Provided by: git-subrepo_0.4.9-1_amd64 bug

Name

       git-subrepo - Git Submodule Alternative

Synopsis

           git subrepo -h    # Help Overview

           git subrepo clone <remote-url> [<subdir>]
           git subrepo init <subdir>
           git subrepo pull <subdir>
           git subrepo push <subdir>

           git subrepo fetch <subdir>
           git subrepo branch <subdir>
           git subrepo commit <subdir>
           git subrepo config <subdir>

           git subrepo status [<subdir>]
           git subrepo clean <subdir>

           git subrepo help [<command> | --all]
           git subrepo version
           git subrepo upgrade

Description

       This git command "clones" an external git repo into a subdirectory of your repo. Later on,
       upstream changes can be pulled in, and local changes can be pushed back. Simple.

Benefits

       This command is an improvement from "git-submodule" and "git-subtree"; two other git
       commands with similar goals, but various problems.

       It assumes there are 3 main roles of people interacting with a repo, and attempts to serve
       them all well:

       •   owner - The person who authors/owns/maintains a repo.

       •   users - People who are just using/installing the repo.

       •   collaborators - People who commit code to the repo and subrepos.

       The "git-subrepo" command benefits these roles in the following ways:

       •   Simple and intuitive commandline usage (with tab completion).

       •   Users get your repo and all your subrepos just by cloning your repo.

       •   Users do not need to install "git-subrepo", ever.

       •   Collaborators do not need to install unless they want to push/pull.

       •   Collaborators know when a subdir is a subrepo (it has a ".gitrepo" file).

       •   The ".gitrepo" file never gets pushed back to the subrepo upstream.

       •   Well named branches and remotes are generated for manual operations.

       •   Owners do not deal with the complications of keeping submodules in sync.

       •   Subrepo repositories can contain subrepos themselves.

       •   Branching with subrepos JustWorks™.

       •   Different branches can have different subrepos in different states, etc.

       •   Moving/renaming/deleting a subrepo subdir JustWorks™.

       •   You can "init" an existing subdirectory into a subrepo.

       •   Your git history is kept squeaky clean.

       •   Upstream history (clone/pull) is condensed into a single commit.

       •   Pulls can use a "merge", "rebase" or "force" strategies.

       •   You can see the subrepo history with "git log subrepo/<subdir>/fetch".

       •   Commits pushed back upstream are not condensed (by default).

       •   Trivial to try any subrepo operations and then reset back.

       •   No configuration required.

       •   Does not introduce history that messes up other git commands.

       •   Fixes known rebase failures with "git-subtree".

Installation

       The best short answer is:

           git clone https://github.com/ingydotnet/git-subrepo /path/to/git-subrepo
           echo 'source /path/to/git-subrepo/.rc' >> ~/.bashrc

       The complete "Installation Instructions" can be found below.

       Note: git-subrepo needs a git version (> 2.7) that supports worktree:s.

Commands

       All the subrepo commands use names of actual Git commands and try to do operations that
       are similar to their Git counterparts. They also attempt to give similar output in an
       attempt to make the subrepo usage intuitive to experienced Git users.

       Please note that the commands are not exact equivalents, and do not take all the same
       arguments. Keep reading…

       "git subrepo clone <repository> [<subdir>] [-b <branch>] [-f] [-m <msg>] [--file=<msg
       file>] [-e] [--method <merge|rebase>]"
           Add a repository as a subrepo in a subdir of your repository.

           This is similar in feel to "git clone". You just specify the remote repo url, and
           optionally a sub-directory and/or branch name. The repo will be fetched and merged
           into the subdir.

           The subrepo history is squashed into a single commit that contains the reference
           information. This information is also stored in a special file called
           "<subdir>/.gitrepo". The presence of this file indicates that the directory is a
           subrepo.

           All subsequent commands refer to the subrepo by the name of the subdir. From the
           subdir, all the current information about the subrepo can be obtained.

           The "--force" option will "reclone" (completely replace) an existing subdir.

           The "--method" option will decide how the join process between branches are performed.
           The default option is merge.

           The "clone" command accepts the "--branch=" "--edit", "--file", "--force" and
           "--message=" options.

