Provided by: git-debrebase_11.11_all bug

NAME

       git-debrebase - tool to maintain series of Debian changes to upstream source

SYNOPSYS

        git-debrebase [<options...>] [-- <git-rebase options...>]
        git-debrebase [<options...>] <operation> [<operation options...>

QUICK REFERENCE

       These are most of the commands you will regularly need:

        git debrebase -i                           # edit the patch queue
        git debrebase conclude && git push         # push to eg salsa
        git debrebase conclude && dgit push-source # source-only upload
        git debrebase new-upstream 1.2.3-1 [-i]    # uses tag, eg "v1.2.3"
        dpkg-buildpackage -uc -b                   # get test debs, at any time

       To add patches, or edit the packaging, just make git commits.  Ignore anything that may
       appear in debian/patches.  Avoid using "git pull" and "git merge" without "--ff-only".

       When sharing branches, you should usually share a fast-forwarding branch (ie, use
       "git-debrebase conclude" (or "prepush") before pushing.

       git-debrebase has a special branch format, so see "CONVERTING AN EXISTING PACKAGE" in
       dgit-maint-debrebase(7).

GUIDE TO DOCUMENTATION

       This is the command line reference.  There is also a detailed workflow tutorial at
       dgit-maint-debrebase(7) (on which the above "QUICK REFERENCE" is based).  For background,
       theory of operation, and definitions see git-debrebase(5).

       You should read this manpage in conjunction with "TERMINOLOGY" in git-debrebase(5), which
       defines many important terms used here.

PRINCIPAL OPERATIONS

       git-debrebase [-- <git-rebase options...>]
       git-debrebase [-i <further git-rebase options...>]
           Unstitches and launders the branch.  (See "UNSTITCHING AND LAUNDERING" below.)

           Then, if any git-rebase options were supplied, edits the Debian delta queue, using
           git-rebase, by running

               git rebase <git-rebase options> <breakwater-tip>

           Do not pass a base branch argument: git-debrebase will supply that.  Do not use
           --onto, or --fork-point.  Useful git-rebase options include -i and --autosquash.

           If git-rebase stops for any reason, you may git-rebase --abort, --continue, or --skip,
           as usual.  If you abort the git-rebase, the branch will still have been laundered, but
           everything in the rebase will be undone.

           The options for git-rebase must either start with "-i", or be prececded by "--", to
           distinguish them from options for git-debrebase.

           It is hazardous to use plain git-rebase on a git-debrebase branch, because git-rebase
           has a tendency to start the rebase too far back in history, and then drop important
           commits.  See "ILLEGAL OPERATIONS" in git-debrebase(5)

       git-debrebase status
           Analyses the current branch, both in terms of its contents, and the refs which are
           relevant to git-debrebase, and prints a human-readable summary.

           Please do not attempt to parse the output; it may be reformatted or reorganised in the
           future.  Instead, use one of the "UNDERLYING AND SUPPLEMENTARY OPERATIONS" described
           below.

       git-debrebase conclude
           Finishes a git-debrebase session, tidying up the branch and making it fast forward
           again.

           Specifically: if the branch is unstitched, launders and restitches it, making a new
           pseudomerge.  Otherwise, it is an error, unless --noop-ok.

       git-debrebase quick
           Unconditionally launders and restitches the branch, consuming any ffq-prev and making
           a new pseudomerge.

           If the branch is already laundered and stitched, does nothing.

       git-debrebase prepush [--prose=<for commit message>]
           If the branch is unstitched, stitches it, consuming ffq-prev.

           This is a good command to run before pushing to a git server.  You should consider
           using conclude instead, because that launders the branch too.

       git-debrebase stitch [--prose=<for commit message>]
           Stitches the branch, consuming ffq-prev.

           If there is no ffq-prev, it is an error, unless --noop-ok.

           You should consider using prepush or conclude instead.

       git-debrebase scrap
           Throws away all the work since the branch was last stitched.  This is done by
           resetting you to ffq-prev and discarding all working tree changes.

