* gdb.git mirror is broken
@ 2009-10-06 0:31 H.J. Lu
2009-10-06 6:23 ` Pierre Muller
` (3 more replies)
0 siblings, 4 replies; 24+ messages in thread
From: H.J. Lu @ 2009-10-06 0:31 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: meyering; +Cc: GDB
Hi Jim,
gdb.git mirror at
http://sources.redhat.com/git/gdb.git
is broken. The problems are
1: "cpu" directory is missing.
2. Top level files and gdb/gdbserver, bfd, sim, include directories
haven't been updated since 2009-09-16.
Thanks.
--
H.J.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread* RE: gdb.git mirror is broken 2009-10-06 0:31 gdb.git mirror is broken H.J. Lu @ 2009-10-06 6:23 ` Pierre Muller 2009-10-06 6:45 ` Jim Meyering ` (2 subsequent siblings) 3 siblings, 0 replies; 24+ messages in thread From: Pierre Muller @ 2009-10-06 6:23 UTC (permalink / raw) To: 'H.J. Lu', meyering; +Cc: 'GDB' This explains the problems I also get when trying to test my patches on gcc16. Pierre Muller Pascal language support maintainer for GDB > -----Message d'origine----- > De : gdb-owner@sourceware.org [mailto:gdb-owner@sourceware.org] De la > part de H.J. Lu > Envoyé : Tuesday, October 06, 2009 2:31 AM > À : meyering@redhat.com > Cc : GDB > Objet : gdb.git mirror is broken > > Hi Jim, > > gdb.git mirror at > > http://sources.redhat.com/git/gdb.git > > is broken. The problems are > > 1: "cpu" directory is missing. > 2. Top level files and gdb/gdbserver, bfd, sim, include directories > haven't been updated since 2009-09-16. > > Thanks. > > > -- > H.J. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: gdb.git mirror is broken 2009-10-06 0:31 gdb.git mirror is broken H.J. Lu 2009-10-06 6:23 ` Pierre Muller @ 2009-10-06 6:45 ` Jim Meyering 2009-10-06 6:51 ` Jim Meyering 2009-10-06 7:38 ` Jim Meyering 3 siblings, 0 replies; 24+ messages in thread From: Jim Meyering @ 2009-10-06 6:45 UTC (permalink / raw) To: H.J. Lu; +Cc: GDB H.J. Lu wrote: > Hi Jim, > > gdb.git mirror at > > http://sources.redhat.com/git/gdb.git > > is broken. The problems are > > 1: "cpu" directory is missing. > 2. Top level files and gdb/gdbserver, bfd, sim, include directories > haven't been updated since 2009-09-16. Hi H.J. When I check out gdb using CVS, via this, (as recommended here http://www.gnu.org/software/gdb/current/) cvs -z3 -d :pserver:anoncvs@sourceware.org:/cvs/src co gdb That created a single directory named "src/", containing no top level files: $ ls src CVS/ config/ etc/ include/ libdecnumber/ opcodes/ sim/ bfd/ cpu/ gdb/ intl/ libiberty/ readline/ texinfo/ This suggests that something is wrong with CVS. Has someone been changing the modules file that describes what you get when you check out gdb from CVS? Is there a better way to checkout from CVS? Just to confirm, I checked it out again (same exact command, also into a new empty directory), and this time, I got all of the expected files. If similar things happen during the mirroring process, that could well explain the problem. At first, I suspected the recent changes in my mirroring script to mirror binutils to git, but for the problem to date back to Sept 16, I now wonder if it's something else. I'm investigating... ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: gdb.git mirror is broken 2009-10-06 0:31 gdb.git mirror is broken H.J. Lu 2009-10-06 6:23 ` Pierre Muller 2009-10-06 6:45 ` Jim Meyering @ 2009-10-06 6:51 ` Jim Meyering 2009-10-06 7:38 ` Jim Meyering 3 siblings, 0 replies; 24+ messages in thread From: Jim Meyering @ 2009-10-06 6:51 UTC (permalink / raw) To: H.J. Lu; +Cc: GDB H.J. Lu wrote: > Hi Jim, > > gdb.git mirror at > > http://sources.redhat.com/git/gdb.git > > is broken. The problems are > > 1: "cpu" directory is missing. The cpu directory has always been excluded from the cvs-to-git mirroring of gdb. Would you like it to be included starting now? ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: gdb.git mirror is broken 2009-10-06 0:31 gdb.git mirror is broken H.J. Lu ` (2 preceding siblings ...) 