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137 lines
5.6 KiB
Plaintext
137 lines
5.6 KiB
Plaintext
NOTES ON COMMITTING TO EMACS'S REPOSITORY -*- outline -*-
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** elpa
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This branch does not contain a copy of Emacs, but of the Emacs Lisp
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package archive (elpa.gnu.org). See admin/notes/elpa for further
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explanation, and the README file in the branch for usage
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instructions.
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* Install changes only on one branch, let them get merged elsewhere if needed.
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In particular, install bug-fixes only on the release branch (if there
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is one) and let them get synced to the master; do not install them by
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hand on the master as well. E.g. if there is an active "emacs-24" branch
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and you have a bug-fix appropriate for the next emacs-24.x release,
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install it only on the emacs-24 branch, not on the master as well.
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Installing things manually into more than one branch makes merges more
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difficult.
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http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/emacs-devel/2010-03/msg01124.html
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The exception is, if you know that the change will be difficult to
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merge to the master (eg because the master code has changed a lot).
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In that case, it's helpful if you can apply the change to both master
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and branch yourself (when committing the branch change, indicate
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in the commit log that it should not be merged to the master, by
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including the phrase "Not to be merged to master", or any other phrase
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that matches "merge").
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* Installing changes from your personal branches.
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If your branch has only a single commit, or many different real
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commits, it is fine to do a merge. If your branch has only a very
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small number of "real" commits, but several "merge from masters", it is
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preferred that you take your branch's diff, apply it to the master, and
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commit directly, not merge. This keeps the history cleaner.
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In general, when working on some feature in a separate branch, it is
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preferable not to merge from master until you are done with the
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feature. Unless you really need some change that was done on the
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master while you were developing on the branch, you don't really need
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those merges; just merge once, when you are done with the feature, and
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Git will take care of the rest. Git is much better in this than CVS,
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so interim merges are unnecessary.
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Or use shelves; or rebase; or do something else. See the thread for
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yet another fun excursion into the exciting world of version control.
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http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/emacs-devel/2010-04/msg00086.html
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* Installing changes from gnulib
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Some of the files in Emacs are copied from gnulib. To synchronize
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these files from the version of gnulib that you have checked out into
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a sibling directory of your branch, type "admin/merge-gnulib"; this
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will check out the latest version of gnulib if there is no sibling
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directory already. It is a good idea to run "git status" afterwards,
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so that if a gnulib module added a file, you can record the new file
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using "git add". After synchronizing from gnulib, do a "make" in the
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usual way.
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To change the set of gnulib modules, change the GNULIB_MODULES
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variable in admin/merge-gnulib before running it.
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If you remove a gnulib module, or if a gnulib module
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removes a file, then remove the corresponding files by hand.
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* How to merge changes from emacs-24 to master
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[The section on git merge procedure has not yet been written.]
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You may see conflicts in autoload md5sums in comments. Strictly
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speaking, the right thing to do is merge everything else, resolve the
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conflict by choosing either the master or branch version, then run
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'make -C lisp autoloads' to update the md5sums to the correct master
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value before committing.
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* Re-adding a file that has been removed from the repository
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Let's suppose you've done:
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git rm file; git commit -a
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You can just restore a copy of the file and then re-add it;
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git does not have per-file history so this will not harm
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anything.
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Alternatively, you can do
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git revert XXXXX
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where XXXXX is the hash of the commit in which file was removed.
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This backs out the entire changeset the deletion was part of,
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which is often more appropriate.
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* Undoing a commit (uncommitting)
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If you have not pushed the commit, you may be able to use 'git reset
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--hard' with a hash argument to revert the your local repo copy to the
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pre-commit state.
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If you have pushed commit, resetting will be ineffective because it
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will only vanish the commit in your local copy. Instead, use 'git
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revert', giving it the commit ID as argument. This will create a
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new commit that backs out the change. Then push that.
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Note that git will generate a log message for the revert that includes
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a git hash. Please edit this to refer to the commit by the first line
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of its log comment, or by committer and date, or by something else
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that is not the hash. As noted previously, it is best to avoid hashes
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in comments in case we someday have to change version-control systems
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again.
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* Bisecting
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This is a semi-automated way to find the revision that introduced a bug.
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Browse 'git help bisect' for technical instructions.
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* Maintaining ChangeLog history
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Older ChangeLog entries are kept in history files named ChangeLog.1,
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ChangeLog.2, etc., and can be edited just as any other source files
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can. Newer ChangeLog entries are stored in the repository as commit
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messages, which cannot be edited directly.
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'make ChangeLog' copies newer ChangeLog entries into a file
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'ChangeLog' that is intended to be put into the distribution tarball.
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This ChangeLog file is not put into the repository.
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'make change-history' copies all newer ChangeLog entries into the
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start of the newest ChangeLog history file. These ChangeLog entries
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are thereafter considered to be old, so later uses of 'make ChangeLog'
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and/or 'make change-history' will no longer copy the entries. To
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alter ChangeLog history, run 'make change-history', then edit
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the ChangeLog history files manually and commit your changes.
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