           If you are in the middle of a git-rebase, will abort that too.

       git-debrebase new-upstream <new-version> [<upstream-details>...] [--|-i <git-rebase
       options...>]
           Rebases the delta queue onto a new upstream version.  In detail:

           Firstly, checks that the proposed rebase seems to make sense: It is a snag unless the
           new upstream(s) are fast forward from the previous upstream(s) as found in the current
           breakwater anchor.  And, in the case of a multi-piece upstream (a multi-component
           upstream, in dpkg-source terminology), if the pieces are not in the same order, with
           the same names.

           If all seems well, unstitches and launders the branch.

           Then, generates (in a private working area) a new anchor merge commit, on top of the
           breakwater tip, and on top of that a commit to update the version number in
           debian/changelog.

           Finally, starts a git-rebase of the delta queue onto these new commits.

           That git-rebase may complete successfully, or it may require your assistance, just
           like a normal git-rebase.

           If you git-rebase --abort, the whole new upstream operation is aborted, except for the
           laundering.

           <new-version> may be a whole new Debian version, including revision, or just the
           upstream part, in which case -1 will be appended to make the new Debian version.

           The <upstream-details> are, optionally, in order:

           <upstream-commit-ish>
               The new upstream branch (or commit-ish).  The default is to look for one of these
               tags, in this order: U vU upstream/U; where U is the new upstream version.  (This
               is the same algorithm as git-deborig(1).)

               It is a snag if the upstream contains a debian/ directory; if forced to proceed,
               git-debrebase will disregard the upstream's debian/ and take (only) the packaging
               from the current breakwater.

           <piece-name> <piece-upstream-commit-ish>
               Specifies that this is a multi-piece upstream.  May be repeated.

               When such a pair is specified, git-debrebase will first combine the pieces of the
               upstream together, and then use the result as the combined new upstream.

               For each <piece-name>, the tree of the <piece-upstream-commit-ish> becomes the
               subdirectory <piece-name> in the combined new upstream (supplanting any
               subdirectory that might be there in the main upstream branch).

               <piece-name> has a restricted syntax: it may contain only ASCII alphanumerics and
               hyphens.

               The combined upstream is itself recorded as a commit, with each of the upstream
               pieces' commits as parents.  The combined commit contains an annotation to allow a
               future git-debrebase new upstream operation to make the coherency checks described
               above.

           <git-rebase options>
               These will be passed to git rebase.

               If the upstream rebase is troublesome, -i may be helpful.  As with plain git-
               debrebase, do not specify a base, or --onto, or --fork-point.

           If you are planning to generate a .dsc, you will also need to have, or generate,
           actual orig tarball(s), which must be identical to the rev-spec(s) passed to git-
           debrebase.  git-debrebase does not concern itself with source packages so neither
           helps with this, nor checks it.  git-deborig(1), git-archive(1), dgit(1) and
           gbp-import-orig(1) may be able to help.

       git-debrebase make-patches [--quiet-would-amend]
           Generate patches in debian/patches/ representing the changes made to upstream files.

           It is not normally necessary to run this command explicitly.  When uploading to
           Debian, dgit and git-debrebase will cooperate to regenerate patches as necessary.
           When working with pure git remotes, the patches are not needed.

           Normally git-debrebase make-patches will require a laundered branch.  (A laundered
           branch does not contain any patches.)  But if there are already some patches made by
           git-debrebase make-patches, and all that has happened is that more changes to upstream
           files have been committed, running it again can add the missing patches.

           If the patches implied by the current branch are not a simple superset of those
           already in debian/patches, make-patches will fail with exit status 7, and an error
           message.  (The message can be suppressed with --quiet-would-amend.)  If the problem is
           simply that the existing patches were not made by git-debrebase, using dgit quilt-
           fixup instead should succeed.

       git-debrebase convert-from-unapplied [<upstream-commit-ish>]
       git-debrebase convert-from-gbp [<upstream-commit-ish>]
           Converts any of the following into a git-debrebase interchange branch:

           •   a gbp patches-unapplied branch (but not a gbp pq patch-queue branch)

           •   a patches-unapplied git packaging branch containing debian/patches, as used with
               quilt

           •   a git branch for a package which has no Debian delta - ie where upstream files are
               have not been modified in Debian, so there are no patches

           (These two commands operate identically and are simply aliases.)

           The conversion is done by generating a new anchor merge, converting any quilt patches
           as a delta queue, and dropping the patches from the tree.

