Provided by: git-debrebase_11.3_all bug

NAME

       git-debrebase - git data model for Debian packaging

INTRODUCTION

       git-debrebase is a tool for representing in git, and manpulating, Debian packages based on
       upstream source code.

       The Debian packaging has a fast forwarding history.  The delta queue (changes to upstream
       files) is represented as a series of individual git commits, which can worked on with
       rebase, and also shared.

   DISCUSSION
       git-debrebase is designed to work well with dgit.  git-debrebase can also be used in
       workflows without source packages, for example to work on Debian-format packages outside
       or alongside Debian.

       git-debrebase itself is not very suitable for use by Debian derivatives, to work on
       packages inherited from Debian, because it assumes that you want to throw away any
       packaging provided by your upstream.  However, use of git-debrebase in Debian does not
       make anything harder for derivatives, and it can make some things easier.

       When using gitk on branches managed by git-debrebase, gitk --date-order, gitk
       --first-parent and gitk -- :. (or gitk .)  produce more useful output than the default.

TERMINOLOGY

       Pseudomerge
           A merge which does not actually merge the trees; instead, it is constructed by taking
           the tree from one of the parents (ignoring the contents of the other parents).  These
           are used to make a rewritten history fast forward from a previous tip, so that it can
           be pushed and pulled normally.  Manual construction of pseudomerges can be done with
           "git merge -s ours" but is not normally needed when using git-debrebase.

       Packaging files
           Files in the source tree within debian/, excluding anything in debian/patches/.

       Upstream
           The version of the package without Debian's packaging.  Typically provided by the
           actual upstream project, and sometimes tracked by Debian contributors in a branch
           "upstream".

           Upstream contains upstream files, but some upstreams also contain packaging files in
           debian/.  Any such non-upstream files found in upstream are thrown away by git-
           debrebase each time a new upstream version is incorporated.

       Upstream files
           Files in the source tree outside debian/.  These may include unmodified source from
           upstream, but also files which have been modified or created for Debian.

       Delta queue
           Debian's changes to upstream files: a series of git commits.

       Quilt patches
           Files in debian/patches/ generated for the benefit of dpkg-source's 3.0 (quilt) .dsc
           source package format.  Not used, often deleted, and regenerated when needed (such as
           when uploading to Debian), by git-debrebase.

       Interchange branch; breakwater; stitched; laundered
           See "BRANCHES AND BRANCH STATES - OVERVIEW".

       Anchor; Packaging
           See "BRANCH CONTENTS - DETAILED SPECIFICATION".

       ffq-prev; debrebase-last
           See "STITCHING, PSEUDO-MERGES, FFQ RECORD".

DIAGRAM

                  ------/--A!----/--B3!--%--/--> interchange view
                       /        /          /      with debian/ directory
                      %        %          %       entire delta queue applied
                     /        /          /        3.0 (quilt) has debian/patches
                    /        /          3*       "master" on Debian git servers
                   /        /          /
                  2*       2*         2
                 /        /          /
                1        1          1    breakwater branch, merging baseline
               /        /          /     unmodified upstream code
           ---@-----@--A----@--B--C      plus debian/ (but no debian/patches)
             /     /       /                     no ref refers to this: we
          --#-----#-------#-----> upstream        reconstruct its identity by
                                                  inspecting interchange branch
           Key:

             1,2,3   commits touching upstream files only
             A,B,C   commits touching debian/ only
             B3      mixed commit (eg made by an NMUer)
             #       upstream releases

            -@-      anchor merge, takes contents of debian/ from the
            /         previous `breakwater' commit and rest from upstream

            -/-      pseudomerge; contents are identical to
            /         parent lower on diagram.

             %       dgit- or git-debrebase- generated commit of debian/patches.
                     `3.0 (quilt)' only; generally dropped by git-debrebase.

             *       Maintainer's HEAD was here while they were editing,
                     before they said they were done, at which point their
                     tools made -/- (and maybe %) to convert to
                     the fast-forwarding interchange branch.

             !       NMUer's HEAD was here when they said `dgit push'.
                     Rebase branch launderer turns each ! into an
                     equivalent *.

BRANCHES AND BRANCH STATES - OVERVIEW

       git-debrebase has one primary branch, the interchange branch.  This branch is found on
       Debian contributors' workstations (typically, a maintainer would call it master), in the
       Debian dgit git server as the suite branch (dgit/dgit/sid) and on other git servers which
       support Debian work (eg master on salsa).

       The interchange branch is fast-forwarding (by virtue of pseudomerges, where necessary).

