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From: Boaz Harrosh <bharrosh@panasas.com>
To: Mario Pareja <mpareja.dev@gmail.com>
Cc: git@vger.kernel.org
Subject: Re: Locking binary files
Date: Tue, 23 Sep 2008 14:16:01 +0300	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <48D8CFF1.8030403@panasas.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <94c1db200809222339t7d65081eq7471fef86fb5ec73@mail.gmail.com>

Mario Pareja wrote:
> Hi,
> 
> For one and a half years, I have been keeping my eyes on the git
> community in hopes of making the switch away from SVN.  One particular
> issue holding me back is the inability to lock binary files.
> Throughout the past year, I have yet to see developments on this
> issue.  I understand that locking files goes against the fundamental
> principles of distributed source control, but I think we need to come
> up with some workarounds.  For Linux kernel development this is may
> not be an issue; however, for application development this is a major
> issue. How else can one developer be sure that time spent editing a
> binary file will not be wasted because another developer submitted a
> change?
> 
> To achieve the effects of locking, a "central" repository must be
> identified.  Regardless of the distributed nature of git, most
> _companies_ will have a "central" repository for a software project.
> We should be able to mark a file as requiring a lock from the
> governing git repository at a specified address.  Is this made
> difficult because git tracks file contents not files?
> 
> In any case, I think this is a crucial issue that needs to be
> addressed if git is going to be adopted by companies with binary file
> conflict potential. I don't see how a web development company can take
> advantage of git to track source code and image file changes.  Any
> advice would be great!
> 
> Regards,
> 
> Mario
> --

It should be easy for a company to set a policy where a couple of scripts
must be run for particular type of files. Given that, the implementation
of such scripts is easy:

For every foo.bin there is possibly a foo.bin.lock file.

Lock-script look for absence of the lock-file at upstream then git-add
the file (With some info that tells users things like who has the file).
If git-push fails, since I'm adding a file and someone already added
it while I was pushing, then the lock is not granted.

Unlock-script will git-rm the lock-file and push.

In both scripts mod-bits of original file can be toggled for
read-only/write signaling to the user. (At upstream the file is always
read-only)

This can also work in a distributed system with more then one tier of
servers. (Locks pushed to the most upstream server)

Combine that with git's mail notifications for commits and you have a
system far more robust then svn will ever want to be

My $0.017
Boaz

  parent reply	other threads:[~2008-09-23 11:17 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 19+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
     [not found] <94c1db200809222333q4953a6b9g8ce0c1cd4b8f5eb4@mail.gmail.com>
2008-09-23  6:39 ` Locking binary files Mario Pareja
2008-09-23  7:18   ` Andreas Ericsson
     [not found]     ` <94c1db200809230054t20e7e61dh5022966d4112eee6@mail.gmail.com>
2008-09-23  8:31       ` Andreas Ericsson
2008-09-23 13:56         ` Mario Pareja
2008-09-23 14:28           ` Alex Riesen
2008-09-23 17:32           ` Daniel Barkalow
2008-09-23 19:49             ` Junio C Hamano
2008-09-23 21:13               ` Daniel Barkalow
2008-09-23 21:54                 ` Dmitry Potapov
2008-09-23 22:29                   ` Daniel Barkalow
2008-09-23 23:21                     ` Dmitry Potapov
2008-09-24  4:15                       ` Daniel Barkalow
2008-09-24 15:00                         ` Dmitry Potapov
2008-09-23 20:46           ` Dmitry Potapov
2008-09-23 11:16   ` Boaz Harrosh [this message]
2008-09-23 11:20     ` Boaz Harrosh
2008-09-23 14:14     ` Mario Pareja
2008-09-23 14:35       ` Boaz Harrosh
2008-09-23 13:44   ` Dmitry Potapov

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