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Git
Table of Contents
- Developer Workflow
- Developer Configuration
- Resources
- History
Sahana Eden uses the Git DVCS & hosts active branches on GitHub
Developer Workflow
Fork the Sahana Eden Repository
If you've not used GitHub before:
- Sign-up for an account on GitHub
- Set up git on you your computer by following these instructions.
Note: In order to contribute code back to the Eden project, you need to "push" your changes to GitHub, and GitHub requires you to authenticate for that. The instructions describe authenticating using a password. If you don't want to do do that, you can use SSH keys instead, but the SSH setup is longer, and they do not provide instructions for Windows. If you're using Windows, you can follow these instructions. They're for Launchpad, not GitHub. The only difference is, while you're doing Step 5 (which has you copy the "OpenSSH" formatted public key to the clipboard), go over to the GitHub instructions, to the "Add your SSH key to GitHub" section. Ignore the Linux commands and do the part that saves your public key in your GitHub account. If you want, you can also save that public key in a file. - There is on-line help at GitHub
Then get your own copy of the Eden repository (repo) on both GitHub and your local machine:
- Fork the Eden repo at: https://github.com/flavour/eden/fork
- Use git to clone your own new fork down to your PC, as follows:
cd web2py/applications git clone git@github.com:mygitusername/eden.git cd eden git remote add upstream git://github.com/flavour/eden.git
https://docs.google.com/drawings/d/1TppJKr9Qrq6I2KpkljRixx5gYh1seRqCXk8KDWdeIF0/edit
Ongoing Coding
Summary of coding workflow using git
cd web2py/applications/eden # Update your local repository with latest code from the trunk repository on GitHub git pull --rebase upstream # Write Code # Quick review of code (no test code left in, etc) git diff # Check for any new files which need adding git status git add . # Commit Code (Note, no pushes to GitHub here) git commit -am "My Changes: Part 1" . . . git commit -am "My Changes: Part N" # Pull in changes from trunk git pull --rebase upstream # Resolve any conflicts (see below for how) # Commit fixed code git add . git commit -a # Review commits git log # Squash commits # Use rebase to squash commits to as few as possible to keep revision history clean & make it easier to review the work # http://gitready.com/advanced/2009/02/10/squashing-commits-with-rebase.html git rebase -i HEAD~N # Where N = Number of commits to squash # Push to your branch on GitHub git push
Graphical representation of workflow
https://docs.google.com/drawings/d/1KElPNMq_annNSi_2f5r9grD-c0c_aZh1KBAOqSAtuPA/edit
Once you have pushed to your branch on GitHub, you will likely want this to be merged with Trunk - this should be done via a Pull Request. This is done on GitHub:
- https://github.com/mygitusername/eden/pull/new/<mychanges>(the branch name)
https://docs.google.com/drawings/d/1QmGeuQvFpg3pDQpM9xu81V7MlVy4uU8EzVIRqQ14MwU/edit
Detailed descriptions of workflow steps
Rebasing from Trunk
As you are working on a change, other changes will likely be added to the trunk repository. You may need some of those changes, or may just want to be sure your work fits in smoothly with them, or you may be preparing to submit your changes as a pull request to trunk. In these cases, you'll want to update the branch you're working on to include new revisions from trunk that are not yet in your local repository. The process for doing this is first "fetching" -- copying from the remote repository -- the new revisions from trunk, then either "rebasing" or "merging" to include them in the branch you want to update.
Although rebasing and merging may end up with the same code, the process and "side effects" differ:
- Rebasing lifts your commits off of the common base your branch shared with trunk, then inserts the new trunk revisions, then applies your commits on top of those. Merging leaves your commits where they are, and adds the trunk revisions alongside them.
- Rebasing ends with a linear sequence of commits -- each commit has a single child. Merging ends up with a directed acyclic graph of commits -- some commits will have multiple child commits, or multiple parents.
- If you encounter conflicts while rebasing, you will fix up each of your commits to deal with the conflicts, so when you're done, each of your commits will still be self-contained, free of conflicts, and consistent with the trunk commits that are its ancestors. Conflicts during a merge are handled together at the end of the merge, in a separate "merge commit" that consists of all the new commits that came from trunk, along with any edits you make to deal with merge conflicts. Your commits will still contain their conflicts -- those were fixed externally.