       It is possible to have multiple different interchange branches for the same package,
       stored as different local and remote git branches.  However, divergence should be avoided
       where possible - see "OTHER MERGES".

       A suitable interchange branch can be used directly with dgit.  In this case each dgit
       archive suite branch is a separate interchange branch.

       Within the ancestry of the interchange branch, there is another important, implicit
       branch, the breakwater.  The breakwater contains unmodified upstream source, but with
       Debian's packaging superimposed (replacing any "debian/" directory that may be in the
       upstream commits).  The breakwater does not contain any representation of the delta queue
       (not even debian/patches).  The part of the breakwater processed by git-debrebase is the
       part since the most recent anchor, which is usually a special merge generated by git-
       debrebase.

       When working, locally, the user's branch can be in a rebasing state, known as unstitched.
       While a branch is unstitched, it is not in interchange format.  The previous interchange
       branch tip is recorded, so that the previous history and the user's work can later be
       stitched into the fast-forwarding interchange form.

       An unstitched branch may be in laundered state, which means it has a more particular
       special form convenient for manipulating the delta queue.

BRANCH CONTENTS - DETAILED SPECIFICATION

       It is most convenient to describe the breakwater branch first.  A breakwater is fast-
       forwarding, but is not usually named by a ref.  It contains in this order (ancestors
       first):

       Anchor
           An anchor commit, which is usually a special two-parent merge:

           The first parent contains the most recent version, at that point, of the Debian
           packaging (in debian/); it also often contains upstream files, but they are to be
           ignored.  Often the first parent is a previous breakwater tip.

           The second parent is an upstream source commit.  It may sometimes contain a debian/
           subdirectory, but if so that is to be ignored.  The second parent's upstream files are
           identical to the anchor's.  Anchor merges always contain "[git-debrebase anchor: ...]"
           as a line in the commit message.

           Alternatively, an anchor may be a single-parent commit which introduces the "debian/"
           directory and makes no other changes: ie, the start of Debian packaging.

       Packaging
           Zero or more single-parent commits containing only packaging changes.  (And no quilt
           patch changes.)

       The laundered branch state is rebasing.  A laundered branch is based on a breakwater but
       also contains, additionally, after the breakwater, a representation of the delta queue:

       Delta queue commits
           Zero or more single-parent commits containing only changes to upstream files.

       The merely unstitched (ie, unstitched but unlaundered) branch state is also rebasing.  It
       has the same contents as the laundered state, except that it may contain, additionally, in
       any order but after the breakwater:

       Linear commits to the source
           Further commit(s) containing changes to to upstream files and/or to packaging,
           possibly mixed within a single commit.  (But not quilt patch changes.)

       Quilt patch addition for `3.0 (quilt)'
           Commit(s) which add patches to debian/patches/, and add those patches to the end of
           series.

           These are only necessary when working with packages in ".dsc 3.0 (quilt)" format.  For
           git-debrebase they are purely an output; they are deleted when branches are laundered.
           git-debrebase takes care to make a proper patch series out of the delta queue, so that
           any resulting source packages are nice.

       Finally, an interchange branch is fast forwarding.  It has the same contents as an
       unlaundered branch state, but may (and usually will) additionally contain (in some order,
       possibly intermixed with the extra commits which may be found on an unstitched unlaundered
       branch):

       Pseudomerge to make fast forward
           A pseudomerge making the branch fast forward from previous history.  The contributing
           parent is itself in interchange format.  Normally the overwritten parent is a previous
           tip of an interchange branch, but this is not necessary as the overwritten parent is
           not examined.

           If the two parents have identical trees, the one with the later commit date (or, if
           the commit dates are the same, the first parent) is treated as the contributing
           parent.

       dgit dsc import pseudomerge
           Debian .dsc source package import(s) made by dgit (during dgit fetch of a package most
           recently uploaded to Debian without dgit, or during dgit import-dsc).

           git-debrebase requires that each such import is in the fast-forwarding format produced
           by dgit: a two-parent pseudomerge, whose contributing parent is in the non-fast-
           forwarding dgit dsc import format (not described further here), and whose overwritten
           parent is the previous interchange tip (eg, the previous tip of the dgit suite
           branch).

STITCHING, PSEUDO-MERGES, FFQ RECORD

       Whenever the branch "refs/B" is unstitched, the previous head is recorded in the git ref
       "refs/ffq-prev/B".

