CMake/Git

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CMake version tracking and development is hosted by Git.

Official Repository

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

At the time of this writing the repository does not have branches and tags older than CMake 2.4. Conversion of older branches and tags from CVS will be completed later and added. The release branches in CVS are represented in git as tags. To see the available tags and branches use git show-ref. The current release being worked on will be the release branch.

Cloning

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

$ git clone git://cmake.org/cmake.git CMake

or through the (less efficient) http protocol:

$ git clone http://cmake.org/cmake.git CMake

All further commands work inside the local copy of the repository created by the clone:

$ cd 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.git co -d CMake master

Branches

We use a topic-based workflow as documented here and thus define integration branches:

  • maint: Release maintenance; bug fixes only
  • master: Release preparation; starting point for new features (default)
  • next: Development; new features published here first

We also provide additional branches:

  • nightly: Follows next, updated at 01:00 UTC
  • release: Follows master, updated at 01:00 UTC
  • dashboard: Dashboard script (see below)
  • hooks: Local commit hooks (place in .git/hooks)

After cloning, create a local branch to track the upstream branch using git checkout:

$ git checkout -b release origin/release

As a shortcut with Git >= 1.6.5 one may choose a branch during the initial clone:

$ git clone -b release git://cmake.org/cmake.git CMakeRel

Updating

Use git pull to update your repository and work tree with the latest upstream changes:

$ git checkout master
$ git pull
From git://cmake.org/cmake
   689aa0e..4803630  master     -> origin/master
Updating 689aa0e..4803630
Fast forward
...

Note the "Fast forward" in the output. This assumes that you have made no local commits on master.

Development

We provide here a brief introduction to development with Git. See the Resources below for further information.

First, use git config to introduce yourself to Git:

$ git config --global user.name "Your Name"
$ git config --global user.email "you@yourdomain.com"

Optionally enable color output from Git commands:

$ git config --global color.ui auto

The --global option stores the configuration settings in ~/.gitconfig in your home directory so that they apply to all repositories.

Committing

After cloning the repository using the above instructions one may commit new changes locally. Git creates commits based on a stage (also called index or cache) that sits between the work tree and the repository. After editing a file, say Modules/readme.txt, use git status to see the state of the stage and work tree:

$ git status
# On branch master
# Changed but not updated:
#   (use "git add <file>..." to update what will be committed)
#   (use "git checkout -- <file>..." to discard changes in working directory)
#
#       modified:   Modules/readme.txt
#
no changes added to commit (use "git add" and/or "git commit -a")

This tells you that no changes are staged for commit (i.e. the stage and HEAD commit have identical content), and that the Modules/readme.txt file in the work tree has been modified from what is in the stage. We stage the change using git add:

$ git add Modules/readme.txt

and check the status again:

$ git status
# On branch master
# Changes to be committed:
#   (use "git reset HEAD <file>..." to unstage)
#
#       modified:   Modules/readme.txt
#

This tells you that changes have been staged for commit, and that the work tree is identical to the stage. Now use git commit to create a commit:

$ git commit

Git will bring up an editor interactively to ask for the commit message. The editor will already have the output of git status in it as a reminder, but the comment lines will be removed from the message automatically. A good convention is to use a short one-line summary (preferably 50 characters or less), then a blank line, then a detailed description:

Clarify documentation of module conventions

The previous description of output variable XXX_YYY_ZZZ was not precise.
We clarify the wording and give an example.

# Please enter the commit message for your changes. Lines starting
# with '#' will be ignored, and an empty message aborts the commit.
# On branch master
# Your branch is ahead of 'origin/master' by 1 commit.
#
# Changes to be committed:
#   (use "git reset HEAD^1 <file>..." to unstage)
#
#       modified:   Modules/readme.txt
#

Upon exit it will create the commit (unless you leave the message blank to abort the commit). After committing, check the status again:

$ git status
# On branch master
# Your branch is ahead of 'origin/master' by 1 commit.
#
nothing to commit (working directory clean)

This tells you that the (new) HEAD commit, stage, and work tree are all identical. Furthermore it says you have one commit on your local master branch beyond what was last fetched from the upstream origin/master branch. Use git log to see your commit:

$ git log origin/master..master
commit 0298957e33baab30cda0da625091260a0267a5a4
Author: Your Name <you@yourdomain.com>
Date:   Thu Feb 4 14:37:53 2010 -0500

    Clarify documentation of module conventions
    
    The previous description of output variable XXX_YYY_ZZZ was not precise.
    We clarify the wording and give an example.

The origin/master..master option says "show me commits reachable from master but not from origin/master". In this case it is just the one commit.

One may also browse history interactively using gitk.

