version-controlled at all). But there are several disadvantages -
for one, these tools (especially StGIT) do not actually fit well
with plain Git at all: it is basically impossible to take advantage
-of the index efectively when using StGIT. But more importantly,
+of the index effectively when using StGIT. But more importantly,
these tools horribly fail in the face of distributed environment.
TopGit has been designed around three main tenets:
As mentioned above, the main intended use-case for TopGit is tracking
third-party patches, where each patch is effectively a single topic
-branch. In order to flexibly accomodate even complex scenarios when
+branch. In order to flexibly accommodate even complex scenarios when
you track many patches where many are independent but some depend
on others, TopGit ignores the ancient Quilt heritage of patch series
and instead allows the patches to freely form graphs (DAGs just like
-Git history itself, only "one lever higher"). For now, you have
+Git history itself, only "one level higher"). For now, you have
to manually specify which patches does the current one depend
on, but TopGit might help you with that in the future in a darcs-like
fashion.
After `tg create`, you should insert the patch description
to the '.topmsg' file, which will already contain some
- pre-filled bits. You can set topgit.to, topgit.cc and topgit.bcc
+ prefilled bits. You can set topgit.to, topgit.cc and topgit.bcc
configuration variables in order to have `tg create`
add these headers with given default values to '.topmsg'.
only empty branch (base == head); use '-f' to remove
non-empty branch.
+ The '-f' option is also useful to force removal of a branch's base, if
+ you used 'git branch -D B' to remove the branch B, and then certain
+ TopGit commands complain, because the base of branch B is still there.
+
Currently, this command will _NOT_ remove the branch from
the dependency list in other branches. You need to take
care of this _manually_. This is even more complicated
adjusting '.topmsg', prepare them in the index before
calling 'tg depend add'.
+ TODO: Subcommand for removing dependencies, obviously
+
tg info
~~~~~~~
Show a summary information about the current or specified
tg patch will be able to automatically send the patches by mail
or save them to files. (TODO)
- TODO: tg patch -i to base at index instead of branch,
- -w for working tree
+ Options:
+ -i base patch generation on index instead of branch
+ -w base patch generation on working tree instead of branch
tg mail
~~~~~~~
its documentation for details on how to setup email for git.
You can pass arbitrary options to this command through the
'-s' parameter, but you must double-quote everything.
+ The '-r' parameter with msgid can be used to generate in-reply-to
+ and reference headers to an earlier mail.
+
+ Note: be careful when using this command. It easily sends out several
+ mails. You might want to run
+
+ git config sendemail.confirm always
+
+ to let `git send-email` ask for confirmation before sending any mail.
TODO: 'tg mail patchfile' to mail an already exported patch
TODO: mailing patch series
This can take long time to accurately determine all the relevant
information about each branch; you can pass '-t' to get just
- terse list of topic branch names quickly.
+ terse list of topic branch names quickly. Alternately, you can
+ pass '--graphviz' to get a dot-suitable output to draw a dependency
+ graph between the topic branches.
+
+ You can also use the --sort option to sort the branches using
+ a topological sort. This is especially useful if each
+ TopGit-tracked topic branch depends on a single parent branch,
+ since it will then print the branches in the dependency
+ order. In more complex scenarios, a text graph view would be
+ much more useful, but that is not yet implemented.
+
+ The --deps option outputs dependency informations between
+ branches in a machine-readable format. Feed this to "tsort"
+ to get the output from --sort.
TODO: Speed up by an order of magnitude
- TODO: Graph view
+ TODO: Text graph view
tg export
~~~~~~~~~
in the cleaned up history (corresponding basically exactly
to `tg patch` output for the topic branch).
- The command has two posible outputs now - either a Git branch
- with the collapsed history, or a quilt series in new directory.
+ The command has three possible outputs now - either a Git branch with
+ the collapsed history, a Git branch with a linearized history, or a
+ quilt series in new directory.
In case of producing collapsed history in new branch,
- You can use this collapsed structure either for providing
+ you can use this collapsed structure either for providing
a pull source for upstream, or further linearization e.g.
for creation of a quilt series using git log:
`- t/bar/good <,-------------------'/
`- t/baz ---------------------'
+ In case of using the linearize mode:
+
+ master$ tg export --linearize for-linus
+
+ you get a linear history respecting the dependencies of your patches in
+ a new branch for-linus. The result should be more or less the same as
+ using quilt mode and reimporting it into a Git branch. (More or less
+ because the topologic order can usually be extended in more than one
+ way into a complete ordering and the two methods may choose different
+ one's.) The result might be more appropriate for merging upstream as
+ it contains fewer merges.
+
+ Note that you might get conflicts during linearization because the
+ patches are reordered to get a linear history.
+
In case of the quilt mode,
master$ tg export --quilt for-linus
a comma-separated explicit list of branches to export. This
mode of operation is currently not supported with collapse.
- Usage: tg export ([--collapse] BRANCH | --quilt DIR)
+ In '--quilt' mode the patches are named like the originating topgit
+ branch. So usually they end up in subdirectories of the output
+ directory. With option '--flatten' the names are mangled such that
+ they end up directly in the output dir (i.e. slashed are substituted by
+ underscores). With '--numbered' (which implies '--flatten') the patch
+ names get a number as prefix to allow getting the order without
+ consulting the series file, which eases sending out the patches.
+
+ Usage: tg export ([(--collapse | --linearize)] BRANCH | --quilt DIR)
TODO: Make stripping of non-essential headers configurable
TODO: Make stripping of [PATCH] and other prefixes configurable
TODO: --mbox option for other mode of operation
- TODO: -n option to prevent exporting of empty patches
TODO: -a option to export all branches
- TODO: For quilt exporting, use a temporary branch and remove it when
- done - this would allow producing conflict-less series
+ TODO: For quilt exporting, export the linearized history created in a
+ temporary branch---this would allow producing conflict-less
+ series
tg import
~~~~~~~~~
Import commits within the given revision range into TopGit,
creating one topic branch per commit, the dependencies forming
- a linear sequence starting on your current branch.
+ a linear sequence starting on your current branch (or a branch
+ specified by the '-d' parameter).
The branch names are auto-guessed from the commit messages
and prefixed by t/ by default; use '-p PREFIX' to specify
TODO: tg update -a for updating all topic branches
-TODO: tg depend for adding/removing dependencies smoothly
+tg push
+~~~~~~~
+ pushes a TopGit-controlled topic branch to a remote
+ repository. By default the remote gets all dependencies
+ (both tgish and non-tgish) and bases pushed to.
+
TODO: tg rename
When mailing out your patch, basically only few extra headers
mail headers are inserted and the patch itself is appended.
Thus, as your patches evolve, you can record nuances like whether
-the paricular patch should have To-list/Cc-maintainer or vice
+the particular patch should have To-list/Cc-maintainer or vice
versa and similar nuances, if your project is into that.
From is prefilled from your current GIT_AUTHOR_IDENT, other headers
can be prefilled from various optional topgit.* config options.