2009-10-06 6:51 ` Jim Meyering @ 2009-10-06 7:38 ` Jim Meyering 2009-10-06 13:08 ` H.J. Lu ` (2 more replies) 3 siblings, 3 replies; 24+ messages in thread From: Jim Meyering @ 2009-10-06 7:38 UTC (permalink / raw) To: H.J. Lu, Tom Tromey; +Cc: GDB H.J. Lu wrote: > Hi Jim, > > gdb.git mirror at > > http://sources.redhat.com/git/gdb.git > > is broken. The problems are > > 1: "cpu" directory is missing. Considering cpu/ has never been included in a gdb.git mirror (it's been explicitly excluded from the beginning), it may make sense to reconvert the repository from scratch, in order to include that directory and all of its history. However, that would have the disadvantage of changing all existing SHA1 commit values -- which might cause problems with the likes of archer.git. > 2. Top level files and gdb/gdbserver, bfd, sim, include directories > haven't been updated since 2009-09-16. I don't know what caused the process to stop mirroring those directories. It could be a bug in cvsps, git-cvsimport, my script, git-push, or even rsync. IMHO, the best would be to remove CVS from the loop. Leading up to that, I propose the following: I will re-convert all of gdb's CVS history to git (using parsecvs), not excluding the cpu/ directory this time. Then, I will add checks to my mirroring script to notify me if git and CVS checkouts ever diverge. Note that the initial conversion is via parsecvs, yet incrementals are via my scripts, which rely on git-cvsimport (which in turn relies on cvsps). If anyone is interested in switching primary GDB development to git, once such a new repository is in place and deemed stable, I urge you to dump CVS. While the conversion tools are not always reliable, I can assure you that git itself has been amazingly reliable for years. --------------------------------------- If you want to keep existing SHA1 commits (say for archer), yet continue with minimal disruption, and you don't mind omitting the history of cpu/ for now, I can easily plop all of cpu/ and the missing bits of the out-of-sync directories into gdb.git via a single commit. That will make it so a git clone and a cvs checkout produce identical (modulo CVS/ dirs) hierarchies. And who knows, maybe it'll make it so changes to offending directories will once again be tracked via the mirroring mechanism. It looks like I'll have to adjust my mirroring script to incur still more overhead (space and time) to verify cvs/git consistency, regardless... Also, please be aware that this is a mostly-extracurricular project. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: gdb.git mirror is broken 2009-10-06 7:38 ` Jim Meyering @ 2009-10-06 13:08 ` H.J. Lu 2009-10-06 14:07 ` Jim Meyering 2009-10-06 15:45 ` Joel Brobecker 2009-10-06 16:08 ` Tom Tromey 2 siblings, 1 reply; 24+ messages in thread From: H.J. Lu @ 2009-10-06 13:08 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Jim Meyering; +Cc: Tom Tromey, GDB On Tue, Oct 6, 2009 at 12:38 AM, Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> wrote: > H.J. Lu wrote: > >> Hi Jim, >> >> gdb.git mirror at >> >> http://sources.redhat.com/git/gdb.git >> >> is broken. The problems are >> >> 1: "cpu" directory is missing. > > Considering cpu/ has never been included in a gdb.git mirror > (it's been explicitly excluded from the beginning), it may > make sense to reconvert the repository from scratch, in order > to include that directory and all of its history. > > However, that would have the disadvantage of changing all > existing SHA1 commit values -- which might cause problems with > the likes of archer.git. I didn't realize that cpu was excluded on purpose. I just did a comparison between gdb tree checked out from CVS and gdb tree checked out from git. I don't mind leaving it as is. >> 2. Top level files and gdb/gdbserver, bfd, sim, include directories >> haven't been updated since 2009-09-16. > > I don't know what caused the process to stop mirroring > those directories. It could be a bug in cvsps, git-cvsimport, > my script, git-push, or even rsync. > > IMHO, the best would be to remove CVS from the loop. > Leading up to that, I propose the following: > > I will re-convert all of gdb's CVS history to git (using parsecvs), > not excluding the cpu/ directory this time. Then, I will add checks > to my mirroring script to notify me if git and CVS checkouts ever > diverge. I am enclosing my script at the end of this email. It diffs all ChangLogs between 2 gdb trees. > Note that the initial conversion is via parsecvs, > yet incrementals are via my scripts, which rely on git-cvsimport > (which in turn relies on cvsps). > > If anyone is interested in switching primary GDB development > to git, once such a new repository is in place and deemed stable, > I urge you to dump CVS. While the conversion tools are not always > reliable, I can assure you that git itself has been amazingly reliable > for years. > It sounds a good idea. But don't we need to switch src tree to git, not just gdb tree? I don't mind checking out the whole src tree. But we need