On Thu, Mar 28, 2019 at 04:05:06PM +0100, Robin Broda via aur-general wrote: > On 3/27/19 1:43 PM, lambdadroid via aur-general wrote: > > Hi, > > > > I've been trying to upload packages from archlinux-me176c [1] to the > > AUR. My scripts create a subtree split of one package, then do quite > > a bit of other magic and upload it to the AUR. > > > > I've been having a few problems with "linux-me176c" > > because I used to have large patch files in the repository (> 250 KiB). > > So I modified the scripts to cut off the history after I switched to > > fetching from a Git repository instead. > > > > This works fine, but while testing I seem to have uploaded a broken > > subtree or some temporary commit, so the new generated subtrees no > > longer match what is uploaded on the AUR - making it impossible for me > > to update the package (without force-push). > > > > Deleting the package on the AUR was accepted automatically because of: > > Deletion of a fresh package requested by its current maintainer. > > but I should have read on the wiki first that this does not delete the > > Git tree. :) > > > > Is there any chance to remove the Git repository of this new package, > > or should I somehow try to recover that broken state? > > > > Thanks, > > lambdadroid > > > > [1]: https://github.com/me176c-dev/archlinux-me176c > > > > there's no broken state. pull from the AUR remote and rebase your commits on > top of that >
I would like to do this but I'm not sure how this would work in my case: I push to the AUR using an automated subtree setup (very similar to aurpublish [1]). For each subdirectory that represents an AUR package, it splits the commit history using "git subtree", and pushes it to the AUR. I've taken a closer look at the Git repo I pushed and it looks like I only accidentally pushed a temporary commit to "linux-me176c" that no longer exists in my main repository. So the new subtrees I generate no longer match what exists on the AUR. I would prefer to remove that commit since there is a proper commit message on my main repository, but I'm also not sure how to solve this situation with a rebase: - I have already pushed other packages using the new state, so if I rebase the main repo, it'll stop working for those other packages (because the other subtrees will no longer match) - How do I rebase a subtree back into the main repository? Is there any chance that you (or someone else) could simply remove the last commit with a force-push? There is absolutely no history that is getting lost here, since this is a completely new package. Thanks, lambdadroid [1]: https://github.com/eli-schwartz/aurpublish > -- > Rob (coderobe) > > O< ascii ribbon campaign - stop html mail - www.asciiribbon.org