           The upstream commit-ish should correspond to the upstream branch or tag, if there is
           one.  It is a snag if it is not an ancestor of HEAD, or if the history between the
           upstream and HEAD contains commits which make changes to upstream files.  If it is not
           specified, the same algorithm is used as for git-debrebase new-upstream.

           It is also a snag if the specified upstream has a debian/ subdirectory.  This check
           exists to detect certain likely user errors, but if this situation is true and
           expected, forcing it is fine.

           git-debrebase will try to look for the dgit archive view of the most recent release,
           and if it finds it will make a pseduomerge so that your new git-debrebase view is
           appropriately fast forward.

           The result is a well-formed git-debrebase interchange branch.  The result is also
           fast-forward from the original branch.

           It is a snag if the new branch looks like it will have diverged, just as for a
           laundering/unstitching call to git-debrebase; See "Establish the current branch's ffq-
           prev", below.

           Note that it is dangerous not to know whether you are dealing with a (gbp) patches-
           unapplied branch containing quilt patches, or a git-debrebase interchange branch.  At
           worst, using the wrong tool for the branch format might result in a dropped patch
           queue!

UNDERLYING AND SUPPLEMENTARY OPERATIONS

       git-debrebase breakwater
           Prints the breakwater tip commitid.  If your HEAD branch is not fully laundered,
           prints the tip of the so-far-laundered breakwater.

       git-debrebase anchor
           Prints the breakwater anchor commitid.

       git-debrebase analyse
           Walks the history of the current branch, most recent commit first, back until the most
           recent anchor, printing the commit object id, and commit type and info (ie the
           semantics in the git-debrebase model) for each commit.

       git-debrebase record-ffq-prev
           Establishes the current branch's ffq-prev, as discussed in "UNSTITCHING AND
           LAUNDERING", but does not launder the branch or move HEAD.

           It is an error if the ffq-prev could not be recorded.  It is also an error if an ffq-
           prev has already been recorded, unless --noop-ok.

       git-debrebase convert-to-gbp
           Converts a laundered branch into a gbp patches-unapplied branch containing quilt
           patches.  The result is not fast forward from the interchange branch, and any ffq-prev
           is deleted.

           This is provided mostly for the test suite and for unusual situations.  It should only
           be used with care and with a proper understanding of the underlying theory.

           Be sure to not accidentally treat the result as a git-debrebase branch, or you will
           drop all the patches!

       git-debrebase convert-from-dgit-view [<convert-options>] [upstream]
           Converts any dgit-compatible git branch corresponding to a (possibly hypothetical) 3.0
           quilt dsc source package into a git-debrebase-compatible branch.

           This operation should not be used if the branch is already in git-debrebase form.
           Normally git-debrebase will refuse to continue in this case (or silently do nothing if
           the global --noop-ok option is used).

           Some representation of the original upstream source code will be needed.  If upstream
           is supplied, that must be a suitable upstream commit.  By default, git-debrebase will
           look first for git tags (as for new-upstream), and then for orig tarballs which it
           will ask dgit to process.

           The upstream source must be exactly right and all the patches in debian/patches must
           be up to date.  Applying the patches from debian/patches to the upstream source must
           result in exactly your HEAD.

           The output is laundered and stitched.  The resulting history is not particularly
           pretty, especially if orig tarball(s) were imported to produce a synthetic upstream
           commit.

           The available convert-options are as follows.  (These must come after convert-from-
           dgit-view.)

           --[no-]diagnose
               Print additional error messages to help diagnose failure to find an appropriate
               upstream.  --no-diagnose is the default.

           --build-products-dir
               Directory to look in for orig tarballs.  The default is the git config option
               dgit.default.build-products-dir or failing that, "..".  Passed on to dgit, if git-
               debrebase invokes dgit.

           --[no-]origs
               Whether to try to look for or use any orig tarballs.  --origs is the default.

           --[no-]tags
               Whether to try to look for or use any upstream git tags.  --tags is the default.

           --always-convert-anyway
               Perform the conversion operation, producing unpleasant extra history, even if the
               branch seems to be in git-debrebase form already.  This should not be done unless
               necessary, and it should not be necessary.

       git-debrebase forget-was-ever-debrebase
           Deletes the ffq-prev and debrebase-last refs associated with this branch, that git-
           debrebase and dgit use to determine whether this branch is managed by git-debrebase,
           and what previous head may need to be stitched back in.