Publishing

Authorized developers may publish 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.git

(Note that 'pushurl' requires Git >= 1.6.4. Use just 'url' for Git < 1.6.4.)

All publishers share the git@cmake.org account but each uses a unique ssh key for authentication. To request access, fill out the Kitware Password form. Include your ssh public key and a reference to someone our administrators may contact to verify your privileges.

Note that we may not grant all contributors push access to the cmake.org repository. The distributed nature of Git allows contributors to retain authorship credit even if they do not publish changes directly.

Once your push URL is configured and your key is installed for git@cmake.org then you can try pushing changes. Continuing from the above commit example, you have one commit on your local master beyond what was last fetched from origin. Use git push to send the changes back to origin:

$ git push

This shorthand push command works when your current local branch tracks a remote branch. Git automatically configured the local master branch to track the remote branch origin/master upon cloning. The configuration can be seen in .git/config:

[branch "master"]
        remote = origin
        merge = refs/heads/master

The configuration makes the above push command equivalent to the longhand form:

$ git push origin master:master

The origin option tells Git where to send history. The master:master option tells Git what history to send. The left part names a local branch to send, and the right part names the remote branch to update.

Integration

When someone else pushes changes to cmake.org/cmake.git after you last fetched from it then a "git push" as documented above may fail with an error like

To git@cmake.org:cmake.git
 ! [rejected]        master -> master (non-fast forward)
error: failed to push some refs to 'git@cmake.org:cmake.git'
To prevent you from losing history, non-fast-forward updates were rejected
Merge the remote changes before pushing again.  See the 'non-fast forward'
section of 'git push --help' for details.

Git is telling you that your history does not include the new upstream changes, so you must first fetch them from upstream and integrate your work. This is the Git equivalent to when a commit in CVS or Subversion fails with a message that your checkout is not up to date. Those tools make you update and resolve conflicts before you can even commit, but Git lets you commit first and integrate with other work later.

Git provides a shorthand way to integrate the work with one command, but for instructional purposes we'll take the long way. Use git fetch to get the latest upstream changes, and then check the local status:

$ git fetch
From git://cmake.org/cmake
   689aa0e..4803630  master     -> origin/master
$ git status
# On branch master
# Your branch and 'origin/master' have diverged,
# and have 1 and 1 different commit(s) each, respectively.
#
nothing to commit (working directory clean)

Now that the local repository has a copy of the latest upstream changes it tells you explicitly that development has diverged. The graph of history looks somewhat like this:

... o ---- o ---- A ---- B  origin/master (upstream work)
                   \
                    C  master (your work)

You based commit C on commit A because that was the latest work you had fetched from upstream at the time. However, before you tried to push back to origin someone else pushed commit B. Development history has diverged into separate paths.

There are two ways to integrate the two paths of history (your work with new upstream work): Merge or Rebase

Merge

Use the git merge command:

$ git merge origin/master

This tells Git to integrate the changes from origin/master into your work and create a merge commit. The graph of history now looks like this:

... o ---- o ---- A ---- B  origin/master (upstream work)
                   \      \
                    C ---- M  master (your work)

The new merge commit M has two parents, each representing one path of development that led to the content stored in the commit.

Note that the history behind M is now non-linear.

Rebase

Use the git rebase command:

$ git rebase origin/master

This tells Git to replay commit C (your work) as if you had based it on commit B instead of A. CVS and Subversion users routinely rebase their local changes on top of upstream work when they update before commit. Git just adds explicit separation between the commit and rebase steps.

The graph of history now looks like this:

... o ---- o ---- A ---- B  origin/master (upstream work)
                          \
                           C'  master (your work)

Commit C' is a new commit created by the git rebase command. It is different from C in two ways:

  1. It has a different history: B instead of A.
  2. It's content accounts for changes in both B and C: it is the same as M from the merge example.

Note that the history behind C' is still linear. We have chosen (for now) to allow only linear history in cmake.org/cmake.git. This approach preserves the CVS-based workflow used previously and may ease the transition. An attempt to push C' into our repository will work (assuming you have permissions and no one has pushed while you were rebasing).

The git pull command provides a shorthand way to fetch from origin and rebase local work on it:

$ git pull --rebase

This combines the above fetch and rebase steps into one command.

Workflow

We use the branchy workflow documented here.

Dashboard

The dashboard branch contains a dashboard client helper script. Use these commands to track it:

$ mkdir -p ~/Dashboards/CMakeScripts
$ cd ~/Dashboards/CMakeScripts
$ git init
$ git remote add -t dashboard origin git://cmake.org/cmake.git
$ git pull origin

The cmake_common.cmake script contains setup instructions in its top comments.

Resources

Additional information about Git may be obtained at these sites: