209 lines
9 KiB
Markdown
209 lines
9 KiB
Markdown
# the 'hub' ADC
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In this document:
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* <a href="#_a_home_grown_hub_for_git_repos">a home grown 'hub' for git repos</a>
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* <a href="#_general_syntax">general syntax</a>
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* <a href="#_Bob_s_commands">Bob's commands</a>
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* <a href="#_Alice_s_just_looking_commands">Alice's "just looking" commands</a>
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* <a href="#_Alice_s_action_commands">Alice's "action" commands</a>
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* <a href="#_what_next_">what next?</a>
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* <a href="#_note_to_the_admin_configuration_variables">note to the admin: configuration variables</a>
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<a name="_a_home_grown_hub_for_git_repos"></a>
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### a home grown 'hub' for git repos
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This ADC (admin-defined command) helps collaboration among repos. The name is
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in honor of github, which is the primary host for gitolite itself.
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[Note that github is a web-based service, and does a lot more, like comments,
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code reviews, etc., none of which are possible here. We're only talking about
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some basic stuff to make the most common operations easier. In particular,
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this system is not a replacement for normal project communications like
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email!]
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**Conventions used**: all through the following description, we will assume
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that **Alice** has a repo **parent**, **Bob** has a fork of parent called
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**child**, and he is asking Alice to pull a branch he made called **b1** from
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child to parent.
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In plain git (without using github or similar), the pull request process
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starts with an email from Bob to Alice, followed by Alice running a `git fetch
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<Bob's URL> b1` (optionally preceded by a `git remote add` for convenience of
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long term use). Until this happens she can't see much detail about the
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commits to be pulled.
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**What this ADC does** is (a) collect all the pull requests she needs to look
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at in one place, and (b) allow her to examine the changes with any combination
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of `git log` and `git diff` options *without having to fetch the content
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first*, and (c) act as a trusted intermediary to allow Alice to fetch *just
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one branch* from Bob even if she does not have any access to Bob's repository!
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In a situation where there may be lots of requests, being able to take a quick
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look at them (and possibly reject some), without having to pull down anything
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at all, could be very useful.
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Once past that level, she could get the changes down to her workstation using
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`git fetch` as normal. With this ADC, however, she has another alternative:
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get them over to `parent` (her repo) on the same gitolite server, then later
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do a normal `git fetch [origin]` to get it to her workstation. This has the
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added advantage that other people, who may be watching her repo but not Bob's,
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now get to see what Bob sent her and send comments etc.
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<a name="_general_syntax"></a>
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### general syntax
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The general syntax is
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ssh git@server hub <hub-command> <args>
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<a name="_Bob_s_commands"></a>
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#### Bob's commands
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The following commands do not cause a fetch, and should be quite fast:
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* Bob sends a pull request for branch b1 to repo parent. Notice he does not
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mention Alice by name. This command expects a message to be piped/typed
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in via STDIN [this message is meant to be transient and is not stored long
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term; use email for more "permanent" communications].
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echo "hi Alice, please pull" | ssh git@server hub request-pull child b1 [parent]
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If `child` was created by a recent version of the 'fork' ADC (or the KDE
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'clone' ADC), which records the name of the parent repo on a fork, and it
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is *that* repo to which Bob wishes to send the pull request, the third
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argument is optional.
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* Bob lists the status (fetched/rejected/pending) of pull requests he has
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made from his repo child to repo parent. (Note we don't say "accepted" but
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"fetched"; see later for why):
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ssh git@server hub request-status child [parent]
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The second argument is optional the same way as the 3rd argument in the
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previous command.
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Requests that have been accepted or rejected will usually have some
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additional text, supplied by the user who did the reject/accept. Bob can
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ask for those details by request number:
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ssh git@server hub request-status child [parent] request-number
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<a name="_Alice_s_just_looking_commands"></a>
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#### Alice's "just looking" commands
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* Alice lists requests waiting for her to check and possibly pull into
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parent. For each waiting pull request, she will see a serial number, the
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originating repo name (child, in our example), the requestor (Bob, here),
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and the branch/tag-name (b1) being pulled:
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ssh git@server hub list-requests parent
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This command also takes an optional list of search strings that are OR-d
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together and matched against the 'status' field. So saying
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ssh git@server hub list-requests parent fetched pending
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would list only items that were 'fetched' or 'pending' (meaning 'accepted'
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and 'rejected' would not show up).