a way to build only gcc, gdb, binutils, .... even though there are more packages. Thanks. -- H.J. --- #! /bin/sh gdb=$1 cl=" ./etc/ChangeLog ./gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog ./gdb/ChangeLog ./gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog ./gdb/doc/ChangeLog ./intl/ChangeLog ./bfd/ChangeLog ./bfd/doc/ChangeLog ./libdecnumber/ChangeLog ./readline/examples/rlfe/ChangeLog ./ChangeLog ./opcodes/ChangeLog ./libiberty/ChangeLog ./config/ChangeLog ./cpu/ChangeLog ./sim/frv/ChangeLog ./sim/arm/ChangeLog ./sim/mcore/ChangeLog ./sim/m32r/ChangeLog ./sim/mips/ChangeLog ./sim/d10v/ChangeLog ./sim/cr16/ChangeLog ./sim/h8300/ChangeLog ./sim/ChangeLog ./sim/sh/ChangeLog ./sim/m68hc11/ChangeLog ./sim/testsuite/frv-elf/ChangeLog ./sim/testsuite/mips64el-elf/ChangeLog ./sim/testsuite/d10v-elf/ChangeLog ./sim/testsuite/ChangeLog ./sim/testsuite/sim/mips/ChangeLog ./sim/testsuite/sim/cr16/ChangeLog ./sim/testsuite/sim/h8300/ChangeLog ./sim/testsuite/sim/sh/ChangeLog ./sim/testsuite/sim/sh64/ChangeLog ./sim/testsuite/sim/sh64/media/ChangeLog ./sim/testsuite/sim/sh64/compact/ChangeLog ./sim/testsuite/m32r-elf/ChangeLog ./sim/igen/ChangeLog ./sim/iq2000/ChangeLog ./sim/ppc/ChangeLog ./sim/v850/ChangeLog ./sim/mn10300/ChangeLog ./sim/sh64/ChangeLog ./sim/erc32/ChangeLog ./sim/common/ChangeLog ./sim/m32c/ChangeLog ./include/gdb/ChangeLog ./include/elf/ChangeLog ./include/opcode/ChangeLog ./include/coff/ChangeLog ./include/aout/ChangeLog ./include/ChangeLog ./include/nlm/ChangeLog " for f in $cl do diff -up $f $gdb/$f done ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: gdb.git mirror is broken 2009-10-06 13:08 ` H.J. Lu @ 2009-10-06 14:07 ` Jim Meyering 2009-10-06 14:26 ` Joseph S. Myers 2009-10-06 16:06 ` Tom Tromey 0 siblings, 2 replies; 24+ messages in thread From: Jim Meyering @ 2009-10-06 14:07 UTC (permalink / raw) To: H.J. Lu; +Cc: Tom Tromey, GDB H.J. Lu wrote: > On Tue, Oct 6, 2009 at 12:38 AM, Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> wrote: >> H.J. Lu wrote: >> >>> Hi Jim, >>> >>> gdb.git mirror at >>> >>> http://sources.redhat.com/git/gdb.git >>> >>> is broken. The problems are >>> >>> 1: "cpu" directory is missing. >> >> Considering cpu/ has never been included in a gdb.git mirror >> (it's been explicitly excluded from the beginning), it may >> make sense to reconvert the repository from scratch, in order >> to include that directory and all of its history. >> >> However, that would have the disadvantage of changing all >> existing SHA1 commit values -- which might cause problems with >> the likes of archer.git. > > I didn't realize that cpu was excluded on purpose. I just > did a comparison between gdb tree checked out from CVS > and gdb tree checked out from git. I don't mind leaving it as is. > >>> 2. Top level files and gdb/gdbserver, bfd, sim, include directories >>> haven't been updated since 2009-09-16. >> >> I don't know what caused the process to stop mirroring >> those directories. It could be a bug in cvsps, git-cvsimport, >> my script, git-push, or even rsync. >> >> IMHO, the best would be to remove CVS from the loop. >> Leading up to that, I propose the following: >> >> I will re-convert all of gdb's CVS history to git (using parsecvs), >> not excluding the cpu/ directory this time. Then, I will add checks >> to my mirroring script to notify me if git and CVS checkouts ever >> diverge. > > I am enclosing my script at the end of this email. It diffs > all ChangLogs between 2 gdb trees. > >> Note that the initial conversion is via parsecvs, >> yet incrementals are via my scripts, which rely on git-cvsimport >> (which in turn relies on cvsps). >> >> If anyone is interested in switching primary GDB development >> to git, once such a new repository is in place and deemed stable, >> I urge you to dump CVS. While the conversion tools are not always >> reliable, I can assure you that git itself has been amazingly reliable >> for years. >> > > It sounds a good idea. But don't we need to switch src tree to git, not > just gdb tree? I don't mind checking out the whole src tree. But we > need a way to build only gcc, gdb, binutils, .... even though there are > more packages. When gdb was the only project using this cvs-to-git mirroring, the status of these shared directories didn't really matter. Now that binutils also has a git mirror, perhaps we should think ahead to the day if/when everyone is using git and not CVS. Since some directories are shared between projects, one way would be to make