On Wed, Nov 30, 2016 at 3:14 AM, Duy Nguyen <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Wed, Nov 23, 2016 at 2:22 AM, Stefan Beller <[email protected]> wrote:
>> +/*
>> + * Migrate the given submodule (and all its submodules recursively) from
>> + * having its git directory within the working tree to the git dir nested
>> + * in its superprojects git dir under modules/.
>> + */
>> +void migrate_submodule_gitdir(const char *prefix, const char *path,
>> + int recursive)
>
> Submodules and worktrees seem to have many things in common.
Yes. :)
> The first
> one is this. "git worktree move" on a worktree that contains
> submodules .git also benefits from something like this [1].
That patch is a sensible approach. :)
(By checking all files to not be submodules a worktree would not run
into problems like
a127331cd81, mv: allow moving nested submodules)
> I suggest
> you move this function to some neutral place and maybe rename it to
> relocate_gitdir() or something.
ok tell me where this neutral place is found?
(I'd prefer to not clobber it into cache.h *the* most neutral place in git)
Maybe dir.{c,h} ?
>
> It probably should take a bit flag instead of "recursive" here. One
> thing I would need is the ability to tell this function "I have moved
> all these .git dirs already (because I move whole worktree in one
> operation), here are the old and new locations of them, fix them up!".
> In other words, no rename() could be optionally skipped.
In the non-main working trees you'd also have a .git file linking
to the actual git dir and you'd only have to fix them up instead of moving.
>
> [1]
> https://public-inbox.org/git/[email protected]/T/#u
>
>> +{
>> + char *old_git_dir;
>> + const char *new_git_dir;
>> + const struct submodule *sub;
>> +
>> + old_git_dir = xstrfmt("%s/.git", path);
>> + if (read_gitfile(old_git_dir))
>> + /* If it is an actual gitfile, it doesn't need migration. */
>> + goto out;
>> +
>> + sub = submodule_from_path(null_sha1, path);
>> + if (!sub)
>> + die(_("Could not lookup name for submodule '%s'"),
>> + path);
>> +
>> + new_git_dir = git_common_path("modules/%s", sub->name);
>
> Why doesn't git_path() work here? This would make "modules" shared
> between worktrees, even though it's not normally. That inconsistency
> could cause trouble.
I thought that was a long term goal?
(I actually think about reviving the series you sent out a few weeks ago
to make worktree and submodules work well together)
So for that we'd want to have at least the object store shared across all
worktrees.
>
>> + if (safe_create_leading_directories_const(new_git_dir) < 0)
>> + die(_("could not create directory '%s'"), new_git_dir);
>> +
>> + if (!prefix)
>> + prefix = get_super_prefix();
>> + printf("Migrating git directory of %s%s from\n'%s' to\n'%s'\n",
>> + prefix ? prefix : "", path,
>> + real_path(old_git_dir), new_git_dir);
>> +
>> + if (rename(old_git_dir, new_git_dir) < 0)
>> + die_errno(_("Could not migrate git directory from '%s' to
>> '%s'"),
>> + old_git_dir, new_git_dir);
>> +
>> + connect_work_tree_and_git_dir(path, new_git_dir);
>
> Another thing in common is, both submodules and worktrees use some
> form of textual symlinks. You need to fix up some here. But if this
> submodule has multiple worktreee, there may be some "symlinks" in
> .git/worktrees which would need fixing up as well.
We could signal that via one of the flag bits?
(e.g. FIXUP_WORKTREE_SYMLINKS )
>
> You don't have to do the fix up thing right away, but I think we
> should at least make sure we leave no dangling links behind (by
> die()ing early if we find a .git dir we can't handle yet)
> --
> Duy