bug#70456: Request for merging "core-updates" branch
Christopher Baines writes: > Christopher Baines writes: > >> I've spent a bunch of time in the last few days trying to see if I can >> get the bordeaux build farm moving on core-updates and I think things >> are moving at pace now. ... > Some good progress was made with building core-updates, so I'm hoping > that with this next iteration (and hopefully a quiet period on the > master branch) we can get to the point where we can merge. Substitute availability has been progressing well for core-updates, with the biggest fix being the switch to datefudge for the nss tests on 32bit systems. Unfortunately it's been a while since core-updates has been rebased, and the master branch hasn't been quiet so even though substitute availability looks good, core-updates is missing ~2500 commits from master, including some impactful changes and not representative of the state of master if it was merged. I did try rebasing around 3 weeks ago, but I got stuck on some rust related conflicts and gave up. I've had another go now though and I've managed to rebase, although I did remove some of the rust changes (I've sent them as patches here [1]. 1: https://issues.guix.gnu.org/72553 Hopefully the builds won't take more than a week or two to happen. signature.asc Description: PGP signature
bug#70456: Request for merging "core-updates" branch
Christopher Baines writes: > I've spent a bunch of time in the last few days trying to see if I can > get the bordeaux build farm moving on core-updates and I think things > are moving at pace now. Following on from this, builds have mostly paused for the last few days as many changes have landed on the master branch. There's a few impactful changes in this range [1] (subversion, git-minimal, qt-build-system, ...) but also going back just over a week there were the lisp-team changes pushed to master (ecl and sbcl updates) which I don't think are in core-updates yet. 1: https://git.savannah.gnu.org/cgit/guix.git/log/?qt=range&q=c5fc11488c..831001c581 It's hard to tell how these changes will interact with those on core-updates but I think we need to just rebase the branch and find out. I've now done that and pushed it as core-updates-next. This is mostly to allow others to make changes to core-updates-next today, before swapping it out with core-updates tomorrow. This core-updates-next also includes a few additional patches, plus the contents of tex-team, since that was next in the queue, and the changes shouldn't be risky. Some good progress was made with building core-updates, so I'm hoping that with this next iteration (and hopefully a quiet period on the master branch) we can get to the point where we can merge. signature.asc Description: PGP signature
bug#70456: Request for merging core-updates branch
Hi Christopher, Christopher Baines writes: > Maxim Cournoyer writes: > >> Guillaume Le Vaillant writes: >> >>> Lars-Dominik Braun skribis: >>> Hi, it seems the core-updates branch is first in the merge-queue. haskell-team was successfully built by the CI and is ready to be merged. Since there does not seem to be an ETA for core-updates, can I skip the queue and go ahead with merging haskell-team? Lars >>> >>> Hi. >>> The lisp-team branch is also in a good shape and ready to be merged. >> >> I think it's fine to merge these first; perhaps the core-updates merge >> request should be removed if it was preposterous (usually we issue the >> merge request when we are confident the branch is ready to me merged). > > Can you clarify what you mean by preposterous? > > While the guidance did previously say to raise an issue when you wanted > to merge the branch, it's now changed to when you create the branch in > an attempt to avoid this of situation of long running stateful branches > in the future. OK, sorry, I somehow had forgotten/missed that. Some branches might require more work post merge-request than was expected; it's hard to say without trying it first. > I fail to see how merging core-updates is going to get easier if we > wait. It's not. But while things are still being worked on, if other branches are done and ready, they shouldn't be in held in limbo. -- Thanks, Maxim
bug#70456: Request for merging "core-updates" branch