each directory into its own git repository. Then, a separate gdb.git repository would include them via a git submodule. The way this would work is that gdb would record an SHA1 (that's about all a git submodule does) telling which bfd commit it is currently using. If bfd/ development is in a particularly unstable period, you may want to keep gdb's submodule pointing at some commit from before the disruptive changes started. Once bfd things stabilize, you would run a command telling git to record a newer bfd/ SHA1 in the gdb repository, and then you'd commit that meta-change. Here's an example of such a commit in coreutils, where I make it use the latest changes from gnulib: http://git.sv.gnu.org/cgit/coreutils.git/commit/?id=3c40fdfba612a0fad259de29adaeaf7554cfaf33 If I need to make a change in gnulib, I don't change coreutils/gnulib/, but rather make the change in a separate git clone'd gnulib tree, commit, and then push. Once I've pushed, I can then go back to my coreutils tree and tell it to sync from the latest upstream. I run this command: git syncsub which is just an alias for: git submodule foreach git pull origin master And then commit the result. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: gdb.git mirror is broken 2009-10-06 14:07 ` Jim Meyering @ 2009-10-06 14:26 ` Joseph S. Myers 2009-10-06 14:33 ` Jim Meyering 2009-10-07 4:29 ` Matt Rice 2009-10-06 16:06 ` Tom Tromey 1 sibling, 2 replies; 24+ messages in thread From: Joseph S. Myers @ 2009-10-06 14:26 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Jim Meyering; +Cc: H.J. Lu, Tom Tromey, GDB On Tue, 6 Oct 2009, Jim Meyering wrote: > perhaps we should think ahead to the day if/when everyone > is using git and not CVS. The day when each project can choose its version control system, and change between systems, independently and without needing to change in sync with other projects, sounds much better to me. That there is any link at all between the development of GDB and Cygwin, for example, is a defect in the present system that should be fixed by the move of either project to another system. > If I need to make a change in gnulib, I don't change > coreutils/gnulib/, but rather make the change in a separate First and foremost, as I said in <http://sourceware.org/ml/binutils/2009-05/msg00117.html>, version control should make common tasks easy. That means a single command in a binutils checkout to commit both a BFD change and the testcases in the ld testsuite, for example. What things look like underneath is less important, and the exact spelling of the command is less important - but if it doesn't look like a single repository for common use cases like that, something is seriously wrong. Version control should also make mistakes hard - it should be hard to check in an incomplete patch by accident, or think you have checked in a change when it has not gone where it should, for example, and extremely hard to break the repository. (Advocates of any change also still need to work out the detailed designs, as I noted in <http://sourceware.org/ml/binutils/2009-05/msg00213.html>.) -- Joseph S. Myers joseph@codesourcery.com ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: gdb.git mirror is broken 2009-10-06 14:26 ` Joseph S. Myers @ 2009-10-06 14:33 ` Jim Meyering 2009-10-06 16:11 ` Joseph S. Myers 2009-10-07 4:29 ` Matt Rice 1 sibling, 1 reply; 24+ messages in thread From: Jim Meyering @ 2009-10-06 14:33 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Joseph S. Myers; +Cc: H.J. Lu, Tom Tromey, GDB Joseph S. Myers wrote: > On Tue, 6 Oct 2009, Jim Meyering wrote: > >> perhaps we should think ahead to the day if/when everyone >> is using git and not CVS. > > The day when each project can choose its version control system, and > change between systems, independently and without needing to change in > sync with other projects, sounds much better to me. That there is any > link at all between the development of GDB and Cygwin, for example, is a > defect in the present system that should be fixed by the move of either > project to another system. > >> If I need to make a change in gnulib, I don't change >> coreutils/gnulib/, but rather make the change in a separate > > First and foremost, as I said in > <http://sourceware.org/ml/binutils/2009-05/msg00117.html>, version control > should make common tasks easy. That means a single command in a binutils > checkout to commit both a BFD change and the testcases in the ld > testsuite, for example. What things look like