printdebug "import clog $r1clogp->{version} becomes r1\n";
}
die $! if CLOGS->error;
- close CLOGS or $?==(SIGPIPE<<8) or failedcmd @clogcmd;
+ close CLOGS or $?==SIGPIPE or failedcmd @clogcmd;
$clogp or fail "package changelog has no entries!";
push @specs, qw(heads/*) if deliberately_not_fast_forward;
# This is rather miserable:
- # When git-fetch --prune is passed a fetchspec ending with a *,
+ # When git fetch --prune is passed a fetchspec ending with a *,
# it does a plausible thing. If there is no * then:
# - it matches subpaths too, even if the supplied refspec
# starts refs, and behaves completely madly if the source
# We want to fetch a fixed ref, and we don't know in advance
# if it exists, so this is not suitable.
#
- # Our workaround is to use git-ls-remote. git-ls-remote has its
+ # Our workaround is to use git ls-remote. git ls-remote has its
# own qairks. Notably, it has the absurd multi-tail-matching
- # behaviour: git-ls-remote R refs/foo can report refs/foo AND
+ # behaviour: git ls-remote R refs/foo can report refs/foo AND
# refs/refs/foo etc.
#
# Also, we want an idempotent snapshot, but we have to make two
- # calls to the remote: one to git-ls-remote and to git-fetch. The
- # solution is use git-ls-remote to obtain a target state, and
- # git-fetch to try to generate it. If we don't manage to generate
+ # calls to the remote: one to git ls-remote and to git fetch. The
+ # solution is use git ls-remote to obtain a target state, and
+ # git fetch to try to generate it. If we don't manage to generate
# the target state, we try again.
my $specre = join '|', map {
my ($objid,$rrefname) = ($1,$2);
if (!$wanted_rref->($rrefname)) {
print STDERR <<END;
-warning: git-ls-remote @look reported $rrefname; this is silly, ignoring it.
+warning: git ls-remote @look reported $rrefname; this is silly, ignoring it.
END
next;
}
if (!exists $wantr{$rrefname}) {
if ($wanted_rref->($rrefname)) {
printdebug <<END;
-git-fetch @fspecs created $lrefname which git-ls-remote @look didn't list.
+git-fetch @fspecs created $lrefname which git ls-remote @look didn't list.
END
} else {
print STDERR <<END
-warning: git-fetch @fspecs created $lrefname; this is silly, deleting it.
+warning: git fetch @fspecs created $lrefname; this is silly, deleting it.
END
}
runcmd_ordryrun_local @git, qw(update-ref -d), $lrefname;
next if $got eq $want;
if (!defined $objgot{$want}) {
print STDERR <<END;
-warning: git-ls-remote suggests we want $lrefname
+warning: git ls-remote suggests we want $lrefname
warning: and it should refer to $want
-warning: but git-fetch didn't fetch that object to any relevant ref.
+warning: but git fetch didn't fetch that object to any relevant ref.
warning: This may be due to a race with someone updating the server.
warning: Will try again...
END
next FETCH_ITERATION;
}
printdebug <<END;
-git-fetch @fspecs made $lrefname=$got but want git-ls-remote @look says $want
+git-fetch @fspecs made $lrefname=$got but want git ls-remote @look says $want
END
runcmd_ordryrun_local @git, qw(update-ref -m),
- "dgit fetch git-fetch fixup", $lrefname, $want;
+ "dgit fetch git fetch fixup", $lrefname, $want;
$lrfetchrefs_f{$lrefname} = $want;
}
last;
}
- printdebug "git_fetch_us: git-fetch --no-insane emulation complete\n",
+ printdebug "git_fetch_us: git fetch --no-insane emulation complete\n",
Dumper(\%lrfetchrefs_f);
my %here;
# 2. Copy .pc from the fake's extraction, if necessary
# 3. Run dpkg-source --commit
# 4. If the result has changes to debian/, then
- # - git-add them them
- # - git-add .pc if we had a .pc in-tree
- # - git-commit
- # 5. If we had a .pc in-tree, delete it, and git-commit
+ # - git add them them
+ # - git add .pc if we had a .pc in-tree
+ # - git commit
+ # 5. If we had a .pc in-tree, delete it, and git commit
# 6. Back in the main tree, fast forward to the new HEAD
# Another situation we may have to cope with is gbp-style
# We would want to detect these, so we know to escape into
# quilt_fixup_gbp. However, this is in general not possible.
# Consider a package with a one patch which the dgit user reverts
- # (with git-revert or the moral equivalent).
+ # (with git revert or the moral equivalent).
#
# That is indistinguishable in contents from a patches-unapplied
# tree. And looking at the history to distinguish them is not
if (!$rmchanges) {
my @unwanted = map { s#^\.\./##; $_; } glob "../$pat";
@unwanted = grep { $_ ne changespat $version,'source' } @unwanted;
- fail "changes files other than source matching $pat".
- " already present (@unwanted);".
- " building would result in ambiguity about the intended results"
+ fail <<END
+changes files other than source matching $pat already present; building would result in ambiguity about the intended results.
+Suggest you delete @unwanted.
+END
if @unwanted;
}
my $wasdir = must_getcwd();
($b =~ m/_source\.changes$/ <=> $a =~ m/_source\.changes$/)
or $a cmp $b
} @changesfiles;
+ fail <<END if @changesfiles==1;
+only one changes file from sbuild (@changesfiles)
+perhaps you need to pass -A ? (sbuild's default is to build only
+arch-specific binaries; dgit 1.4 used to override that.)
+END
fail "wrong number of different changes files (@changesfiles)"
unless @changesfiles==2;
my $binchanges = parsecontrol($changesfiles[1], "binary changes file");