Re: [fossil-users] Is there a way to see history (e.g., annotate) for a single line of code?
Tony, there is a SCM used on IBM Mainframes called ENDEVOR that gives this type of history. see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Endevor and https://www.ca.com/us/products/ca-endevor-software-change-manager.h tml The other products were called Panvalet and Librarian. I can no longer provide cut & paste examples, but maybe someone on the list can. Maybe the CA sites have some examples. The rough algorithm is illustrated by the following example. The way it works is that the first "check-in" is level 0, say, in May 1990. Say the code is in COBOL. There is no DIFF, as it is the first add. Say the code is lines 500 to 503: 500 MOVE SPACES TO CUST-NAME. 501 MOVE ZEROES TO CUST-PHONE. 502 MOVE "BEER" TO CUST-FAVE-DRINK. The code is "checked-out" (and locked or owned) by a developer in Dec 1990, modified with an modification and a deletion, and then "checked- in" in Feb 1991. This is level 1. 500 MOVE SPACES TO CUST-NAME. 501 -001 MOVE ZEROES TO CUST-PHONE. 502 -001 MOVE "BEER" TO CUST-FAVE-DRINK. 502 +001 MOVE "CIDER" TO CUST-FAVE-DRINK. In March 1992, another developer, "checked-out" and then "checked-in" (level 2) one new line. 500 MOVE SPACES TO CUST-NAME. 501 -001 MOVE ZEROES TO CUST-PHONE. 502 +002 MOVE "RASBERRY" TO CUST-FAVE-JAM-OR-CONSERVE. 503 -001 MOVE "BEER" TO CUST-FAVE-DRINK. 503 +001 MOVE "CIDER" TO CUST-FAVE-DRINK. The diff output can be toggled to give the current "check-in", in this case the "BEER" line and the CUST-PHONE line would not be shown. Or, deleted lines are excluded. Modified lines are inserts(+) and deletes(-). Note, the parallel diff with colours in Fossil wouldn't quite suit a 3 or 4 version comparison. Large block inserts and deletes, and changing indentation were a challenge. COBOL has a line structure: Cols 1-6, numbering (optional) Col 7 - either space for a code line or '*' for a comment line Cols 8 thru 72 the code or comment Cols 73 thru 80, numbering (optional) - some people used these columns for version control - effectively a small inline comment This 'fixed' format made it a bit easier. regs, Kev ------- Date: Tue, 1 Aug 2017 15:01:18 +0300 From: "Tony Papadimitriou" To: "Fossil SCM user's discussion" Subject: [fossil-users] Is there a way to see history (e.g.,annotate) for a single line of code? When doing ‘annotate’ on a certain file version I see the most recent commit responsible for each line in the file. That’s great! However, if I want to know which previous commits (history) touched one specific line, is there some way to do this? Thanks. ___ fossil-users mailing list fossil-users@lists.fossil-scm.org http://lists.fossil-scm.org:8080/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/fossil-users
Re: [fossil-users] Is there a way to see history (e.g., annotate) for a single line of code?
On Aug 1, 2017, at 12:45 PM, Warren Young wrote: > > ...somewhat prone to reporting false differences. And once it’s latched onto > a false difference, it is likely to go off on a useless tangent, chasing > changes to a line you don’t care about. I guess you could use the “bloodhound algorithm:” at the point where the line moves and changes, stop the output and make the user give you a new line number and checkin ID, as with a bloodhound who has lost the scent running around until he finds the scent trail again. ___ fossil-users mailing list fossil-users@lists.fossil-scm.org http://lists.fossil-scm.org:8080/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/fossil-users
Re: [fossil-users] Is there a way to see history (e.g., annotate) for a single line of code?
On Aug 1, 2017, at 6:44 AM, Richard Hipp wrote: > > On 8/1/17, Tony Papadimitriou wrote: >> When doing ‘annotate’ on a certain file version I see the most recent commit >> responsible for each line in the file. That’s great! >> >> However, if I want to know which previous commits (history) touched one >> specific line, is there some way to do this? > > There is not. Can you suggest an algorithm for computing it? There’s a straightforward algorithm that is not very useful: 1. Get the change history for the file the same way as with “fossil finfo”. 2. Using a modified version of the “fossil diff” algorithm, detect whether the given numbered line has changed between each pair of checkins. Print the checkin ID and new line content if so. 3. Get next checkin ID up the timeline and go to 2. The thing is, that’s only useful if the line specified hasn’t shifted up or down in the file between checkins. If the OP wants Fossil to somehow track the movement of lines up and down within the file while also detecting changes in that line, I think you’d have to modify step 2 to use a fuzzy diff, causing this new feature to give fuzzy output. That is, if the user says $ fossil annotate --line 1234 it would first do a diff between the current checkout version and the prior checkin on that branch, then use the diff algorithm’s information to guess how many lines up or down the line has moved within that prior checkin. If the line is unchanged, that’s pretty easy, but if it’s moved *and* changed, Fossil will have to guess based on how many lines were added or removed prior to the diff point. I think that would be more useful, though somewhat prone to reporting false differences. And once it’s latched onto a false difference, it is likely to go off on a useless tangent, chasing changes to a line you don’t care about. ___ fossil-users mailing list fossil-users@lists.fossil-scm.org http://lists.fossil-scm.org:8080/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/fossil-users
Re: [fossil-users] Is there a way to see history (e.g., annotate) for a single line of code?
On 8/1/17, Tony Papadimitriou wrote: > When doing ‘annotate’ on a certain file version I see the most recent commit > responsible for each line in the file. That’s great! > > However, if I want to know which previous commits (history) touched one > specific line, is there some way to do this? There is not. Can you suggest an algorithm for computing it? Another thing that is needed: Given an historical check-in, I sometimes want to see the annotation going forwards in time. In other words, for some historical check-in, I want to see the next change for each line in the file. This is tricky because of the way the change graph is constructed. It is easy to go back in time since every check-in has a well-defined primary parent. But going forwards in time is hard because a single check-in can have an arbitrary number of children, and so it is difficult to know which child path to follow. -- D. Richard Hipp d...@sqlite.org ___ fossil-users mailing list fossil-users@lists.fossil-scm.org http://lists.fossil-scm.org:8080/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/fossil-users
[fossil-users] Is there a way to see history (e.g., annotate) for a single line of code?
When doing ‘annotate’ on a certain file version I see the most recent commit responsible for each line in the file. That’s great! However, if I want to know which previous commits (history) touched one specific line, is there some way to do this? Thanks. ___ fossil-users mailing list fossil-users@lists.fossil-scm.org http://lists.fossil-scm.org:8080/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/fossil-users