underneath is less > important, and the exact spelling of the command is less important - but > if it doesn't look like a single repository for common use cases like > that, something is seriously wrong. > > Version control should also make mistakes hard - it should be hard to > check in an incomplete patch by accident, or think you have checked in a > change when it has not gone where it should, for example, and extremely > hard to break the repository. > > (Advocates of any change also still need to work out the detailed designs, > as I noted in <http://sourceware.org/ml/binutils/2009-05/msg00213.html>.) No pressure from me. I barely have time to help with the technical side of things, so if you want someone willing to invest in advocacy I'm not your man. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: gdb.git mirror is broken 2009-10-06 14:33 ` Jim Meyering @ 2009-10-06 16:11 ` Joseph S. Myers 0 siblings, 0 replies; 24+ messages in thread From: Joseph S. Myers @ 2009-10-06 16:11 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Jim Meyering; +Cc: H.J. Lu, Tom Tromey, GDB On Tue, 6 Oct 2009, Jim Meyering wrote: > No pressure from me. > I barely have time to help with the technical side of things, > so if you want someone willing to invest in advocacy I'm not your man. I don't want advocacy, but *technical design*. Technical design based around showing how common tasks translate to a proposed new system, existing scripts are converted and common errors are made harder. Technical design that demonstrates that the usual tasks for people making occasional changes are at least as easy and intuitive as now. Technical design that shows how the breakage that is the subject of the present thread will not be possible in the proposed system. (No doubt it will also make additional things possible for version control experts, but the people proposing designs need to think in normal user terms.) Personally I think a single repository for GDB and binutils together, with configure options for building only one or the other, might be a reasonable approach (with other projects left to move from CVS or not at their own choice and in their own time), but that's not the level of design needed here; it doesn't even address how to handle gdbtk. For shared toplevel files, libiberty etc., I think it would be reasonable to do things in a DVCSly pure way and have no master repository and scripts automatically merging commits from one repository to another (possibly using a different version control system), or to declare GCC the master for all files present there and disallow non-automatic commits to the shared files on the mainline of other repositories. But a detailed design would need to demonstrate such scripts working in practice. -- Joseph S. Myers joseph@codesourcery.com ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: gdb.git mirror is broken 2009-10-06 14:26 ` Joseph S. Myers 2009-10-06 14:33 ` Jim Meyering @ 2009-10-07 4:29 ` Matt Rice 2009-10-10 5:35 ` Matt Rice 1 sibling, 1 reply; 24+ messages in thread From: Matt Rice @ 2009-10-07 4:29 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Joseph S. Myers; +Cc: Jim Meyering, H.J. Lu, Tom Tromey, GDB [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1621 bytes --] On Tue, Oct 6, 2009 at 7:26 AM, Joseph S. Myers <joseph@codesourcery.com> wrote: > > First and foremost, as I said in > <http://sourceware.org/ml/binutils/2009-05/msg00117.html>, version control > should make common tasks easy. That means a single command in a binutils > checkout to commit both a BFD change and the testcases in the ld > testsuite, for example. What things look like underneath is less > important, and the exact spelling of the command is less important - but > if it doesn't look like a single repository for common use cases like > that, something is seriously wrong. here is one way we could achieve the 'single commit across bfd and ld testsuite' case, by splitting bfd out, then subtree-merging it back in, then doing a subtree merge to the separated bfd, when binutils changes... one of the downsides to this is it is going to create alot of merge commits which looks kind of funky in the separated bfd's gitk, but assuming that we don't give anybody write access to the separated bfd, we could do this automatically and assume there will be no conflicts I imagine.... this script takes quite a while to run (for the initial splitting) and a bit of disk space... If we want to keep gdb in both the binutils and the