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* Alice views request # 1 waiting to be pulled into parent. Shows the same
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details as above for that request, followed by the message that Bob typed
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in when he ran `request-pull`:
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ssh git@server hub view-request parent 1
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* Alice views the log of the branch she is being asked to pull. Note that
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this does NOT involve a fetch, so it will be pretty fast. The log starts
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from b1, and stops at a SHA that represents any of the branches in parent.
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Alice can use any git-log options she wants to; for instance `--graph`,
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`--decorate`, `--boundary`, etc., could be quite useful. However, she
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can't use any GUI; it has to be 'git log':
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ssh git@server hub view-log parent 1 <git log options>
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Notice that the repo name Alice supplies is still her own, although the
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log comes from the child repo that Bob wants Alice to pull from. It's
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best if you think of this as "view the commits from pull request #1 in
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'parent'".
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* Alice views the diff between arbitrary commits on child:
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ssh git@server hub view-diff parent 1 <git diff options>
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Again, she mentions *her* reponame but the diff's come from `child`. Also
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note that, due to restrictions on what characters are allowed in arguments
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to ADCs, you probably can't do things like `pu^` or `master~3`, and have
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to use SHAs instead.
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<a name="_Alice_s_action_commands"></a>
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#### Alice's "action" commands
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* Alice doesn't like what she sees and decides to reject it. This command
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expects some text on STDIN as the rejection message:
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echo "hi Bob, your patch needs work; see email" | ssh git@server hub reject parent 1
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* Alice likes what she sees so far and wants to fetch the branch Bob is
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asking her to pull. Note that we are intentionally not using the word
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"accept", because this command does not (and cannot, since it is running
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on a bare repo on the server) do a pull. What it does is it fetches into
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a branch whose name will be `requests/child/b1`.
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Note that when multiple requests from the same repo (child) for the same
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branch (b1) happen, each "fetch" overwrites the branch. This allows Bob
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to continually refine the branch he is requesting for a pull based on
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(presumably emailed) comments from Alice. In a way, this is a "remote
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tracking branch", just like `refs/remotes/origin/b1`.
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ssh git@server hub fetch parent 1
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This command will actually fetch from child into parent, and may take time
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when the changes are large. However all this is on the server so it does
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not involve network traffic:
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* Alice has fetched the stuff she wants, looked at it/tested it, and decides
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to merge it into `parent`. Once that is done, she runs:
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echo "thanks for the frobnitz patch Bob" | ssh git@server hub accept parent 1
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to let Bob know next time he checks 'request-status'. Like the `reject`
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sub-command, this is also just a status update; no actual 'git' changes
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happen.
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Notice the sequence of Alice's action commands: it's either 'reject', or a
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'fetch' then 'accept'.
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<a name="_what_next_"></a>
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### what next?
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At this point, you're done with the `hub` ADC. However, all this is on the
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bare `parent.git` on the server, and nothing has hit Alice's workstation yet!
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Alice will still have to run a fetch or a pull on her workstation if she wants
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to check the code in detail, use a tool like gitk, and especially to
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compile/test it. *Then* she decides whether to accept or reject the request,
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which will have to be communicated via email, of course; see the second para
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of this document ;-)
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Finally, note that Alice does not actually need to use the `fetch` subcommand.
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She can do the traditional thing and fetch Bob's repo/branch directly to her
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*workstation*.
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<a name="_note_to_the_admin_configuration_variables"></a>
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### note to the admin: configuration variables
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There are 2 configuration variables. `BASE_FETCH_URL` should be set to a
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simple "read" URL (so it doesn't even have to be ssh) that almost anyone using
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this server can use. It's only used in producing the `git fetch` command
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mentioned just above.
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`GL_FORKED_FROM` is set to `gl-forked-from` by default, but if your initials
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are `JM` you can set it to `kde-cloned-from` to save time and trouble ;-)
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