From: D Herring <dherring@tentpost.com>
To: git@vger.kernel.org
Subject: Re: idea: git "came from" tags
Date: Tue, 19 Jan 2010 00:02:11 -0500 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <hj3ecj$836$1@ger.gmane.org> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <4B542EB2.5030407@drmicha.warpmail.net>
Michael J Gruber wrote:
> D Herring venit, vidit, dixit 18.01.2010 05:22:
>> Actors:
>> - public "upstream" repository
>> - public "local" repository
>> - end users tracking both
>>
>> Situation:
>> - local starts by tracking upstream
>> - local makes changes, commits, and sends upstream
>> - users now tracking local ahead of upstream
>
> Here I have to ask why. If users choose to track a volatile branch then
> they have to live with rebasing or hard resets. If they want something
> stable then they should track upstream.
I'm maintaining the "local" repository in a distribution of upstream
libraries. I'm trying to avoid both volatile branches and unnecessary
clutter. Here, both upstream and local are stable; they are just
maintained by different teams. Upstream often accepts patches; but
they may tweak things, use a different version control system, etc.
and so the commit objects differ.
>> - upstream makes modified commits
>> - local satisfied, wants to reset master to upstream/master
>>
>> Problem:
>> - A merge will perpetually leave two parallel branches. Even though
>> there are no longer any diffs, local/master cannot use the same
>> objects as upstream/master.
>
> If there are no diffs then, in fact, it can share most objects since
> most trees will be the same, only a few commit objects will differ.
But once I have a local diff, the local tree must always use different
git objects, even though the file contents are the same...
>> - A hard reset lets local/master return to sharing objects with
>> upstream/master; but this may break pulls or cause other problems for
>> users.
>>
>> Proposed solution:
>> - Local adds a "came from" tag to upstream/master, leaves a tag on the
>> head of local/master, and does a hard reset from local/master to
>> upstream/master. When a user tracking local/master does a pull, their
>> client detects a non-fast-forward, finds the came-from tag, and treats
>> it as a fast-forward.
>>
>> Basically, this is a protocol to glue a "strategy ours" merge onto an
>> existing tree. This way local can cleanly track upstream, with no
>> added complexity in the nominal (no local changes) case.
>
> But doesn't that mean that users completely trust you about what they
> should consider a fast forward, i.e. when they should do a hard reset?
> So, this is completely equivalent to following one of your branches with
> +f, i.e. having a public a branch which they pull from no matter what,
> and having a private branch which pushes to the public one in case of
> fast-forwards as well as in the case when you would use your special tag.
This almost works, but it destroys some history preserved by a proper
merge or this proposed extension. For example, suppose there are
three commits between the user's last fetch and this merge/forced
update; a proper merge will download them, but a forced update will
not. This becomes important when a release tarball is based on one of
these missing commits.
If local uses merge objects to track this properly, it creates a
parallel branch that is simply nuisance clutter. Normally, the
nuisance is limited to a visual distraction in gitk; but it can be
significant if a user is trying to track both local and upstream.
When there are and have been no local changes, local is following
upstream; so the user can freely follow either until a local change is
made. When there are no but have been local changes that were merged,
the user must pick a branch even thought the contents are the same.
I could be obsessing over a minor detail; but the proposed change
doesn't seem drastic.
To reiterate,
Given
A - C - E - ... - Z
\ \
- B + D
where A-Z are commit objects and the contents of merge D are identical
to C, it would be nice to have a protocol that tags D for posterity
and allows D->E to be a fast forward, without requiring cooperation
from the source of E to Z.
Later,
Daniel
prev parent reply other threads:[~2010-01-19 5:05 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 3+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2010-01-18 4:22 idea: git "came from" tags D Herring
2010-01-18 9:49 ` Michael J Gruber
2010-01-19 5:02 ` D Herring [this message]
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