| Git for CVS users |
| ================= |
| |
| Ok, so you're a CVS user. That's ok, it's a treatable condition, and the |
| first step to recovery is admitting you have a problem. The fact that |
| you are reading this file means that you may be well on that path |
| already. |
| |
| The thing about CVS is that it absolutely sucks as a source control |
| manager, and you'll thus be happy with almost anything else. Git, |
| however, may be a bit _too_ different (read: "good") for your taste, and |
| does a lot of things differently. |
| |
| One particular suckage of CVS is very hard to work around: CVS is |
| basically a tool for tracking _file_ history, while git is a tool for |
| tracking _project_ history. This sometimes causes problems if you are |
| used to doign very strange things in CVS, in particular if you're doing |
| things like making branches of just a subset of the project. Git can't |
| track that, since git never tracks things on the level of an individual |
| file, only on the whole project level. |
| |
| The good news is that most people don't do that, and in fact most sane |
| people think it's a bug in CVS that makes it tag (and check in changes) |
| one file at a time. So most projects you'll ever see will use CVS |
| _as_if_ it was sane. In which case you'll find it very easy indeed to |
| move over to Git. |
| |
| First off: this is not a git tutorial. See Documentation/tutorial.txt |
| for how git actually works. This is more of a random collection of |
| gotcha's and notes on converting from CVS to git. |
| |
| Second: CVS has the notion of a "repository" as opposed to the thing |
| that you're actually working in (your working directory, or your |
| "checked out tree"). Git does not have that notion at all, and all git |
| working directories _are_ the repositories. However, you can easily |
| emulate the CVS model by having one special "global repository", which |
| people can synchronize with. See details later, but in the meantime |
| just keep in mind that with git, every checked out working tree will be |
| a full revision control of its own. |
| |
| |
| Importing a CVS archive |
| ----------------------- |
| |
| Ok, you have an old project, and you want to at least give git a chance |
| to see how it performs. The first thing you want to do (after you've |
| gone through the git tutorial, and generally familiarized yourself with |
| how to commit stuff etc in git) is to create a git'ified version of your |
| CVS archive. |
| |
| Happily, that's very easy indeed. Git will do it for you, although git |
| will need the help of a program called "cvsps": |
| |
| http://www.cobite.com/cvsps/ |
| |
| which is not actually related to git at all, but which makes CVS usage |
| look almost sane (ie you almost certainly want to have it even if you |
| decide to stay with CVS). However, git will want at _least_ version 2.1 |
| of cvsps (available at the address above), and in fact will currently |
| refuse to work with anything else. |
| |
| Once you've gotten (and installed) cvsps, you may or may not want to get |
| any more familiar with it, but make sure it is in your path. After that, |
| the magic command line is |
| |
| git cvsimport <cvsroot> <module> |
| |
| which will do exactly what you'd think it does: it will create a git |
| archive of the named CVS module. The new archive will be created in a |
| subdirectory named <module>. |
| |
| It can take some time to actually do the conversion for a large archive, |
| and the conversion script can be reasonably chatty, but on some not very |
| scientific tests it averaged about eight revisions per second, so a |
| medium-sized project should not take more than a couple of minutes. |
| |
| |
| Emulating CVS behaviour |
| ----------------------- |
| |
| |
| FIXME! Talk about setting up several repositories, and pulling and |
| pushing between them. Talk about merging, and branches. Some of this |
| needs to be in the tutorial too. |
| |
| |
| |
| CVS annotate |
| ------------ |
| |
| The core GIT itself does not have a "cvs annotate" equivalent. |
| It has something that you may want to use when you would use |
| "cvs annotate". |
| |
| Let's step back a bit and think about the reason why you would |
| want to do "cvs annotate a-file.c" to begin with. |
| |
| You would use "cvs annotate" on a file when you have trouble |
| with a function (or even a single "if" statement in a function) |
| that happens to be defined in the file, which does not do what |
| you want it to do. And you would want to find out why it was |
| written that way, because you are about to modify it to suit |
| your needs, and at the same time you do not want to break its |
| current callers. For that, you are trying to find out why the |
| original author did things that way in the original context. |
| |
| Many times, it may be enough to see the commit log messages of |
| commits that touch the file in question, possibly along with the |
| patches themselves, like this: |
| |
| $ git-whatchanged -p a-file.c |
| |
| This will show log messages and patches for each commit that |
| touches a-file. |
| |
| This, however, may not be very useful when this file has many |
| modifications that are not related to the piece of code you are |
| interested in. You would see many log messages and patches that |
| do not have anything to do with the piece of code you are |
| interested in. As an example, assuming that you have this piece |
| code that you are interested in in the HEAD version: |
| |
| if (frotz) { |
| nitfol(); |
| } |
| |
| you would use git-rev-list and git-diff-tree like this: |
| |
| $ git-rev-list HEAD | |
| git-diff-tree --stdin -v -p -S'if (frotz) { |
| nitfol(); |
| }' |
| |
| We have already talked about the "--stdin" form of git-diff-tree |
| command that reads the list of commits and compares each commit |
| with its parents. The git-whatchanged command internally runs |
| the equivalent of the above command, and can be used like this: |
| |
| $ git-whatchanged -p -S'if (frotz) { |
| nitfol(); |
| }' |
| |
| When the -S option is used, git-diff-tree command outputs |
| differences between two commits only if one tree has the |
| specified string in a file and the corresponding file in the |
| other tree does not. The above example looks for a commit that |
| has the "if" statement in it in a file, but its parent commit |
| does not have it in the same shape in the corresponding file (or |
| the other way around, where the parent has it and the commit |
| does not), and the differences between them are shown, along |
| with the commit message (thanks to the -v flag). It does not |
| show anything for commits that do not touch this "if" statement. |
| |
| Also, in the original context, the same statement might have |
| appeared at first in a different file and later the file was |
| renamed to "a-file.c". CVS annotate would not help you to go |
| back across such a rename, but GIT would still help you in such |
| a situation. For that, you can give the -C flag to |
| git-diff-tree, like this: |
| |
| $ git-whatchanged -p -C -S'if (frotz) { |
| nitfol(); |
| }' |
| |
| When the -C flag is used, file renames and copies are followed. |
| So if the "if" statement in question happens to be in "a-file.c" |
| in the current HEAD commit, even if the file was originally |
| called "o-file.c" and then renamed in an earlier commit, or if |
| the file was created by copying an existing "o-file.c" in an |
| earlier commit, you will not lose track. If the "if" statement |
| did not change across such rename or copy, then the commit that |
| does rename or copy would not show in the output, and if the |
| "if" statement was modified while the file was still called |
| "o-file.c", it would find the commit that changed the statement |
| when it was in "o-file.c". |
| |
| [ BTW, the current versions of "git-diff-tree -C" is not eager |
| enough to find copies, and it will miss the fact that a-file.c |
| was created by copying o-file.c unless o-file.c was somehow |
| changed in the same commit.] |
| |
| You can use the --pickaxe-all flag in addition to the -S flag. |
| This causes the differences from all the files contained in |
| those two commits, not just the differences between the files |
| that contain this changed "if" statement: |
| |
| $ git-whatchanged -p -C -S'if (frotz) { |
| nitfol(); |
| }' --pickaxe-all |
| |
| [ Side note. This option is called "--pickaxe-all" because -S |
| option is internally called "pickaxe", a tool for software |
| archaeologists.] |