- There is also a difference in how your commits will appear in the log, and in particular, what order they will be in once they are accepted into trunk. Rebased commits will be shown after the new trunk commits -- this is the same order in which users of the code will receive the changes if they are updating their deployments. Merged commits are shown at the time they were written, not at the time they became publicly available in trunk.
For these reasons, it is preferable to use rebase rather than merge to include trunk changes into your local repository.
Regardless of whether you rebase or merge, neither of these is a "safe" operation -- you may make a mistake during the process, or encounter errors or conflicts. So before starting, a simple way to be sure you can go back to your unmodified branch is to make a copy of the branch.
The following summary of commands assumes you are working on branch mychanges and want to save your work on
branch mychanges_backup. It also assumes you have a master branch that mirrors branch master in trunk, and
that you have a remote called upstream that points to the trunk repository. This setup makes it less
convenient to use the git pull --rebase
command, as that (now) requires that the remote and local
branch have the same name. Here we show an alternative that does a pull into your local master branch, then
a rebase from your updated master branch into your mychanges branch.
# Check whether you have uncommitted changes git status # Commit any new and changed files git add ... git commit ... # Make a backup branch git checkout -b mychanges_backup # Update your master branch (this is assumed to have only trunk commits on it) git checkout master git pull upstream master # Switch back to the branch you want to update git checkout mychanges # Update your mychanges branch from your (updated) local master git rebase master # If you get a conflict on one of your commits, the rebase will stop and leave files with the # conflicts marked. See the following section about how to resolve it. After you have edited # any files that need to be changed, git add them and optionally commit them, then continue the # rebase. # Edit as per next section... git add ... git rebase --continue # If, at any point before the end of the rebase, something goes wrong, or you're just not sure # what you're doing: git rebase --abort
Resolving Merge Conflicts
If you encounter conflicts during the rebase, the conflicts will be tagged in the files with:
<<<<<<< HEAD # Commits from Trunk ======= # Commits from <mychanges> >>>>>>> "My Changes"
You can correct these conflict in your code text editor, then add them andcontinue the rebase:
git add -u git rebase --continue
You can create the .THIS & .OTHER files using:
git show :2:file.txt > file.txt.THIS git show :3:file.txt > file.txt.OTHER
You can use the changes to a file in the remote branch (theirs / OTHER):
git checkout --theirs filename.c git add filename.c git commit
...or the changes to a file in your local branch (ours / THIS):
git checkout --ours filename.c git add filename.c git commit
...or the changes to ALL files in the remote branch (theirs / OTHER):
git checkout --theirs . # checkout our local version of all files git add -u # mark all conflicted files as merged git commit # commit the merge
Or the changes to ALL files in your local branch (ours / THIS)
git checkout --ours . # checkout our local version of all files git add -u # mark all conflicted files as merged git commit # commit the merge
Although on Windows this seems by default to produce UTF-16 files! ('UCS-2 Little Endian'). A script to make this process easier for Windows users is attached: merge.cmd
Squashing commits
# Stash your current work git stash # N = number of commits to squash git reset HEAD@{N} git add -A git commit -am 'Your commit message for the one-big-commit' # Push to your branch on GitHub, overwriting any previous code there git push origin +master # Restore your work in-progress git stash pop
Undoing a commit
You may need to remove a commit you've made, either if you find you don't want it, or if it needs to be fixed. (Note if your commit has already been pushed to GitHub and accepted into the trunk, then you should use a new commit to take out unwanted changes. This section only applies if you're fixing up your repository before the changes are in trunk.)
If you want to fix up your latest commit, you can undo the commit, and unstage the files in it, by doing:
git reset HEAD~1
This will return your repository to its state before the git add commands that staged the files. Your changes will be in your working directory. HEAD~1 refers to the commit below the current tip of the branch.