       Unstiched branches are not fast forward from the published interchange branches [1].  So
       before a branch can be pushed, the right pseudomerge must be reestablished.  This is the
       stitch operation, which consumes the ffq-prev ref.

       When the user has an unstitched branch, they may rewrite it freely, from the breakwater
       tip onwards.  Such a git rebase is the default operation for git-debrebase.  Rebases
       should not go back before the breakwater tip, and certainly not before the most recent
       anchor.

       Unstitched branches must not be pushed to interchange branch refs (by the use of "git push
       -f" or equivalent).  It is OK to share an unstitched branch in similar circumstances and
       with similar warnings to sharing any other rebasing git branch.

       [1] Strictly, for a package which has never had a Debian delta queue, the interchange and
       breakwater branches may be identical, in which case the unstitched branch is fast forward
       from the interchange branch and no pseudomerge is needed.

       When ffq-prev is not present, "refs/debrebase-last/B" records some ancestor of refs/B,
       (usually, the result of last stitch).  This is used for status printing and some error
       error checks - especially for printing guesses about what a problem is.  To determine
       whether a branch is being maintained in git-debrebase form it is necessary to walk its
       history.

OTHER MERGES

       Note that the representation described here does not permit general merges on any of the
       relevant branches.  For this reason the tools will try to help the user avoid divergence
       of the interchange branch.

       See dgit-maint-debrebase(7) for a discussion of what kinds of behaviours should be be
       avoided because they might generate such merges.

       Automatic resolution of divergent interchange branches (or laundering of merges on the
       interchange branch) is thought to be possible, but there is no tooling for this yet:

       Nonlinear (merging) history in the interchange branch is awkward because it (obviously)
       does not preserve the linearity of the delta queue.  Easy merging of divergent delta
       queues is a research problem.

       Nonlinear (merging) history in the breakwater branch is in principle tolerable, but each
       of the parents would have to be, in turn, a breakwater, and difficult questions arise if
       they don't have the same anchor.

       We use the commit message annotation to distinguish the special anchor merges from other
       general merges, so we can at least detect unsupported merges.

LEGAL OPERATIONS

       The following basic operations follow from this model (refer to the diagram above):

       Append linear commits
           No matter the branch state, it is always fine to simply git commit (or cherry-pick
           etc.)  commits containing upstream file changes, packaging changes, or both.

           (This may make the branch unlaundered.)

       Launder branch
           Record the previous head in ffq-prev, if we were stitched before (and delete
           debrebase-last).

           Reorganise the current branch so that the packaging changes come first, followed by
           the delta queue, turning "-@-A-1-2-B3" into "...@-A-B-1-2-3".

           Drop pseudomerges and any quilt patch additions.

       Interactive rebase
           With a laundered branch, one can do an interactive git rebase of the delta queue.

       New upstream rebase
           Start rebasing onto a new upstream version, turning "...#..@-A-B-1-2-3" into
           "(...#..@-A-B-, ...#'-)@'-1-2".

           This has to be a wrapper around git-rebase, which prepares @' and then tries to rebase
           1 2 onto @'.  If the user asks for an interactive rebase, @' doesn't appear in the
           commit list, since @' is the newbase of the rebase (see git-rebase(1)).

           Note that the construction of @' cannot fail because @' simply copies debian/ from B
           and and everything else from #'.  (Rebasing A and B is undesirable.  We want the
           debian/ files to be non-rebasing so that git log shows the packaging history.)

       Stitch
           Make a pseudomerge, whose contributing parent is the unstitched branch and whose
           overwritten parent is ffq-prev, consuming ffq-prev in the process (and writing
           debrebase-last instead).  Ideally the contributing parent would be a laundered branch,
           or perhaps a laundered branch with a quilt patch addition commit.

       Commit quilt patches
           To generate a tree which can be represented as a 3.0 (quilt) .dsc source package, the
           delta queue must be reified inside the git tree in debian/patches/.  These patch files
           can be stripped out and/or regenerated as needed.

ILLEGAL OPERATIONS

       Some git operations are not permitted in this data model.  Performing them will break git-
       debrebase.

       General merges
           See "OTHER MERGES", above.

       git-rebase starting too soon, or without base argument
           git-rebase must not be invoked in such a way that the chosen base is before the
           anchor, or before the last pseudomerge.  This is because git-rebase mangles merges.
           git rebase --preserve-merges is also dangerous.

           git-rebase without a base argument will often start too early.

           For these reasons, it is better to use git-debrebase and let it choose the base for
           your rebase.  If you do realise you have made this mistake, it is best to use the
           reflog to recover to a suitable good previous state.