separate module though that creates some things to decide like which version is the canonical one which developers should commit to, unless people feel like merging it by hand... the subtree merge isn't really something i'm that terribly familiar with, but it seems to work, i haven't done a whole lot of repository verification though. [-- Attachment #2: git-split.sh --] [-- Type: application/x-sh, Size: 2544 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: gdb.git mirror is broken 2009-10-07 4:29 ` Matt Rice @ 2009-10-10 5:35 ` Matt Rice 0 siblings, 0 replies; 24+ messages in thread From: Matt Rice @ 2009-10-10 5:35 UTC (permalink / raw) To: GDB On Tue, Oct 6, 2009 at 9:29 PM, Matt Rice <ratmice@gmail.com> wrote: <snip> > by splitting bfd out, then subtree-merging it back in, > then doing a subtree merge to the separated bfd, when binutils changes... > > one of the downsides to this is it is going to create alot of merge > commits which looks kind of funky in the separated bfd's gitk, <snip> It just occurred to me that when merging from the large combined tree back into the split out subtrees, assuming that these simply track the main tree and nobody is given write access I believe we can safely $ git fetch binutils $ git rebase -s subtree binutils/master instead of the $ git merge -s subtree binutils/master without worrying about rebase rewriting commits, since it is strictly a sink. instead of git merge -s subtree and avoid all of these merge commits ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: gdb.git mirror is broken 2009-10-06 14:07 ` Jim Meyering 2009-10-06 14:26 ` Joseph S. Myers @ 2009-10-06 16:06 ` Tom Tromey 2009-10-06 16:21 ` Jim Meyering 1 sibling, 1 reply; 24+ messages in thread From: Tom Tromey @ 2009-10-06 16:06 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Jim Meyering; +Cc: H.J. Lu, GDB >>>>> "Jim" == Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> writes: Jim> Since some directories are shared between projects, one way would Jim> be to make each directory into its own git repository. Jim> Then, a separate gdb.git repository would include them Jim> via a git submodule. I thought that submodules could not be used to share files in the top-level directory. This is why I think submodules are not a viable solution for src -- anything in that directory is shared, not only by all the src projects, but also by gcc. Tom ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: gdb.git mirror is broken 2009-10-06 16:06 ` Tom Tromey @ 2009-10-06 16:21 ` Jim Meyering 0 siblings, 0 replies; 24+ messages in thread From: Jim Meyering @ 2009-10-06 16:21 UTC (permalink / raw) To: tromey; +Cc: H.J. Lu, GDB Tom Tromey wrote: >>>>>> "Jim" == Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> writes: > Jim> Since some directories are shared between projects, one way would > Jim> be to make each directory into its own git repository. > Jim> Then, a separate gdb.git repository would include them > Jim> via a git submodule. > > I thought that submodules could not be used to share files in the > top-level directory. This is why I think submodules are not a viable > solution for src -- anything in that directory is shared, not only by > all the src projects, but also by gcc. You can put the top-level files in their own repository and make that a submodule, then have either a VC'd symlink for each file (ugly, and not as maintainable, IMHO) or a bootstrap/autogen.sh-style script that creates the links. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: gdb.git mirror is broken 2009-10-06 7:38 ` Jim Meyering 2009-10-06 13:08 ` H.J. Lu @ 2009-10-06 15:45 ` Joel Brobecker 2009-10-06 18:38 ` Eli Zaretskii 2009-10-06 16:08 ` Tom Tromey 2 siblings, 1 reply; 24+ messages in thread From: Joel Brobecker @ 2009-10-06 15:45 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Jim Meyering; +Cc: H.J. Lu, Tom Tromey, GDB > If anyone is interested in switching primary GDB development > to git, once such a new repository is in place and deemed stable, > I urge you to dump CVS. While the conversion tools are not always > reliable, I can assure you that git itself has been amazingly reliable > for years. I think we're not quite ready to switch to any other version management system right now, unfortunately. But I strongly support a switch to git. The problem is that, for this to happen, we will have to agree to some adjustments in one way or the other, because we won't have partial checkouts anymore. This will need to be discussed by the