       "git subrepo init <subdir> [-r <remote>] [-b <branch>] [--method <merge|rebase>]"
           Turn an existing subdirectory into a subrepo.

           If you want to expose a subdirectory of your project as a published subrepo, this
           command will do that. It will split out the content of a normal subdirectory into a
           branch and start tracking it as a subrepo. Afterwards your original repo will look
           exactly the same except that there will be a "<<subdir"/.gitrepo >> file.

           If you specify the "--remote" (and optionally the "--branch") option, the values will
           be added to the "<subdir>/.gitrepo" file. The "--remote" option is the upstream URL,
           and the "--branch" option is the upstream branch to push to. These values will be
           needed to do a "git subrepo push" command, but they can be provided later on the
           "push" command (and saved to "<<subdir"/.gitrepo >> if you also specify the "--update"
           option).

           Note: You will need to create the empty upstream repo and push to it on your
                 own, using "git subrepo push <subdir>".

           The "--method" option will decide how the join process between branches are performed.
           The default option is merge.

           The "init" command accepts the "--branch=" and "--remote=" options.

       "git subrepo pull <subdir>|--all [-M|-R|-f] [-m <msg>] [--file=<msg file>] [-e] [-b
       <branch>] [-r <remote>] [-u]"
           Update the subrepo subdir with the latest upstream changes.

           The "pull" command fetches the latest content from the remote branch pointed to by the
           subrepo's ".gitrepo" file, and then tries to merge the changes into the corresponding
           subdir. It does this by making a branch of the local commits to the subdir and then
           merging or rebasing (see below) it with the fetched upstream content. After the merge,
           the content of the new branch replaces your subdir, the ".gitrepo" file is updated and
           a single 'pull' commit is added to your mainline history.

           The "pull" command will attempt to do the following commands in one go:

               git subrepo fetch <subdir>
               git subrepo branch <subdir>
               git merge/rebase subrepo/<subdir>/fetch subrepo/<subdir>
               git subrepo commit <subdir>
               # Only needed for a consequential push:
               git update-ref refs/subrepo/<subdir>/pull subrepo/<subdir>

           In other words, you could do all the above commands yourself, for the same effect. If
           any of the commands fail, subrepo will stop and tell you to finish this by hand.
           Generally a failure would be in the merge or rebase part, where conflicts can happen.
           Since Git has lots of ways to resolve conflicts to your personal tastes, the subrepo
           command defers to letting you do this by hand.

           When pulling new data, the method selected in clone/init is used. This has no effect
           on the final result of the pull, since it becomes a single commit. But it does affect
           the resulting "subrepo/<subdir>" branch, which is often used for a subrepo "push"
           command. See 'push' below for more information. If you want to change the method you
           can use the "config" command for this.

           When you pull you can assume a fast-forward strategy (default) or you can specify a
           "--rebase", "--merge" or "--force" strategy. The latter is the same as a "clone
           --force" operation, using the current remote and branch.

           Like the "clone" command, "pull" will squash all the changes (since the last pull or
           clone) into one commit. This keeps your mainline history nice and clean. You can
           easily see the subrepo's history with the "git log" command:

               git log refs/subrepo/<subdir>/fetch

           The set of commands used above are described in detail below.

           The "pull" command accepts the "--all", "--branch=", "--edit", "--file", "--force",
           "--message=", "--remote=" and "--update" options.

       "git subrepo push <subdir>|--all [<branch>] [-m msg] [--file=<msg file>] [-r <remote>] [-b
       <branch>] [-M|-R] [-u] [-f] [-s] [-N]"
           Push a properly merged subrepo branch back upstream.

           This command takes the subrepo branch from a successful pull command and pushes the
           history back to its designated remote and branch. You can also use the "branch"
           command and merge things yourself before pushing if you want to (although that is
           probably a rare use case).

           The "push" command requires a branch that has been properly merged/rebased with the
           upstream HEAD (unless the upstream HEAD is empty, which is common when doing a first
           "push" after an "init"). That means the upstream HEAD is one of the commits in the
           branch.

