backslash escape backticks | |
$arg =~ s#\$#\\\$#g; # Backslash escape dollar signs | |
$arg = '"'.$arg.'"' if $quotes_needed; | |
push(@newargs, $arg); | |
} | |
return @newargs; | |
} | |
# Have git's rev-parse command parse @args and decide which part is files, | |
# which is options, and which are revisions. Further, have git translate | |
# revisions into full 40-character hexadecimal commit ids. | |
sub git_rev_parse (@) { | |
my @args = @_; | |
Util::push_debug(new_value => 0); | |
my @quoted_args = Util::quote_args(@args); | |
my ($ret, $output) = | |
ExecUtil::execute_captured("$GIT_CMD rev-parse @quoted_args", | |
ignore_ret => 1); | |
if ($ret != 0) { | |
$output =~ /^(fatal:.*)$/m && print STDERR "$1\n"; | |
$output =~ /^(Use '--'.*)$/m && print STDERR "$1\n"; | |
exit 1; | |
} | |
my @opts = | |
split('\n', `$GIT_CMD rev-parse --no-revs --flags @quoted_args`); | |
my @revs = | |
split('\n', `$GIT_CMD rev-parse --revs-only @quoted_args`); | |
my @files = | |
split('\n', `$GIT_CMD rev-parse --no-revs --no-flags @quoted_args`); | |
# Translate sha1sums back to human specified version of revisions. Note that | |
# something like "REV1...REV2" is translated into "SHA1 SHA2 ^SHA3", so one | |
# argument may have become 3 revisions. options and files should translate | |
# one to one, though, so we can back out the original revision names. | |
@revs = @args[scalar(@opts)..scalar(@args)-scalar(@files)-1]; | |
Util::pop_debug(); | |
return (\@opts, \@revs, \@files); | |
} | |
# reroot_paths__from_to_files | |
# Given | |
# $from absolute path of directory files were originally relative to | |
# $to absolute path of directory you want files relative to | |
# @files list of files with paths relative to $from | |
# returns a list of files with paths relative to $to | |
# For example: | |
# reroot_paths__from_to_files("/home", "/home/newren", ('bar', '../foo')) | |
# would return | |
# ('../bar', '../../foo') | |
# Another example: | |
# reroot_paths__from_to_files("/tmp/junk", "/tmp", ('bar', '../foo')) | |
# would return | |
# ('junk/bar', 'foo') | |
sub reroot_paths__from_to_files ($$@) { | |
my ($from, $to, @files) = @_; | |
$from =~ s#/*$#/#; # Make sure $from ends with exactly 1 slash | |
$to =~ s#/*$#/#; # Make sure $to ends with exactly 1 slash | |
my @new_paths; | |
foreach my $file (@files) { | |
# Get the old path for the file, removing any "PATH/.." sequences | |
my $oldpath = "$from$file"; | |
$oldpath =~ s#/+#/#; # Remove duplicate slashes in path | |
$oldpath = "$1$2" while $oldpath =~ m#^(.*?)(?!\.\./)[^/]+/\.\./(.*)$#; | |
# Find what $oldpath and $to have in common | |
my $common_leading_path = ""; | |
my $combined = "$oldpath\n$to"; | |
if ($combined =~ m#^(.*/).*\n\1.*$#) { | |
$common_leading_path = $1; | |
} | |
# Now get the unique parts of $oldpath and $to | |
my $remainder_old_path = substr($oldpath, length($common_leading_path)); | |
my $remainder_to = substr($to, length($common_leading_path)); | |
# Do an s/DIRECTORY_NAME/../ on remainder_to, since we want to know | |
# the relative path for getting from $to to $from. | |
$remainder_to =~ s#[^/]+#..#g; | |
push(@new_paths, "$remainder_to$remainder_old_path"); | |
} | |
return @new_paths; | |
} | |
{ | |
my @debug_values; | |
sub push_debug (@) { | |
my @opts = @_; | |
my %options = ( @opts ); | |
die "Called without new_value!" if !defined($options{new_value}); | |
my $old_value = $DEBUG; | |
push(@debug_values, $DEBUG); | |
$DEBUG = $options{new_value}; | |
return $old_value; | |
} | |
sub pop_debug () { | |
$DEBUG = pop @debug_values; | |
} | |
} | |
#*************************************************************************# | |
#*************************************************************************# | |
#*************************************************************************# | |
# MAIN PROGRAM # | |
#*************************************************************************# | |
#*************************************************************************# | |