If you want to uncommit N commits, but keep the code changes in your working directory:
git reset HEAD~N
If you want to get rid of your latest commit, and do not want to keep the code changes, you can do a "hard" reset.
git reset --hard HEAD~1
Likewise, if you want to discard the last N commits, and do not want to keep the code changes:
git reset --hard HEAD~N
If you are not entirely sure you want to discard the code changes, but need a branch without them, you can simply check out a new branch that ends at the last commit you want. E.g. to make a branch that ends N commits before the latest:
git checkout -b <new_branch_name> HEAD~N
See below for more on using multiple branches. To remove a commit from your repository on GitHub, use either the hard reset or new branch method above to reset your local repository to the commit you want on GitHub. GitHub will not let you overwrite a branch with a different history unless you tell it to with the --force option. If your local and remote branches have the same names, you only need to specify the branch name once, without the ":".
git push --force origin <local_branch_name>:<github_branch_name>
Code review on GitHub
Getting your changes accepted into the trunk repository
Before submitting code to be included in the trunk repository, several things should be done:
- Rebase from trunk and deal with any merge conflicts.
- Squash all commits in your change into one commit. This removes any false steps and re-working, and packages the related work together.
- Test after rebasing.
- Push your changes to your own fork of Eden on GitHub.
- Ask for a code review if appropriate.
Once you are ready to submit your work, make a pull request: Click Pull Requests on the right side of the GitHub page for your repo then the New Pull Request button. Note if you already have a pull request open, then changes you push to the branch that is the source of the pull request will be included in it automatically -- you do not need to close the pull request and make a new one.
Working with multiple branches
If you are working on several tasks, or want to make temporary changes for experimentation, or want to back up your work before doing a rebase or reset, you can do that by having multiple branches in your repository and switching between them. Each branch is a sequence of commits leading up to a specific head commit (which can be referred to as HEAD without confusion since git knows which branch you're referring to by which is checked out). It is very common for git users to switch between branches, and this is a fast operation in git.
To make a new branch equivalent to the current branch:
git checkout -b <new_branch_name>
To switch from one branch to another, just check out the other branch: ((( git checkout <other_branch> }}}
Note git will not let you switch to a different branch if you have uncommitted changes in tracked files. To get around this, the simplest thing to do is to commit your modified files in a temporary commit, then undo that commit later. You can also "stash" your work, which actually makes a commit on a special branch. Since it's easy to forget what's in the stash, unless you're only stashing briefly, a real commit with an informative message is probably better.
To list all the branches in the repository:
git branch -v
The -v (for verbose) tells git to show not just the branch names, but also the head commit's revision number and message.
To rename the current branch:
git branch -m <new_branch_name>
To rename a branch that is not checked out:
git branch -m <old_branch_name> <new_branch_name>
To delete a branch:
git branch -d <branch_to_delete>
Under some circumstances, git will complain when you try to rename or delete a branch. If you are sure you want to do it, use -M instead of -m for rename, or -D instead of -d for delete.
If you will be working on a specific branch for a particular event (e.g. a deployment or hackathon), then you can add that branch to your local repository:
git remote add <branch_name> https://github.com/flavour/<branch_name>.git git fetch <branch_name>
Now you have both the master branch from the trunk repository, and the specific branch <branch_name>.
You can push branches other than master to your GitHub repository.
git push -u origin <branch_name>
Note it is good to specify the branch name to push, else git will try to push all of them. The -u tells git to make your local branch "track" the remote branch. This is only needed on the first push to that branch.
If you need a specific revision of the current branch, your can check out that revision on a new branch:
git checkout -b <revision> <branch_name>
(git requires a name for a branch if you want to preserve commits.)
Creating a second working directory and repository
If you wish to have multiple directories containing different branches, you can run these as separate web2py applications. (Note this is not a standard manner of working when using git, and is generally only needed if you are working on multiple projects at the same time, and need to preserve their databases and other state.)