           This can be useful if you were just playing with git-debrebase, and have used git-
           reset --hard to go back to a commit before your experiments.

           Do not use this if you expect to run git-debrebase on the branch again.

OPTIONS

       This section documents the general options to git-debrebase (ie, the ones which
       immediately follow git-debrebase or git debrebase on the command line).  Individual
       operations may have their own options which are docuented under each operation.

       -f<snag-id>
           Turns snag(s) with id <snag-id> into warnings.

           Some troublesome things which git-debrebase encounters are snags.  (The specific
           instances are discussed in the text for the relevant operation.)

           When a snag is detected, a message is printed to stderr containing the snag id (in the
           form "-f<snag-id>"), along with some prose.

           If snags are detected, git-debrebase does not continue, unless the relevant
           -f<snag-id> is specified, or --force is specified.

       --force
           Turns all snags into warnings.  See the -f<snag-id> option.

           Do not invoke git-debrebase --force in scripts and aliases; instead, specify the
           particular -f<snag-id> for expected snags.

       --noop-ok
           Suppresses the error in some situations where git-debrebase does nothing, because
           there is nothing to do.

           The specific instances are discussed in the text for the relvant operation.

       --anchor=<commit-ish>
           Treats <commit-ish> as an anchor.  This overrides the usual logic which automatically
           classifies commits as anchors, pseudomerges, delta queue commits, etc.

           It also disables some coherency checks which depend on metadata extracted from its
           commit message, so it is a snag ("-fanchor-treated") if <commit-ish> is the anchor for
           the previous upstream version in git-debrebase new-upstream operations.  You have to
           check yourself that the new upstream is fast forward from the old one, and has the
           right components (as if applicable).

       --dgit=<program>
           Run <program>, instead of dgit from PATH, when invocation of dgit is necessary.  This
           is provided mostly for the benefit of the test suite.

       -D  Requests (more) debugging.  May be repeated.

       --experimental-merge-resolution
           Enable experimental code for handling general merges (see "General merges" in
           git-debrebase(5)).

           If using this option succeeds, the output is likely to be correct, although it would
           be a good idea to check that it seems sane.

           If it fails, your tree should be left where it was.

           However, there may be lossage of various kinds, including misleading error messages,
           and references to nonexistent documentation.  On merge failure, it might invite you to
           delve into an incomprehensible pile of multidimensional merge wreckage, which is
           supposed to be left in special refs invented for the purpose (so, not your working
           tree, or HEAD).

UNSTITCHING AND LAUNDERING

       Several operations unstitch and launder the branch first.  In detail this means:

   Establish the current branch's ffq-prev
       If ffq-prev is not yet recorded, git-debrebase checks that the current branch is ahead of
       relevant remote tracking branches.  The relevant branches depend on the current branch
       (and its git configuration) and are as follows:

       •   The branch that git would merge from (remote.<branch>.merge, remote.<branch>.remote);

       •   The branch git would push to, if different (remote.<branch>.pushRemote etc.);

       •   For local dgit suite branches, the corresponding tracking remote;

       •   If you are on "master", remotes/dgit/dgit/sid.

       The apparently relevant ref names to check are filtered through
       branch.<branch>.ffq-ffrefs, which is a semicolon-separated list of glob patterns, each
       optionally preceded by !; first match wins.

       In each case it is a snag if the local HEAD is behind the checked remote, or if local HEAD
       has diverged from it.  All the checks are done locally using the remote tracking refs:
       git-debrebase does not fetch anything from anywhere.

       If these checks pass, or are forced, git-debrebse then records the current tip as ffq-
       prev.

   Examine the branch
       git-debrebase analyses the current HEAD's history to find the anchor in its breakwater,
       and the most recent breakwater tip.

   Rewrite the commits into laundered form
       Mixed debian+upstream commits are split into two commits each.  Delta queue (upstream
       files) commits bubble to the top.  Pseudomerges, and quilt patch additions, are dropped.

       This rewrite will always succeed, by construction.  The result is the laundered branch.

SEE ALSO

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