maintainers of the various projects that are part of src, and getting an agreement might not be an easy task, especially across projects and with using just email... Several of us in the GDB project are very motivated in that direction, so as soon as things quiet down a bit, we'll try to come up with a plan and start discussing it seriously. -- Joel ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: gdb.git mirror is broken 2009-10-06 15:45 ` Joel Brobecker @ 2009-10-06 18:38 ` Eli Zaretskii 2009-10-06 19:01 ` Joel Brobecker 0 siblings, 1 reply; 24+ messages in thread From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2009-10-06 18:38 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Joel Brobecker; +Cc: jim, hjl.tools, tromey, gdb > Date: Tue, 6 Oct 2009 08:45:37 -0700 > From: Joel Brobecker <brobecker@adacore.com> > Cc: "H.J. Lu" <hjl.tools@gmail.com>, Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com>, GDB <gdb@sourceware.org> > > > If anyone is interested in switching primary GDB development > > to git, once such a new repository is in place and deemed stable, > > I urge you to dump CVS. While the conversion tools are not always > > reliable, I can assure you that git itself has been amazingly reliable > > for years. > > I think we're not quite ready to switch to any other version management > system right now, unfortunately. But I strongly support a switch to git. git is a PITA on Windows, which is a major issue for me. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: gdb.git mirror is broken 2009-10-06 18:38 ` Eli Zaretskii @ 2009-10-06 19:01 ` Joel Brobecker 2009-10-06 20:36 ` Eli Zaretskii 0 siblings, 1 reply; 24+ messages in thread From: Joel Brobecker @ 2009-10-06 19:01 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Eli Zaretskii; +Cc: jim, hjl.tools, tromey, gdb > git is a PITA on Windows, which is a major issue for me. Oh? git has been working great on Windows for me. Which git are you using? I've been using the one from cygwin. -- Joel ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: gdb.git mirror is broken 2009-10-06 19:01 ` Joel Brobecker @ 2009-10-06 20:36 ` Eli Zaretskii 2009-10-06 21:10 ` Joel Brobecker 0 siblings, 1 reply; 24+ messages in thread From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2009-10-06 20:36 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Joel Brobecker; +Cc: jim, hjl.tools, tromey, gdb > Date: Tue, 6 Oct 2009 12:00:59 -0700 > From: Joel Brobecker <brobecker@adacore.com> > Cc: jim@meyering.net, hjl.tools@gmail.com, tromey@redhat.com, gdb@sourceware.org > > > git is a PITA on Windows, which is a major issue for me. > > Oh? git has been working great on Windows for me. Which git are you > using? I've been using the one from cygwin. That's the point: I don't use Cygwin and don't want to install one. The only other port of git is based on MSYS, which in many ways has the same problems as Cygwin, as far as I'm concerned. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: gdb.git mirror is broken 2009-10-06 20:36 ` Eli Zaretskii @ 2009-10-06 21:10 ` Joel Brobecker 2009-10-06 22:04 ` Tom Tromey 2009-10-07 7:27 ` Eli Zaretskii 0 siblings, 2 replies; 24+ messages in thread From: Joel Brobecker @ 2009-10-06 21:10 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Eli Zaretskii; +Cc: jim, hjl.tools, tromey, gdb > That's the point: I don't use Cygwin and don't want to install one. > The only other port of git is based on MSYS, which in many ways has > the same problems as Cygwin, as far as I'm concerned. It would be useful to explain what the same problems are, because I am still in the dark as to what they are. If git is not an option because you can't find a client that works for you, then the only other realistic option we have is SVN. Do you know of a SVN client that works for you? -- Joel ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: gdb.git mirror is broken 2009-10-06 21:10 ` Joel Brobecker @ 2009-10-06 22:04 ` Tom Tromey 2009-10-07 7:29 ` Eli Zaretskii 2009-10-07 7:27 ` Eli Zaretskii 1 sibling, 1 reply; 24+ messages in thread From: Tom Tromey @ 2009-10-06 22:04 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Joel Brobecker; +Cc: Eli Zaretskii, jim, hjl.tools, gdb >>>>> "Joel" == Joel Brobecker <brobecker@adacore.com> writes: Joel> If git is not an option because you can't find a client that works Joel> for you, then the only other realistic option we have is SVN. We could run git-cvsserver. Tom ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: