Working with git-svn or hgsubversion (was: Move part of macports infrastructure to GitHub)
Rainer Müller
raimue at macports.org
Sun Mar 16 15:18:55 PDT 2014
On 2014-03-16 19:42, Sean Farley wrote:
> If MacPorts really wants to switch to distributed version control, then
> I would suggest Mercurial. I have experimented with using Mercurial for
> the MacPorts repo and found that the mercurial UI is much, much more
> consistent than git coming from Subversion.
I definitely don't want to start a discussion whether git or Mercurial
is the better tool, but they both other integration to Subversion with
git-svn [1] and hgsubversion [2].
I propose we change to our policies to make it possible to work with any
tool locally, giving developers the choice to work with the tool they
like the most, be it svn, git-svn, hgsubversion, bzr-svn, ...
For example, both LLVM [3] and WebKit [4] keep Subversion as their main
repository, but also encourage contributors to use git to prepare patches.
In a perfect world, that would already be possible out of the box, for
example working against our existing Git mirror of the MacPorts
repository [5]. Unfortunately, these tools have some shortcomings that
make working with our current ports tree impossible. The problems are
the missing support for Subversion properties.
a) No support for svn:ignore property
Easy to accomplish, we would just keep the equivalent in .gitignore
and .hgignore files in the repository root. The svn:ignore property
would still be the authoritative value. As these are barely set at
all in the ports tree, that should not be a problem.
b) No support for svn:keywords property
Most notably we are using svn:keywords to replace the $Id$ string in
every Portfile. I think this string is of limited use and we could do
without it.
See also this ticket for a detailed discussion of the problem:
http://trac.macports.org/ticket/38902
(Following the comments in the ticket, it's not even an issue with
newer versions of git-svn any more. What about hgsubversion?)
c) No support for svn:eol-style property
Do we need that at all, anyway? I don't think anybody is editing this
on Windows, so I doubt we would ever see a file with CRLF line
endings.
d) Optional, nice to have: mapping usernames to real names
Both git and Mercurial usually display real names with email
addresses instead of plain usernames. A file with that mapping can be
used, but has to be kept in sync (or can be generated from the wiki).
At the moment our git mirror uses "<handle>@macports.org@<UUID>" as
committer. This correctly identifies the person, but is not very nice.
e) Optional, nice to have: split base, doc, www, and ports tree
With the current git mirror everyone interested in the ports tree is
also required to fetch the trees for base/, doc/ and doc-new/, and
www/.
This is not about disk space as a git clone with full history
actually takes less space than a Subversion working copy, but a
separate repository might be easier to handle, especially when you
can just add that to sources.conf. Note we already have contrib/ and
users/ as separate repositories.
Any other issues that you might have experienced that I forgot?
Who is already using git-svn, hgsubversion, or similar tools for working
with the ports tree?
Rainer
[1]
https://www.kernel.org/pub/software/scm/git/docs/git-svn.html#_basic_examples
[2] http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/HgSubversion
[3] http://llvm.org/docs/GettingStarted.html#git-mirror
[4] http://trac.webkit.org/wiki/UsingGitWithWebKit
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