From: Pete Wyckoff <pw@padd.com>
To: Gary Gibbons <ggibbons@perforce.com>
Cc: Luke Diamand <luke@diamand.org>,
git@vger.kernel.org, Vitor Antunes <vitor.hda@gmail.com>,
Michael Horowitz <michael.horowitz@ieee.org>
Subject: Re: git p4: in-place submit
Date: Wed, 2 May 2012 18:19:32 -0400 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <20120502221932.GA6208@padd.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <B4B1DDAA-FA1A-4CAB-81BB-ED1D42FAFB43@perforce.com>
ggibbons@perforce.com wrote on Wed, 02 May 2012 10:06 -0700:
> Perforce 12.1 introduces a new command 'p4 reconcile'
> which
>
> reconcile -- Open files for add, delete, and/or edit to reconcile
> client with workspace changes made outside of Perforce
>
> This is intended to do all the work one would need to do to
> prepare a git managed workspace for submission back into Perforce.
>
> We could use this for in-place-submit when the p4d supports it.
Cute! Would be nice to teach it about rename and copy too.
I would be a bit nervous of it picking up random .o files. Maybe
it could learn to parse "git status -s", or share some common
format for other tools to explain to reconcile exactly what
happened. Or we just feed it an explicit path list.
-- Pete
> Entire 'p4 help reconcile':
>
> reconcile -- Open files for add, delete, and/or edit to reconcile
> client with workspace changes made outside of Perforce
>
> status -- synonym for 'reconcile -n' (output uses local paths)
> status -A -- synonym for 'reconcile -ead' (output uses local paths)
>
> p4 reconcile [-c changelist#] [-e -a -d -f -I -l -n] [file ...]
>
> 'p4 reconcile' finds unopened files in a client's workspace and
> detects the following:
>
> 1. files in depot missing from workspace, but still on have list
> 2. files on workspace that are not in depot
> 3. files modified in workpace that are not opened for edit
>
> By default, the files matching each condition above in the path
> are reconciled by opening files for delete (scenario 1), add
> (scenario 2), and/or edit (scenario 3). The -e, -a, and -d flags
> may be used to limit to a subset of these operations. If no file
> arguments are given, reconcile and status default to the current
> working directory.
>
> The -n flag previews the operation without performing any action.
>
> If -c changelist# is included, the files are opened in the specified
> pending changelist.
>
> The -e flag allows the user to reconcile files that have been
> modified outside of Perforce. The reconcile command will open
> these files for edit.
>
> The -a flag allows the user to reconcile files that are in the
> user's directory that are not under Perforce source control. These
> files are opened for add.
>
> The -f flag allows the user to add files with filenames that contain
> wildcard characters. Filenames that contain the special characters
> '@', '#', '%' or '*' are reformatted to encode the characters using
> ASCII hexadecimal representation. After the files are added, you
> must refer to them using the reformatted file name, because Perforce
> does not recognize the local filesystem name.
>
> The -I flag informs the client that it should not perform any ignore
> checking configured by P4IGNORE.
>
> The -d flag allows the user to reconcile files that have been
> removed from the user's directory but are still in the depot.
> These files will be opened for delete only if they are still on the
> user's have list.
>
> The -l flag requests output in local file syntax using relative
> paths, similar to the workspace-centric view provided by 'status'.
>
>
>
>
>
>
> On May 1, at May 1 3:18 PM, Pete Wyckoff wrote:
>
> > luke@diamand.org wrote on Tue, 01 May 2012 06:28 +0100:
> >> On 30/04/12 23:58, Pete Wyckoff wrote:
> >>> Tell me if you think this is a good idea.
> >>>
> >>> Now, submit requires a separate workspace. You have one for git,
> >>> and a separate one used just to push files back into p4. I'd
> >>> like to see if we can do the submit part from the git workspace
> >>> directly.
> >>>
> >>> My motivation is:
> >>>
> >>> - managing both a git and a p4 workspace is extra hassle
> >>>
> >>> - $work repo is big, and having a separate copy just for
> >>> submits is a waste of space
> >>>
> >>> Setup would go something like:
> >>>
> >>> # normal clone
> >>> git p4 clone --destination=/home/pw/p4/proj //depot/proj@all
> >>>
> >>> # build client at same location
> >>> p4 client -i<<-EOF
> >>> Client: pw:proj
> >>> Description: pw proj client
> >>> Root: /home/pw/p4/proj
> >>> View: //depot/proj/... //pw:proj/...
> >>> EOF
> >>>
> >>> # set config to tell git p4 what to do
> >>> cd /home/pw/p4/proj
> >>> git config git-p4.submit-in-place true ;# new!
> >>> git config git-p4.client pw:proj
> >>> git config git-p4.useClientSpec true
> >>>
> >>> but no "p4 sync".
> >>>
> >>> Then use git to edit/commit, and eventually "git p4 submit" as
> >>> usual. The new submit-in-place code would:
> >>>
> >>> - make sure everything is committed
> >>>
> >>> - find git-p4 latest change number
> >>> - ensuring linear series of commits back to p4/master
> >>>
> >>> - warn if latest change in //depot/proj/... is greater, but proceed
> >>>
> >>> - p4 sync -k @change ;# -k means don't touch my workspace
> >>>
> >>> - for each commit in p4/master..branch:
> >>> - git checkout commit
> >>> - p4 edit, move, delete, -t text+x, etc to prepare tree
> >>> - p4 submit
> >>> - if any files require resolution, fail
> >>> - chmod +w affected files to undo p4 read-only changes
> >>> - git checkout --hard HEAD to destroy RCS keyword updates
> >>>
> >>> - if fail
> >>> - git checkout --hard HEAD
> >>> - rebase branch onto last successful commit
> >>> - else
> >>> - git p4 sync (as usual)
> >>> - update branch to p4/master
> >>> - git checkout branch
> >>>
> >>> Is this a worthwhile change? What details have I overlooked?
> >>>
> >>> -- Pete
> >>
> >>
> >> So the trick here is the "chmod +w" - without that, you won't be
> >> able to edit code via git?
> >
> > Gary: thanks for suggesting "allwrite". That feels like the
> > obvious better alternative for this use case. The sprinkled
> > "chmod +w" do feel a bit hacky.
> >
> >> I think it would be well worth doing - I've always found having two
> >> trees a nuisance.
> >>
> >> It's still worth keeping the existing scheme. I often find it useful
> >> to checkout random bits of our p4 depot without the hassle of
> >> setting up a client workspace if I just want a read-only copy.
> >
> > Good point. I'll keep it optional.
> >
> > The other possibility is to stick the git commits into a branch
> > somewhere, then integrate the branch in the p4 sense. This feels
> > more complex, but makes prettier feature branches in the
> > long-term history.
> >
> > -- Pete
>
> --
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>
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2012-05-02 22:19 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 6+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2012-04-30 22:58 git p4: in-place submit Pete Wyckoff
2012-05-01 5:28 ` Luke Diamand
2012-05-01 22:18 ` Pete Wyckoff
2012-05-02 17:06 ` Gary Gibbons
2012-05-02 22:19 ` Pete Wyckoff [this message]
2012-05-01 19:27 ` Gary Gibbons
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