CMake/Git

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CMake version tracking and development is moving to Git.

Experimental Repository

We have published an experimental repository on cmake.org. WE REQUEST THAT NO ONE PUBLISH A CLONE OF THIS REPOSITORY AT AN ONLINE HOSTING SITE. This may or may not be the final version of history after conversion from CVS. It may be removed or rewritten at any time. We prefer to not have multiple incompatible histories out there. The final conversion will be available soon, at which point we may all begin sharing changes!

At the time of this writing it has only the development mainline and no branches or tags. These will be converted and added later without hindering the main move.

One may clone the repository using git clone through the native git protocol:

 git clone git://cmake.org/cmake-tmp.git CMake

or through the (less efficient) http protocol:

 git clone http://cmake.org/cmake-tmp.git CMake

The repository is also available by anonymous cvs pserver, served by git cvsserver. The server maps git branches to cvs modules, so one must ask cvs to get the module "master":

 cvs -d :pserver:anonymous@cmake.org:/cmake-tmp.git co -d CMake master

One may browse the repository online using the Gitweb interface at http://cmake.org/gitweb.

Development

After cloning the repository using the above instructions one may commit new changes locally.

Publishing

The experimental repository is unofficial and changes published in it are not considered part of the project. However, developers may experiment with publishing work as follows.

Git automatically configures a new clone to refer to its origin through a remote called origin. Initially one may fetch or pull changes from origin, but may not push changes to it.

In order to publish new commits in the cmake.org repository, developers must configure a push URL for the origin. Use git config to specify an ssh-protocol URL:

 git config remote.origin.pushurl git@cmake.org:cmake-tmp.git

All publishers share the git@cmake.org account but each uses a unique ssh key for authentication.