       Editing debian/patches
           debian/patches is an output from git-debrebase, not an input.  If you edit patches
           git-debrebase will complain and refuse to work.  If you add patches your work is
           likely to be discarded.

           Instead of editing patches, use git-debrebase to edit the corresponding commits.

       Renaming (etc.) branch while unstitched
           The previous HEAD, which will be pseudomerged over by operations like git-debrebase
           stitch, is recorded in a ref name dervied from your branch name.

           If you rename unstitched branches, this information can get out of step.

           Conversely, creating a new branch from an unstitched branch is good for making a
           branch to play about in, but the result cannot be stitched.

COMMIT MESSAGE ANNOTATIONS

       git-debrebase makes annotations in the messages of commits it generates.

       The general form is

         [git-debrebase COMMIT-TYPE [ ARGS...]: PROSE, MORE PROSE]

       git-debrebase treats anything after the colon as a comment, paying no attention to PROSE.

       The full set of annotations is:
         [git-debrebase split: mixed commit, debian part]
         [git-debrebase split: mixed commit, upstream-part]
         [git-debrebase convert dgit import: debian changes]
         [git-debrebase anchor: convert dgit import, upstream changes]

         [git-debrebase upstream-combine . PIECE[ PIECE...]: new upstream]
         [git-debrebase anchor: new upstream NEW-UPSTREAM-VERSION, merge]
         [git-debrebase changelog: new upstream NEW-UPSTREAM-VERSION]
         [git-debrebase make-patches: export and commit patches]

         [git-debrebase convert-from-gbp: drop patches]
         [git-debrebase anchor: declare upstream]
         [git-debrebase pseudomerge: stitch]

         [git-debrebase merged-breakwater: constructed from vanilla merge]

         [git-debrebase convert-to-gbp: commit patches]
         [git-debrebase convert-from-dgit-view upstream-import-convert: VERSION]
         [git-debrebase convert-from-dgit-view drop-patches]

       Only anchor merges have the "[git-debrebase anchor: ...]" tag.  Single-parent anchors are
       not generated by git-debrebase, and when made manually should not contain any
       "[git-debrebase ...]" annotation.

       The "split mixed commit" and "convert dgit import" tags are added to the pre-existing
       commit message, when git-debrebase rewrites the commit.

APPENDIX - DGIT IMPORT HANDLING

       The dgit .dsc import format is not documented or specified (so some of the following terms
       are not defined anywhere).  The dgit import format it is defined by the implementation in
       dgit, of which git-debrebase has special knowledge.

       Consider a non-dgit NMU followed by a dgit NMU:

                   interchange --/--B3!--%--//----D*-->
                                /          /
                               %          4
                              /          3
                             /          2
                            /          1
                           2          &_
                          /          /| \
                         1          0 00 =XBC%
                        /
                       /
                 --@--A     breakwater
                  /
               --#--------> upstream

        Supplementary key:

           =XBC%     dgit tarball import of .debian.tar.gz containing
                      Debian packaging including changes B C and quilt patches
           0         dgit tarball import of upstream tarball
           00        dgit tarball import of supplementary upstream piece
           &_        dgit import nearly-breakwater-anchor
           //        dgit fetch / import-dsc pseudomerge to make fast forward

           &'        git-debrebase converted import (upstream files only)
           C'        git-debrebase converted packaging change import

           * **      before and after HEAD

       We want to transform this into:

       I. No new upstream version
            (0 + 00 eq #)
                                   --/--B3!--%--//-----D*-------------/-->
                                    /          /                     /
                                   %          4                     4**
                                  /          3                     3
                                 /          2                     2
                                /          1                     1
                               2          &_                    /
                              /          /| \                  /
                             1          0 00 =XBC%            /
                            /                                /
                           /                                /
                     --@--A-----B---------------------C'---D
                      /
                   --#----------------------------------------->

       II. New upstream
            (0 + 00 neq #)

                                   --/--B3!--%--//-----D*-------------/-->
                                    /          /                     /
                                   %          4                     4**
                                  /          3                     3
                                 /          2                     2
                                /          1                     1
                               2          &_                    /
                              /          /| \                  /
                             1          0 00 =XBC%            /
                            /                                /
                           /                                /
                     --@--A-----B-----------------@---C'---D
                      /                          /
                   --#--------------------- - - / - - --------->
                                               /
                                              &'
                                             /|
                                            0 00

SEE ALSO

       git-debrebase(1), dgit-maint-rebase(7), dgit(1)