#*************************************************************************# | |
package main; | |
sub launch ($) { | |
my $job=shift; | |
$job = $ALIAS{$job} || $job; | |
my $orig_job = $job; | |
$job =~ s/-/_/; # Packages must have underscores, commands often have dashes | |
# Create the action to execute | |
my $action; | |
$action = $job->new() if $job->can("new"); | |
$action = subcommand->new(command => $orig_job) if !$job->can("new"); | |
my $ret; | |
# preprocess | |
if ($action->can("preprocess")) { | |
# Do not skip commands normally executed during the preprocess stage, | |
# since they just gather data. | |
Util::push_debug(new_value => $DEBUG ? 1 : 0); | |
print ">>Stage: Preprocess<<\n" if $DEBUG; | |
$action->preprocess(); | |
Util::pop_debug(); | |
} | |
# run & postprocess | |
if (!$action->can("postprocess")) { | |
print ">>Stage: Run<<\n" if $DEBUG; | |
$ret = $action->run(); | |
} else { | |
my $output = ""; | |
open($OUTFH, '>', \$output) || die "eg $job: cannot open \$OUTFH: $!"; | |
print ">>Stage: Run<<\n" if $DEBUG; | |
$ret = $action->run(); | |
print ">>Stage: Postprocess<<\n" if $DEBUG; | |
$action->postprocess($output); | |
} | |
# wrapup | |
if ($action->can("wrapup")) { | |
print ">>Stage: Wrapup<<\n" if $DEBUG; | |
$action->wrapup(); | |
} | |
$ret = 0 unless ($ret); | |
exit $ret; | |
} | |
sub version () { | |
my $version_obj = "version"->new(); | |
$version_obj->run(); | |
exit 0; | |
} | |
# User gave invalid input; print an error_message, then show command usage | |
sub help (;$) { | |
my $error_message = shift; | |
my %extra_args; | |
# Clear out any arguments so that help object doesn't think we asked for | |
# a specific help topic. | |
@ARGV = (); | |
# Print any error message we were given | |
if (defined $error_message) { | |
print STDERR "$error_message\n\n"; | |
$extra_args{exit_status} = 1; | |
} | |
# Now show help. | |
my $help_obj = "help"->new(%extra_args); | |
$help_obj->run(); | |
} | |
sub main () { | |
# | |
# Get any global options | |
# | |
Getopt::Long::Configure("no_bundling", "no_permute", | |
"pass_through", "no_auto_abbrev", "no_ignore_case"); | |
my @global_args = (); | |
my $record_arg = sub { push(@global_args, "--$_[0]"); }; | |
my $record_args = sub { push(@global_args, "--$_[0]=$_[1]"); }; | |
my $result=GetOptions( | |
"--debug" => sub { $DEBUG = 1 }, | |
"--help" => sub { help() }, | |
"--translate" => sub { $DEBUG = 2 }, | |
"--version" => sub { version() }, | |
"exec-path:s" => sub { $_[1] ? &$record_args(@_) | |
: &$record_arg(@_); }, | |
"c:s" => sub { push(@global_args, "-c", $_[1]); }, | |
"paginate|p" => sub { $USE_PAGER = 1; &$record_arg(@_) }, | |
"no-pager" => sub { $USE_PAGER = 0; &$record_arg(@_) }, | |
"bare" => sub { &$record_arg(@_) }, | |
"git-dir=s" => sub { &$record_args(@_) }, | |
"work-tree=s" => sub { &$record_args(@_) }, | |
"no-replace-objects" => sub { &$record_arg(@_) }, | |
); | |
# Make sure all global args are passed to eg subprocesses as well... | |
@global_args = Util::quote_args(@global_args); | |
$GIT_CMD .= " @global_args"; | |
$EG_EXEC .= " @global_args" if @global_args; | |
# | |
# Fix the environment, if needed (eg testsuite invokes eg via 'git', but | |
# eg needs to be able to call the real git). | |
# WARNING: This does not handle mutual recursion (eg in PATH twice as 'git') | |
# | |
if ($0 =~ m#(.*)/git$#) { | |
my $baddir = $1; | |
my @newpaths = grep {$_ ne $baddir} split(/:/, $ENV{PATH}); | |
$ENV{PATH} = join(':', @newpaths); | |
} | |
# Sanity check the arguments | |
exit ExecUtil::execute($GIT_CMD) if $GIT_CMD =~ m#--exec-path$#; | |
die "eg: Error parsing arguments. (Try 'eg help')\n" if !$result; | |
die "eg: No subcommand specified. (Try 'eg help')\n" if @ARGV < 1; | |
die "eg: Invalid argument '$ARGV[0]'. (Try 'eg help')\n" | |
if ($ARGV[0] !~ m#^[a-z]#); | |
# | |
# Now execute the action | |
# | |
my $action = shift @ARGV; | |
launch($action); | |
} | |
main(); |
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