           By default the branch ref "refs/subrepo/<subdir>/pull" will be pushed, but you can
           specify a (properly merged) branch to push.

           After that, the "push" command just checks that the branch contains the upstream HEAD
           and then pushes it upstream.

           The "--force" option will do a force push. Force pushes are typically discouraged.
           Only use this option if you fully understand it. (The "--force" option will NOT check
           for a proper merge. ANY branch will be force pushed!)

           The "push" command accepts the "--all", "--branch=", "--dry-run", "--file", "--force",
           "--merge", "--message", "--rebase", "--remote=", "--squash" and "--update" options.

       "git subrepo fetch <subdir>|--force --all [-r <remote>] [-b <branch>]"
           Fetch the remote/upstream content for a subrepo.

           It will create a Git reference called "subrepo/<subdir>/fetch" that points at the same
           commit as "FETCH_HEAD". It will also create a remote called "subrepo/<subdir>". These
           are temporary and you can easily remove them with the subrepo "clean" command.

           The "fetch" command accepts the "--force", "--all", "--branch=" and "--remote="
           options.

       "git subrepo branch <subdir>|--all [-f] [-F]"
           Create a branch with local subrepo commits.

           Scan the history of the mainline for all the commits that affect the "subdir" and
           create a new branch from them called "subrepo/<subdir>".

           This is useful for doing "pull" and "push" commands by hand.

           Use the "--force" option to write over an existing "subrepo/<subdir>" branch.

           The "branch" command accepts the "--all", "--fetch" and "--force" options.

       "git subrepo commit <subdir> [<subrepo-ref>] [-m <msg>] [--file=<msg file>] [-e] [-f]
       [-F]"
           Add subrepo branch to current history as a single commit.

           This command is generally used after a hand-merge. You have done a "subrepobranch" and
           merged (rebased) it with the upstream. This command takes the HEAD of that branch,
           puts its content into the subrepo subdir and adds a new commit for it to the top of
           your mainline history.

           This command requires that the upstream HEAD be in the "subrepo/<subdir>" branch
           history. That way the same branch can push upstream. Use the "--force" option to
           commit anyway.

           The "commit" command accepts the "--edit", "--fetch", "--file", "--force" and
           "--message=" options.

       "git subrepo status [<subdir>|--all|--ALL] [-F] [-q|-v]"
           Get the status of a subrepo. Uses the "--all" option by default. If the "--quiet" flag
           is used, just print the subrepo names, one per line.

           The "--verbose" option will show all the recent local and upstream commits.

           Use "--ALL" to show the subrepos of the subrepos (ie the "subsubrepos"), if any.

           The "status" command accepts the "--all", "--ALL", "--fetch", "--quiet" and
           "--verbose" options.

       "git subrepo clean <subdir>|--all|--ALL [-f]"
           Remove artifacts created by "fetch" and "branch" commands.

           The "fetch" and "branch" operations (and other commands that call them) create
           temporary things like refs, branches and remotes. This command removes all those
           things.

           Use "--force" to remove refs. Refs are not removed by default because they are
           sometimes needed between commands.

           Use "--all" to clean up after all the current subrepos. Sometimes you might change to
           a branch where a subrepo doesn't exist, and then "--all" won't find it. Use "--ALL" to
           remove any artifacts that were ever created by subrepo.

           To remove ALL subrepo artifacts:

               git subrepo clean --ALL --force

           The "clean" command accepts the "--all", "--ALL", and "--force" options.

       "git subrepo config <subdir> <option> [<value>] [-f]"
           Read or update configuration values in the subdir/.gitrepo file.

           Because most of the values stored in the .gitrepo file are generated you will need to
           use "--force" if you want to change anything else then the "method" option.

           Example to update the "method" option for a subrepo:

               git subrepo config foo method rebase

       "git subrepo help [<command>|--all]"
           Same as "git help subrepo". Will launch the manpage. For the shorter usage, use "git
           subrepo -h".

           Use "git subrepo help <command>" to get help for a specific command. Use "--all" to
           get a summary of all commands.

           The "help" command accepts the "--all" option.

