| = Gerrit Code Review - Superproject subscription to submodules updates |
| |
| == Description |
| |
| Gerrit supports a custom git superproject feature for tracking submodules. |
| This feature is useful for automatic updates on superprojects whenever |
| a change is merged on tracked submodules. To take advantage of this |
| feature, one should add submodule(s) to a local working copy of a |
| superproject, edit the created .gitmodules configuration file to |
| have a branch field on each submodule section with the value of the |
| submodule branch it is subscribing to, commit the changes, push and |
| merge the commit. |
| |
| When a commit is merged to a project, the commit content is scanned |
| to identify if it registers git submodules (if the commit registers |
| any gitlinks and .gitmodules file with required info) and if so, |
| a new submodule subscription is registered. |
| |
| When a new commit of a registered submodule is merged, Gerrit |
| automatically updates the subscribers to the submodule with a new |
| commit having the updated gitlinks. |
| |
| == Git Submodules Overview |
| |
| Submodules are a git feature that allows an external repository to be |
| attached inside a repository at a specific path. The objective here |
| is to provide a brief overview, further details can be found |
| in the official git submodule command documentation. |
| |
| Imagine a repository called 'super' and another one called 'a'. |
| Also consider 'a' available in a running Gerrit instance on "server". |
| With this feature, one could attach 'a' inside of 'super' repository |
| at path 'a' by executing the following command when being inside |
| 'super': |
| ===== |
| git submodule add ssh://server/a a |
| ===== |
| |
| Still considering the above example, after its execution notice that |
| inside the local repository 'super' the 'a' folder is considered a |
| gitlink to the external repository 'a'. Also notice a file called |
| .gitmodules is created (it is a configuration file containing the |
| subscription of 'a'). To provide the SHA-1 each gitlink points to in |
| the external repository, one should use the command: |
| ==== |
| git submodule status |
| ==== |
| |
| In the example provided, if 'a' is updated and 'super' is supposed |
| to see the latest SHA-1 (considering here 'a' has only the master |
| branch), one should then commit the modified gitlink for 'a' in |
| the 'super' project. Actually it would not even need to be an |
| external update, one could move to 'a' folder (insider 'super'), |
| modify its content, commit, then move back to 'super' and |
| commit the modified gitlink for 'a'. |
| |
| == Creating a New Subscription |
| |
| === Defining the Submodule Branch |
| |
| This is required because submodule subscription is actually the |
| subscription of a submodule project and one of its branches for |
| a branch of a super project. |
| |
| Since Gerrit manages subscriptions in the branch scope, we could have |
| a scenario having a project called 'super' having a branch 'integration' |
| subscribed to a project called 'a' in branch 'integration', and also |
| having the same 'super' project but in branch 'dev' subscribed to the 'a' |
| project in a branch called 'local-dev'. |
| |
| After adding the git submodule to a super project, one should edit |
| the .gitmodules file to add a branch field to each submodule |
| section which is supposed to be subscribed. |
| |
| As the branch field is a Gerrit specific field it will not be filled |
| automatically by the git submodule command, so one needs to edit it |
| manually. Its value should indicate the branch of a submodule project |
| that when updated will trigger automatic update of its registered |
| gitlink. |
| |
| The branch value could be "'.'" if the submodule project branch |
| has the same name as the destination branch of the commit having |
| gitlinks/.gitmodules file. |
| |
| If the intention is to make use of the Gerrit feature described |
| here, one should always be sure to update the .gitmodules file after |
| adding submodules to a super project. |
| |
| If a git submodule is added but the branch field is not added to the |
| .gitmodules file, Gerrit will not create a subscription for the |
| submodule and there will be no automatic updates to the superproject. |
| |
| === Detecting and Subscribing Submodules |
| |
| Whenever a commit is merged to a project, its content is scanned |
| to identify if it registers any submodules (if the commit contains new |
| gitlinks and a .gitmodules file with all required info) and if so, |
| a new submodule subscription is registered. |
| |
| [[automatic_update]] |
| == Automatic Update of Superprojects |
| |
| After a superproject is subscribed to a submodule, it is not |
| required to push/merge commits to this superproject to update the |
| gitlink to the submodule. |
| |
| Whenever a commit is merged in a submodule, its subscribed superproject |
| is updated. |
| |
| Imagine a superproject called 'super' having a branch called 'dev' |
| having subscribed to a submodule 'a' on a branch 'dev-of-a'. When a commit |
| is merged in branch 'dev-of-a' of 'a' project, Gerrit automatically |
| creates a new commit on branch 'dev' of 'super' updating the gitlink |
| to point to the just merged commit. |
| |
| === Subscription Limitations |
| |
| Gerrit will only automatically update superprojects where the |
| submodules are hosted on the same Gerrit instance as the |
| superproject. Gerrit determines this by checking the hostname of the |
| submodule specified in the .gitmodules file and comparing it to the |
| hostname from the canonical web URL. |
| |
| It is currently not possible to use the submodule subscription feature |
| with a canonical web URL hostname that differs from the hostname of |
| the submodule. Instead relative submodules should be used. |
| |
| The Gerrit instance administrator group should always certify to |
| provide the canonical web URL value in its configuration file. Users |
| should certify to use the correct hostname of the running Gerrit |
| instance to add/subscribe submodules. |
| |
| === Relative submodules |
| |
| To enable easier usage of Gerrit mirrors and/or distribution over |
| several protocols, such as plain git and HTTP(S) as well as SSH, one |
| can use relative submodules. This means that instead of providing the |
| entire URL to the submodule a relative path is stated in the |
| .gitmodules file. |
| |
| Gerrit will try to match the entire project name of the submodule |
| including directories. Therefore it is important to supply the full |
| path name of the Gerrit project, not only relative to the super |
| repository. See the following example: |
| |
| We have a super repository placed under a sub directory. |
| |
| product/super_repository.git |
| |
| To this repository we wish add a submodule "deeper" into the directory |
| structure. |
| |
| product/framework/subcomponent.git |
| |
| Now we need to edit the .gitmodules to include the complete path to |
| the Gerrit project. Observe that we need to use two "../" to include |
| the complete Gerrit project path. |
| |
| path = subcomponent.git |
| url = ../../product/framework/subcomponent.git |
| branch = master |
| |
| In contrast the following will not setup proper submodule |
| subscription, even if the submodule will be successfully cloned by git |
| from Gerrit. |
| |
| path = subcomponent.git |
| url = ../framework/subcomponent.git |
| branch = master |
| |
| == Removing Subscriptions |
| |
| If one has added a submodule subscription and drops it, it is |
| required to merge a commit updating the subscribed super |
| project/branch to remove the gitlink and the submodule section |
| of the .gitmodules file. |
| |
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