- Create a fresh clone:
cd web2py/applications git clone git@github.com:flavour/eden.git <new_repository>
- Setup a new repository on GitHub -- see: https://github.com/repositories/new
- Add remotes.
git remote add upstream git@github.com:flavour/eden.git git remote add origin git@github.com:<my_git_username>/<new_repository>.git
- Push to GitHub:
cd <new_repository> git push -u origin master
Using Patches
If you have made changes to one branch & wish to backport them to another branch, then this is done most easily using a Patch:
Story Branches
The Story Branch pattern allows pushing interim work to GitHub for review & also allowing contributing quick fixes to Trunk without disturbing your longer-term work. (The linked story branch description uses a Ruby on Rails (RoR) project as an example, so you'll see RoR commands in the post, such as rake
or rake db:migrate
. In most cases where an RoR command is shown, an appropriate Eden substitute will be to update from Trunk and run tests.)
git checkout -b <mychanges> git commit -a ... git commit -a # Quick review of code (no test code left in, etc) git diff master...HEAD
https://docs.google.com/drawings/d/1Vhvm1EmqWOVNZkZsiJ0MLLpdTl6H_ya263Tdb2HK1N0/edit
Developer Configuration
Tell git your name and email, which it uses to identify you as the author of commits. And tell it your account on GitHub.
git config --global user.name "Your Name" git config --global user.email your@email.com git config --global github.user yourgithubusername git config --global github.token yourtoken
These are examples of other settings you can change. The values shown are not necessarily ones you'll want to use. For instance, the choice of diff and merge tools is contentious -- use your favorites.
git config --global core.editor "'C:/Program Files (x86)/Notepad++/notepad++.exe' -multiInst -notabbar -nosession -noPlugin" git config --global merge.tool diffmerge git config --global diff.tool diffmerge git config --global difftool.diffmerge.cmd 'C:/Program Files (x86)/Git/etc/wrappers/git-diff-diffmerge-wrapper.sh' "$LOCAL" "$REMOTE" git config --global difftool.prompt false git config --global merge.tool diffmerge git config --global mergetool.diffmerge.cmd 'C:/Program Files (x86)/Git/etc/wrappers/git-merge-diffmerge-wrapper.sh' "$PWD/$LOCAL" "$PWD/$BASE" "$PWD/$REMOTE" "$PWD/$MERGED" git config --global mergetool.prompt false git config --global mergetool.trustExitCode false git config --global mergetool.keepBackup false
An alternative to diffmerge is Perforce's free P4V:
Windows
Install Console & Diffmerge & configure Powershell.
Developer Tools
.gitattributes
runs version.py
to update the VERSION
file on commit
Possibly we could add a pre-commit hook to run tests, e.g. based on http://tech.yipit.com/2011/11/16/183772396/ or http://blog.penzilla.net/2011/09/git-pre-commit-hook-for-python-now-with.html
Notifications
You can subscribe to commits via RSS, e.g. to subscribe to Trunk, use:
If you wish to receive email notification of commits, then you can use an Email to RSS service like:
Resources
- Community Book: http://book.git-scm.com
- Tips & Tricks: http://gitready.com
History
Why?
Sahana Eden has decided to move from Bzr/LaunchPad to Git/GitHub
- The current repository is huge & bloated, taking too long to download.
- Even simple changes take an age to Pull down to servers
- Web2py no longer supports Bzr/LaunchPad, so we want to be able to maintain a common tool to work with both repositories.
- New developers are likely to be more familiar with Git/GitHub
How?
The preferred approach is to have a clean repository, in order to get the maximum benefit from the migration...although it is technically possible to migrate the commit history. Commit History will instead be maintained on the LaunchPad site as an archive
Migrating existing Branches
Merge branch with trunk using normal Bzr tools
Assuming that you have already forked Eden Trunk, then you will need to create a new repository manually for additional branches, as you cannot fork your own project on GitHub:
- https://github.com/repositories/new
cd web2py/applications git clone git@github.com:flavour/eden.git <mybranch>2
- Move
.git
&.gitignore
from <mybranch>2 to <mybranch> - Delete the rest of <mybranch>2
- Edit
.git/config
:[remote "origin"] fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/* url = git@github.com:<mygitusername>/<mybranch>.git
- Create the initial repo for this new branch
cd <mybranch> git add . git commit -am "Initial Git version of My branch" git push -u origin master git remote add upstream git://github.com/flavour/eden.git
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Windows script to help with merge conflicts
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pre-commit
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