       "git subrepo version [-q|-v]"
           This command will display version information about git-subrepo and its environment.
           For just the version number, use "git subrepo --version". Use "--verbose" for more
           version info, and "--quiet" for less.

           The "version" command accepts the "--quiet" and "--verbose" options.

       "git subrepo upgrade"
           Upgrade the "git-subrepo" software itself. This simply does a "git pull" on the git
           repository that the code is running from. It only works if you are on the "master"
           branch. It won't work if you installed "git-subrepo" using "make install"; in that
           case you'll need to "make install" from the latest code.

Command Options

       "-h"
           Show a brief view of the commands and options.

       "--help"
           Gives an overview of the help options available for the subrepo command.

       "--version"
           Print the git-subrepo version. Just the version number. Try the "version" command for
           more version info.

       "--all" ("-a")
           If you have multiple subrepos, issue the command to all of them (if applicable).

       "--ALL" ("-A")
           If you have subrepos that also have subrepos themselves, issue the command to ALL of
           them. Note that the "--ALL" option only works for a subset of the commands that
           "--all" works for.

       "--branch=<branch-name>" ("-b <branch-name>")
           Use a different upstream branch-name than the remote HEAD or the one saved in
           ".gitrepo" locally.

       "--dry-run" ("-N")
           For the push command, do everything up until the push and then print out the actual
           "git push" command needed to finish the operation.

       "--edit" ("-e")
           Edit the commit message before committing.

       "--fetch" ("-F")
           Use this option to fetch the upstream commits, before running the command.

       "--file=<commit msg file>"
           Supply your own commit message from a file

       "--force" ("-f")
           Use this option to force certain commands that fail in the general case.

           NOTE: The "--force" option means different things for different commands.
                 Read the command specific doc for the exact meaning.

       "--merge" ("-M")
           Use a "merge" strategy to include upstream subrepo commits on a pull (or setup for
           push).

       "--message=<message>" ("-m <message>")
           Specify your own commit message on the command line.

       "--rebase" ("-R")
           Use a "rebase" strategy to include upstream subrepo commits on a pull (or setup for
           push).

       "--remote=<remote-url>" ("-r <remote-url>")
           Use a different remote-url than the one saved in ".gitrepo" locally.

       "--squash" ("-s")
           Squash all commits on a push into one new commit.

       "--update" ("-u")
           If "--branch" or "--remote" are used, and the command updates the ".gitrepo" file,
           include these values to the update.

Output Options

       "--quiet" ("-q")
           Print as little info as possible. Applicable to most commands.

       "--verbose" ("-v")
           Print more information about the command execution and results. Applicable to most
           commands.

       "--debug" ("-d")
           Show the actual git (and other) commands being executed under the hood.  Applicable to
           most commands.

       "--DEBUG" ("-x")
           Use the Bash "set -x" option which prints every command before it is run. VERY noisy,
           but extremely useful in deep debugging. Applicable to all commands.

Environment Variables

       The "git-subrepo" command exports and honors some environment variables:

       "GIT_SUBREPO_ROOT"
           This is set by the ".rc" file, if you use that method to install / enable
           "git-subrepo". It contains the path of the "git-subrepo" repository.

       "GIT_SUBREPO_RUNNING"
           This variable is exported when "git-subrepo" is running. It is set to the pid of the
           "git-subrepo" process that is running. Other processes, like git hooks for instance,
           can use this information to adjust accordingly.

       "GIT_SUBREPO_COMMAND"
           This variable is exported when "git-subrepo" is running. It is set to the name of the
           "git-subrepo" subcommand that is running.

       "GIT_SUBREPO_PAGER"
           Use this to specify the pager to use for long output commands. Defaults to $PAGER or
           "less".

       "GIT_SUBREPO_QUIET"
           Set this for quiet ("-q") output.

       "GIT_SUBREPO_VERBOSE"
           Set this for verbose ("-v") output.

       "GIT_SUBREPO_DEBUG"
           Set this for debugging ("-d") output.

Installation Instructions

       There are currently 3 ways to install "git-subrepo". For all of them you need to get the
       source code from GitHub:

           git clone https://github.com/ingydotnet/git-subrepo /path/to/git-subrepo

       The first installation method is preferred: "source" the ".rc" file. Just add a line like
       this one to your shell startup script:

           source /path/to/git-subrepo/.rc

       That will modify your "PATH" and "MANPATH", and also enable command completion.