Hey, I've spent a bunch of time in the last few days trying to see if I can get the bordeaux build farm moving on core-updates and I think things are moving at pace now. Builds are happening for 6 systems, with the only major omission being i586-gnu, I think there are existing issues with the guix-daemon in the childhurds not being able to stop builds which timeout, which leads to them getting stuck on builds. I'm not sure if there's an open bug about this. The other major issue that comes up every time there's a core-updates round is that the x86_64-linux bootstrap doesn't seem to build on btrfs, or at least milano-guix-1 which uses btrfs. I have to work around this by scheduling builds with --tag=filesystem=ext4 to have them run on other machines. There isn't a good bug for this, but #53416 probably applies. data.qa.guix.gnu.org seemed to be timing out more than usual for both patches and branches, so I've made some changes there and in the qa-frontpage to mitigate that. The core-updates page should now always load, although something needs adding so you can see how up to date the data is. 1: https://qa.guix.gnu.org/branch/core-updates Andreas has also been getting some additional x86_64-linux/i686-linux agents up and running which should help to speed up the build throughput. Chris signature.asc Description: PGP signature
bug#70456: Request for merging core-updates branch
Maxim Cournoyer writes: > Guillaume Le Vaillant writes: > >> Lars-Dominik Braun skribis: >> >>> Hi, >>> >>> it seems the core-updates branch is first in the merge-queue. haskell-team >>> was successfully built by the CI and is ready to be merged. Since there >>> does not seem to be an ETA for core-updates, can I skip the queue and >>> go ahead with merging haskell-team? >>> >>> Lars >> >> Hi. >> The lisp-team branch is also in a good shape and ready to be merged. > > I think it's fine to merge these first; perhaps the core-updates merge > request should be removed if it was preposterous (usually we issue the > merge request when we are confident the branch is ready to me merged). Can you clarify what you mean by preposterous? While the guidance did previously say to raise an issue when you wanted to merge the branch, it's now changed to when you create the branch in an attempt to avoid this of situation of long running stateful branches in the future. I fail to see how merging core-updates is going to get easier if we wait. signature.asc Description: PGP signature
bug#70456: Request for merging core-updates branch
Hi, Guillaume Le Vaillant writes: > Maxim Cournoyer skribis: > >> Hi, >> >> Guillaume Le Vaillant writes: >> >>> Lars-Dominik Braun skribis: >>> Hi, it seems the core-updates branch is first in the merge-queue. haskell-team was successfully built by the CI and is ready to be merged. Since there does not seem to be an ETA for core-updates, can I skip the queue and go ahead with merging haskell-team? Lars >>> >>> Hi. >>> The lisp-team branch is also in a good shape and ready to be merged. >> >> I think it's fine to merge these first; perhaps the core-updates merge >> request should be removed if it was preposterous (usually we issue the >> merge request when we are confident the branch is ready to me merged). > > Hi. > > It might be more logical to have two steps. First a "work started on > xyz-team branch" message to indicate to the QA to make the stats for > this branch, and then the "request for merging xyz-team branch" message > to put the branch in the merge queue. That'd be neat. Some other flow/UI idea: >From the QA interface, have a "Request to build" button action attached to a branch. If the branch could be built successfully (with all checks OK), enable a "Request to merge" button, that could send an email with the patches to review to guix-patches. -- Thanks, Maxim
bug#70456: Request for merging core-updates branch
Maxim Cournoyer skribis: > Hi, > > Guillaume Le Vaillant writes: > >> Lars-Dominik Braun skribis: >> >>> Hi, >>> >>> it seems the core-updates branch is first in the merge-queue. haskell-team >>> was successfully built by the CI and is ready to be merged. Since there >>> does not seem to be an ETA for core-updates, can I skip the queue and >>> go ahead with merging haskell-team? >>> >>> Lars >> >> Hi. >> The lisp-team branch is also in a good shape and ready to be merged. > > I think it's fine to merge these first; perhaps the core-updates merge > request should be removed if it was preposterous (usually we issue the > merge request when we are confident the branch is ready to me merged). Hi. It might be more logical to have two steps. First a "work started on xyz-team branch" message to indicate to the QA to make the stats for this branch, and then the "request for merging xyz-team branch" message to put the branch in the merge queue. I'll try to merge the lisp-team branch tomorrow (UTC+2 timezone). signature.asc Description: PGP signature
bug#70456: Request for merging core-updates branch