gdb.git mirror is broken 2009-10-06 22:04 ` Tom Tromey @ 2009-10-07 7:29 ` Eli Zaretskii 0 siblings, 0 replies; 24+ messages in thread From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2009-10-07 7:29 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Tom Tromey; +Cc: brobecker, jim, hjl.tools, gdb > From: Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com> > Cc: Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org>, jim@meyering.net, hjl.tools@gmail.com, > gdb@sourceware.org > Date: Tue, 06 Oct 2009 16:03:13 -0600 > > >>>>> "Joel" == Joel Brobecker <brobecker@adacore.com> writes: > > Joel> If git is not an option because you can't find a client that works > Joel> for you, then the only other realistic option we have is SVN. > > We could run git-cvsserver. If it allows write access, fine with me. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: gdb.git mirror is broken 2009-10-06 21:10 ` Joel Brobecker 2009-10-06 22:04 ` Tom Tromey @ 2009-10-07 7:27 ` Eli Zaretskii 1 sibling, 0 replies; 24+ messages in thread From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2009-10-07 7:27 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Joel Brobecker; +Cc: jim, hjl.tools, tromey, gdb > Date: Tue, 6 Oct 2009 14:10:40 -0700 > From: Joel Brobecker <brobecker@adacore.com> > Cc: jim@meyering.net, hjl.tools@gmail.com, tromey@redhat.com, > gdb@sourceware.org > > > That's the point: I don't use Cygwin and don't want to install one. > > The only other port of git is based on MSYS, which in many ways has > > the same problems as Cygwin, as far as I'm concerned. > > It would be useful to explain what the same problems are, because > I am still in the dark as to what they are. In a nutshell, the problem is having a heavyweight package installed with incompatible versions of all the tools I use every day (in their native w32 ports). > If git is not an option because you can't find a client that works > for you, then the only other realistic option we have is SVN. Do you > know of a SVN client that works for you? SVN is fine. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: gdb.git mirror is broken 2009-10-06 7:38 ` Jim Meyering 2009-10-06 13:08 ` H.J. Lu 2009-10-06 15:45 ` Joel Brobecker @ 2009-10-06 16:08 ` Tom Tromey 2009-10-06 16:09 ` Jim Meyering 2 siblings, 1 reply; 24+ messages in thread From: Tom Tromey @ 2009-10-06 16:08 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Jim Meyering; +Cc: H.J. Lu, GDB Jim> However, that would have the disadvantage of changing all Jim> existing SHA1 commit values -- which might cause problems with Jim> the likes of archer.git. I would rather avoid breaking archer.git. Do we really need to make this change? If so, why? Tom ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: gdb.git mirror is broken 2009-10-06 16:08 ` Tom Tromey @ 2009-10-06 16:09 ` Jim Meyering 0 siblings, 0 replies; 24+ messages in thread From: Jim Meyering @ 2009-10-06 16:09 UTC (permalink / raw) To: tromey; +Cc: H.J. Lu, GDB Tom Tromey wrote: > Jim> However, that would have the disadvantage of changing all > Jim> existing SHA1 commit values -- which might cause problems with > Jim> the likes of archer.git. > > I would rather avoid breaking archer.git. > Do we really need to make this change? If so, why? Sounds unnecessary, now. Initially, it sounded like H.J. required cpu/ as a subdirectory of gdb. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2009-10-10 5:35 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 24+ messages (download: mbox.gz / follow: Atom feed) -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2009-10-06 0:31 gdb.git mirror is broken H.J. Lu 2009-10-06 6:23 ` Pierre Muller 2009-10-06 6:45 ` Jim Meyering 2009-10-06 6:51 ` Jim Meyering 2009-10-06 7:38 ` Jim Meyering 2009-10-06 13:08 ` H.J. Lu 2009-10-06 14:07 ` Jim Meyering 2009-10-06 14:26 ` Joseph S. Myers 2009-10-06 14:33 ` Jim Meyering 2009-10-06 16:11 ` Joseph S. Myers 2009-10-07 4:29 ` Matt Rice 2009-10-10 5:35 ` Matt Rice 2009-10-06 16:06 ` Tom Tromey 2009-10-06 16:21 ` Jim Meyering 2009-10-06 15:45 ` Joel Brobecker 2009-10-06 18:38 ` Eli Zaretskii 2009-10-06 19:01 ` Joel Brobecker 2009-10-06 20:36 ` Eli Zaretskii 2009-10-06 21:10 ` Joel Brobecker 2009-10-06 22:04 ` Tom Tromey 2009-10-07 7:29 ` Eli Zaretskii 2009-10-07 7:27 ` Eli Zaretskii 2009-10-06 16:08 ` Tom Tromey 2009-10-06 16:09 ` Jim Meyering
This is a public inbox, see mirroring instructions for how to clone and mirror all data and code used for this inbox