       The second method is to do these things by hand. This might afford you more control of
       your shell environment. Simply add the "lib" and "man" directories to your "PATH" and
       "MANPATH":

           export GIT_SUBREPO_ROOT="/path/to/git-subrepo"
           export PATH="/path/to/git-subrepo/lib:$PATH"
           export MANPATH="/path/to/git-subrepo/man:$MANPATH"

       See below for info on how to turn on Command Completion.

       The third method is a standard system install, which puts "git-subrepo" next to your other
       git commands:

           make install        # Possibly with 'sudo'

       This method does not account for upgrading and command completion yet.

   Windows
       This command is known to work in these Windows environments:

       •   Git for Windows -- <https://git-for-windows.github.io/>

       •   Babun -- <http://babun.github.io/>

       •   Cygwin -- <https://www.cygwin.com/>

       Let us know if there are others that it works (or doesn't work) in.

Testing

       The "git-subrepo" repository comes with a extensive test suite. You can run it with:

           make test

       or if you don't have "make" on your system:

           prove -v test

Upgrading

       If you used the ".rc" or "PATH" method of installation, just run this to upgrade
       "git-subrepo":

           git subrepo upgrade

       Or (same thing):

           cd /path/to/git-subrepo
           git pull

       If you used "make install" method, then run this again (after "git pull"):

           make install        # Possibly with 'sudo'

Command Completion

       The "git subrepo" command supports "<TAB>"-based command completion. If you don't use the
       ".rc" script (see Installation, above), you'll need to enable this manually to use it.

   In Bash
       If your Bash setup does not already provide command completion for Git, you'll need to
       enable that first:

           source <Git completion script>

       On your system, the Git completion script might be found at any of the following locations
       (or somewhere else that we don't know about):

       •   "/etc/bash_completion.d/git"

       •   "/usr/share/bash-completion/git"

       •   "/usr/share/bash-completion/completions/git"

       •   "/opt/local/share/bash-completion/completions/git"

       •   "/usr/local/etc/bash_completion.d/git"

       •   "~/.homebrew/etc/bash_completion.d/git"

       In case you can't find any of these, this repository contains a copy of the Git completion
       script:

           source /path/to/git-subrepo/share/git-completion.bash

       Once Git completion is enabled (whether you needed to do that manually or not), you can
       turn on "git-subrepo" completion with a command like this:

           source /path/to/git-subrepo/share/completion.bash

   In zsh
       In the Z shell (zsh), you can manually enable "git-subrepo" completion by adding the
       following line to your "~/.zshrc", before the "compinit" function is called:

           fpath=('/path/to/git-subrepo/share/zsh-completion' $fpath)

Status

       The git-subrepo command has been used in production and seems to get the job done.
       Development is still ongoing but mostly just for fixing bugs.

       Trying subrepo out is simple and painless (this is not "git submodule").  Nothing is
       permanent (if you do not push to shared remotes). ie You can always play around and reset
       back to the beginning without pain.

       This command has a test suite (run "make test"), but surely has many bugs. If you have
       expertise with Git and subcommands, please review the code, and file issues on anything
       that seems wrong.

       If you want to chat about the "git-subrepo" command, join "#gitcommands" on
       "irc.freenode.net".

Notes

       •   Works on POSIX systems: Linux, BSD, OSX, etc.

       •   Works on various Windows environments. See "Windows" section above.

       •   The "git-subrepo" repo itself has 2 subrepos under the "ext/" subdirectory.

       •   Written in (very modern) Bash, with full test suite. Take a look.

       •   A ".gitrepo" file never is in the top level dir (next to a ".git/" dir).

Authors

       •   Ingy döt Net <ingy@ingy.net>

       •   Magnus Carlsson <grimmymail@gmail.com>

       •   Austin Morgan <admorgan@morgancomputers.net>

License and Copyright

       The MIT License (MIT)

       Copyright (c) 2013-2020 Ingy döt Net