Hi, Guillaume Le Vaillant writes: > Lars-Dominik Braun skribis: > >> Hi, >> >> it seems the core-updates branch is first in the merge-queue. haskell-team >> was successfully built by the CI and is ready to be merged. Since there >> does not seem to be an ETA for core-updates, can I skip the queue and >> go ahead with merging haskell-team? >> >> Lars > > Hi. > The lisp-team branch is also in a good shape and ready to be merged. I think it's fine to merge these first; perhaps the core-updates merge request should be removed if it was preposterous (usually we issue the merge request when we are confident the branch is ready to me merged). -- Thanks, Maxim
bug#70456: Request for merging core-updates branch
Lars-Dominik Braun skribis: > Hi, > > it seems the core-updates branch is first in the merge-queue. haskell-team > was successfully built by the CI and is ready to be merged. Since there > does not seem to be an ETA for core-updates, can I skip the queue and > go ahead with merging haskell-team? > > Lars Hi. The lisp-team branch is also in a good shape and ready to be merged. signature.asc Description: PGP signature
bug#70456: Request for merging core-updates branch
Hi, it seems the core-updates branch is first in the merge-queue. haskell-team was successfully built by the CI and is ready to be merged. Since there does not seem to be an ETA for core-updates, can I skip the queue and go ahead with merging haskell-team? Lars
bug#70456: Request for merging "core-updates" branch
Hi Chris and all, Christopher Baines skribis: > I think keeping the Git commit history clean and representative is > really important, so to me at least this means core-updates can't be > merged to master in it's current form, even if the changes overall from > these 6351 commits are reasonable. > > I'm really not sure how to move forward though, I had a go at trying to > rebuild the branch without introducing the thousands of duplicate > commits and that produced a branch with 765 commits over master, which > still seems a lot, but a big improvement over 6351: > > https://git.cbaines.net/guix/log/?h=chris-core-updates-no-duplicates-attempt > > That was really hard going though, as there's plenty of merge conflicts > along the way, and I'm pretty sure I solved some of them > incorrectly. The resulting branch also differs from core-updates. Woow, impressive. How did you go about finding which commits were duplicates/cherry-picked from master? Which commit did you start from? Given everything you’ve explained, it seems to me it’s worth trying to start from a clean branch like this. I checked it out (commit da77ea23daa0bfa4a73290dff99b22d6825ff80b) to get an idea of where we are and got this: --8<---cut here---start->8--- make[2]: *** No rule to make target 'gnu/packages/patches/glib-networking-gnutls-binding.patch', needed by 'all-am'. make[2]: *** No rule to make target 'gnu/packages/patches/librecad-support-for-boost-1.76.patch', needed by 'all-am'. --8<---cut here---end--->8--- It stopped at: --8<---cut here---start->8--- gnu/packages/sdl.scm:72:2: error: (package (name "sdl2") (version "2.30.1") (source (origin (method url-fetch) (uri (string-append "https://libsdl.org/release/SDL2-"; version ".tar.gz")) (sha256 (base32 "0fj7gxc7rlzzrafnx9nmf7ws3paxy583fmx7bcbavi6gr3xmy881" (arguments (list #:tests? #f #:configure-flags (gexp (append (quote ("--disable-wayland-shared" "--enable-video-kmsdrm" "--disable-kmsdrm-shared")) (quote ("--disable-alsa-shared" "--disable-pulseaudio-shared" "--disable-x11-shared" "LDFLAGS=-lGL" #:make-flags (gexp (cons* (string-append "LDFLAGS=-Wl,-rpath," (ungexp (this-package-input "eudev")) "/lib" ",-rpath," (ungexp (this-package-input "vulkan-loader")) "/lib") (quote ("V=1")) (propagated-inputs (list libx11 libcap mesa)) (native-inputs (list pkg-config)) (inputs (list libxrandr glu alsa-lib pulseaudio dbus eudev glib ibus-minimal libxkbcommon libxcursor vulkan-loader wayland wayland-protocols)) (outputs (quote ("out" "debug"))) (synopsis "Cross platform game development library") (description "Simple DirectMedia Layer is a cross-platform development library designed to\nprovide low level access to audio, keyboard, mouse, joystick, and graphics\nhardware.") (home-page "https://libsdl.org/";) (license license:bsd-3)): missing field initializers (build-system) --8<---cut here---end--->8--- I guess these are merge conflicts that weren’t correctly resolved. This branch rewrites the entire ‘core-updates’ history. What about rewriting starting from the first series of “duplicate” commits? That should solve the immediate issue while keeping the “known good” history? Thanks, Ludo’.
bug#70456: Request for merging "core-updates" branch
emacs has a script gitmerge.el, it can skip some commit when merge with different merge rule (ours), maybe can make life easier: https://git.savannah.gnu.org/cgit/emacs.git/tree/admin/gitmerge.el https://git.savannah.gnu.org/cgit/emacs.git/tree/admin/notes/git-workflow -- 发自我的网易邮箱手机智能版
bug#70456: Request for merging "core-updates" branch
Hi Christopher, Christopher Baines writes: [...] > Assuming we merge core-updates without doing anything about these > duplicate commits, and taking the cwltool package as a semi-random > example, if you do: > > git log -p gnu/packages/bioinformatics.scm I trust the 'newest' (appearing first in 'git log --grep='cwltool: Update') would yield the commit having substitutes? If so, the inconvenience is somewhat mitigated, as long as you know to use the newest of duplicated commits. -- Thanks, Maxim
bug#70456: Request for merging "core-updates" branch
Maxim Cournoyer writes: > Hi, > > Christopher Baines writes: > >> Christopher Baines writes: >> >>> I'm also really confused by what commits appear to be on the branch, >>> take 12b15585a75062f3fba09d82861c6fae9a7743b2 which appears to be one >>> core-updates, but it's a duplicate of >>> e2a7c227dea5b361e2ebdbba24b923d1922a79d0 which was pushed to >>> master. Same with this commit 28d14130953d868d4848540d9de8e1ae4a01a467, >>> which is different to f29f80c194d0c534a92354b2bc19022a9b70ecf8 on >>> master. >> >> I've worked out at least when these two werid commits turned up on >> core-updates. >> >> 12b15585a7 is mentioned here: >> https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/guix-commits/2023-09/msg00955.html >> >> and 28d1413095 is mentioned here: >> https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/guix-commits/2024-03/msg00381.html >> >> >> With the changes last month in March, I was going to suggest deleting >> the branch and then re-creating from f205179ed2 and trying to re-apply >> the changes that should be on core-updates, while avoiding any >> "duplicate" commits. However, I'm not even sure where to being with the >> ~5000 commits pushed in September, at least one of them is a duplicate >> of a commit on master, but I'm not sure how many of the other ~5000 are. >> >> For comparison, I did a merge of master in to core-updates today, and >> this is what it shows up like on guix-commits: >> >> https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/guix-commits/2024-04/msg01209.html >> >> There are only two new revisions, the ed update I pushed, and the merge >> commit, which is what a merge should look like as far as I'm aware. > > I think probably what happened is that in the middle of a merge of > master -> core-updates (which entails sometimes painful conflicts > resolution), a new commit pushed to core-updates, and to be able to push > the resulting local branch (including the thousands of commits from the > merge commit) got rebased on the remote core-updates. > > Perhaps another merge commit appeared on the remote around the same > time, which would explain the duplicates. > > While I agree it's messy to have 5000 of duplicated commits, I'm not > sure attempting to rewrite the branch, which has seen a lot of original > commits, is a good idea (it'd be easy to have some good commits fall > into cracks, leading to lost of work). I think it's important to weigh up the cost and risks associated with either merging these commits, or somehow avoiding doing so. I think the potential impact is more than just a bit of messy Git history. Assuming we merge core-updates without doing anything about these duplicate commits, and taking the cwltool package as a semi-random example, if you do: git log -p gnu/packages/bioinformatics.scm You're going to see two commits for the update to 3.1.20240112164112, that's maybe confusing, but not a big issue I guess since they look the same, just different hashes. But say you're looking at the Git history because you want that specific version of cwltool and you're going to use guix time-machine or an inferior looking at that revision. Well, it's a lucky dip. If you pick the original master commit, you're in luck, you'll probably get substitutes for cwltool. But if you pick the other seemingly identical commit, you're effectively checking out core-updates as it was last month and the chance of substitutes is much less likely. I also can't really think how you'd work out which commit is best to use once core-updates is merged? The easiest way would probably be to check the signature, but that will only work most of the time. This isn't a new issue, it's already problematic for substitute availability to use intermediate commits (commits that weren't directly pointed to by master). But there are over 1000 packages who's versions are being changed on core-updates currently, or at least it looks like this because of the duplicate commits, and if I'm correct about how people are using the git history to find commits for specific versions of packages, then having these duplicates in the Git history for master forever more is going to catch people out for as long as those versions remain relevant. signature.asc Description: PGP signature
bug#70456: Request for merging core-updates branch
Let's see where we are with the branch currently. Thanks, Steve / Futurile
bug#70456: Request for merging "core-updates" branch
Hi, Christopher Baines writes: > Christopher Baines writes: > >> I'm also really confused by what commits appear to be on the branch, >> take 12b15585a75062f3fba09d82861c6fae9a7743b2 which appears to be one >> core-updates, but it's a duplicate of >> e2a7c227dea5b361e2ebdbba24b923d1922a79d0 which was pushed to >> master. Same with this commit 28d14130953d868d4848540d9de8e1ae4a01a467, >> which is different to f29f80c194d0c534a92354b2bc19022a9b70ecf8 on >> master. > > I've worked out at least when these two werid commits turned up on > core-updates. > > 12b15585a7 is mentioned here: > https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/guix-commits/2023-09/msg00955.html > > and 28d1413095 is mentioned here: > https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/guix-commits/2024-03/msg00381.html > > > With the changes last month in March, I was going to suggest deleting > the branch and then re-creating from f205179ed2 and trying to re-apply > the changes that should be on core-updates, while avoiding any > "duplicate" commits. However, I'm not even sure where to being with the > ~5000 commits pushed in September, at least one of them is a duplicate > of a commit on master, but I'm not sure how many of the other ~5000 are. > > For comparison, I did a merge of master in to core-updates today, and > this is what it shows up like on guix-commits: > > https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/guix-commits/2024-04/msg01209.html > > There are only two new revisions, the ed update I pushed, and the merge > commit, which is what a merge should look like as far as I'm aware. I think probably what happened is that in the middle of a merge of master -> core-updates (which entails sometimes painful conflicts resolution), a new commit pushed to core-updates, and to be able to push the resulting local branch (including the thousands of commits from the merge commit) got rebased on the remote core-updates. Perhaps another merge commit appeared on the remote around the same time, which would explain the duplicates. While I agree it's messy to have 5000 of duplicated commits, I'm not sure attempting to rewrite the branch, which has seen a lot of original commits, is a good idea (it'd be easy to have some good commits fall into cracks, leading to lost of work). I'd rather we take this experience as a strong reminding that rebasing merge commits should be avoided at all costs (git already issues a warning, IIRC). As you suggested, the next time a situation like this happens (locally prepared merge commit with new commits made to the remote branch), merging the remote into the local branch is probably a nicer solution. -- Thanks, Maxim
bug#70456: Request for merging "core-updates" branch
Christopher Baines writes: > I'm also really confused by what commits appear to be on the branch, > take 12b15585a75062f3fba09d82861c6fae9a7743b2 which appears to be one > core-updates, but it's a duplicate of > e2a7c227dea5b361e2ebdbba24b923d1922a79d0 which was pushed to > master. Same with this commit 28d14130953d868d4848540d9de8e1ae4a01a467, > which is different to f29f80c194d0c534a92354b2bc19022a9b70ecf8 on > master. I've worked out at least when these two werid commits turned up on core-updates. 12b15585a7 is mentioned here: https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/guix-commits/2023-09/msg00955.html and 28d1413095 is mentioned here: https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/guix-commits/2024-03/msg00381.html With the changes last month in March, I was going to suggest deleting the branch and then re-creating from f205179ed2 and trying to re-apply the changes that should be on core-updates, while avoiding any "duplicate" commits. However, I'm not even sure where to being with the ~5000 commits pushed in September, at least one of them is a duplicate of a commit on master, but I'm not sure how many of the other ~5000 are. For comparison, I did a merge of master in to core-updates today, and this is what it shows up like on guix-commits: https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/guix-commits/2024-04/msg01209.html There are only two new revisions, the ed update I pushed, and the merge commit, which is what a merge should look like as far as I'm aware. signature.asc Description: PGP signature
bug#70456: Request for merging "core-updates" branch
Hey, Thanks for raising this issue Steve, given the branch has been going for around 9 months (since [1]) now, I think it's well overdue to start looking at building and merging it. 1: https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/guix-commits/2023-07/msg00332.html I pushed a single commit plus a merge from master today, and that was pretty difficult. There was plenty of conflicts, and I probably have resolved some wrongly, and there's potentially some things that Git didn't raise as conflicts but might have broken with merging in master. I'm also really confused by what commits appear to be on the branch, take 12b15585a75062f3fba09d82861c6fae9a7743b2 which appears to be one core-updates, but it's a duplicate of e2a7c227dea5b361e2ebdbba24b923d1922a79d0 which was pushed to master. Same with this commit 28d14130953d868d4848540d9de8e1ae4a01a467, which is different to f29f80c194d0c534a92354b2bc19022a9b70ecf8 on master. Putting aside the functional changes on core-updates, it's doesn't seem good to merge these seemingly duplicate commits on to master. I'm not sure how this happened though, or how to fix it. Chris signature.asc Description: PGP signature