| ============================== |
| Moving LLVM Projects to GitHub |
| ============================== |
| |
| .. contents:: Table of Contents |
| :depth: 4 |
| :local: |
| |
| Introduction |
| ============ |
| |
| This is a proposal to move our current revision control system from our own |
| hosted Subversion to GitHub. Below are the financial and technical arguments as |
| to why we are proposing such a move and how people (and validation |
| infrastructure) will continue to work with a Git-based LLVM. |
| |
| There will be a survey pointing at this document which we'll use to gauge the |
| community's reaction and, if we collectively decide to move, the time-frame. Be |
| sure to make your view count. |
| |
| Additionally, we will discuss this during a BoF at the next US LLVM Developer |
| meeting (http://llvm.org/devmtg/2016-11/). |
| |
| What This Proposal is *Not* About |
| ================================= |
| |
| Changing the development policy. |
| |
| This proposal relates only to moving the hosting of our source-code repository |
| from SVN hosted on our own servers to Git hosted on GitHub. We are not proposing |
| using GitHub's issue tracker, pull-requests, or code-review. |
| |
| Contributors will continue to earn commit access on demand under the Developer |
| Policy, except that that a GitHub account will be required instead of SVN |
| username/password-hash. |
| |
| Why Git, and Why GitHub? |
| ======================== |
| |
| Why Move At All? |
| ---------------- |
| |
| This discussion began because we currently host our own Subversion server |
| and Git mirror on a voluntary basis. The LLVM Foundation sponsors the server and |
| provides limited support, but there is only so much it can do. |
| |
| Volunteers are not sysadmins themselves, but compiler engineers that happen |
| to know a thing or two about hosting servers. We also don't have 24/7 support, |
| and we sometimes wake up to see that continuous integration is broken because |
| the SVN server is either down or unresponsive. |
| |
| We should take advantage of one of the services out there (GitHub, GitLab, |
| and BitBucket, among others) that offer better service (24/7 stability, disk |
| space, Git server, code browsing, forking facilities, etc) for free. |
| |
| Why Git? |
| -------- |
| |
| Many new coders nowadays start with Git, and a lot of people have never used |
| SVN, CVS, or anything else. Websites like GitHub have changed the landscape |
| of open source contributions, reducing the cost of first contribution and |
| fostering collaboration. |
| |
| Git is also the version control many LLVM developers use. Despite the |
| sources being stored in a SVN server, these developers are already using Git |
| through the Git-SVN integration. |
| |
| Git allows you to: |
| |
| * Commit, squash, merge, and fork locally without touching the remote server. |
| * Maintain local branches, enabling multiple threads of development. |
| * Collaborate on these branches (e.g. through your own fork of llvm on GitHub). |
| * Inspect the repository history (blame, log, bisect) without Internet access. |
| * Maintain remote forks and branches on Git hosting services and |
| integrate back to the main repository. |
| |
| In addition, because Git seems to be replacing many OSS projects' version |
| control systems, there are many tools that are built over Git. |
| Future tooling may support Git first (if not only). |
| |
| Why GitHub? |
| ----------- |
| |
| GitHub, like GitLab and BitBucket, provides free code hosting for open source |
| projects. Any of these could replace the code-hosting infrastructure that we |
| have today. |
| |
| These services also have a dedicated team to monitor, migrate, improve and |
| distribute the contents of the repositories depending on region and load. |
| |
| GitHub has one important advantage over GitLab and |
| BitBucket: it offers read-write **SVN** access to the repository |
| (https://github.com/blog/626-announcing-svn-support). |
| This would enable people to continue working post-migration as though our code |
| were still canonically in an SVN repository. |
| |
| In addition, there are already multiple LLVM mirrors on GitHub, indicating that |
| part of our community has already settled there. |
| |
| On Managing Revision Numbers with Git |
| ------------------------------------- |
| |
| The current SVN repository hosts all the LLVM sub-projects alongside each other. |
| A single revision number (e.g. r123456) thus identifies a consistent version of |
| all LLVM sub-projects. |
| |
| Git does not use sequential integer revision number but instead uses a hash to |
| identify each commit. (Linus mentioned that the lack of such revision number |
| is "the only real design mistake" in Git [TorvaldRevNum]_.) |
| |
| The loss of a sequential integer revision number has been a sticking point in |
| past discussions about Git: |
| |
| - "The 'branch' I most care about is mainline, and losing the ability to say |
| 'fixed in r1234' (with some sort of monotonically increasing number) would |
| be a tragic loss." [LattnerRevNum]_ |
| - "I like those results sorted by time and the chronology should be obvious, but |
| timestamps are incredibly cumbersome and make it difficult to verify that a |
| given checkout matches a given set of results." [TrickRevNum]_ |
| - "There is still the major regression with unreadable version numbers. |
| Given the amount of Bugzilla traffic with 'Fixed in...', that's a |
| non-trivial issue." [JSonnRevNum]_ |
| - "Sequential IDs are important for LNT and llvmlab bisection tool." [MatthewsRevNum]_. |
| |
| However, Git can emulate this increasing revision number: |
| ``git rev-list --count <commit-hash>``. This identifier is unique only |
| within a single branch, but this means the tuple `(num, branch-name)` uniquely |
| identifies a commit. |
| |
| We can thus use this revision number to ensure that e.g. `clang -v` reports a |
| user-friendly revision number (e.g. `master-12345` or `4.0-5321`), addressing |
| the objections raised above with respect to this aspect of Git. |
| |
| What About Branches and Merges? |
| ------------------------------- |
| |
| In contrast to SVN, Git makes branching easy. Git's commit history is |
| represented as a DAG, a departure from SVN's linear history. However, we propose |
| to mandate making merge commits illegal in our canonical Git repository. |
| |
| Unfortunately, GitHub does not support server side hooks to enforce such a |
| policy. We must rely on the community to avoid pushing merge commits. |
| |
| GitHub offers a feature called `Status Checks`: a branch protected by |
| `status checks` requires commits to be whitelisted before the push can happen. |
| We could supply a pre-push hook on the client side that would run and check the |
| history, before whitelisting the commit being pushed [statuschecks]_. |
| However this solution would be somewhat fragile (how do you update a script |
| installed on every developer machine?) and prevents SVN access to the |
| repository. |
| |
| What About Commit Emails? |
| ------------------------- |
| |
| We will need a new bot to send emails for each commit. This proposal leaves the |
| email format unchanged besides the commit URL. |
| |
| Straw Man Migration Plan |
| ======================== |
| |
| Step #1 : Before The Move |
| ------------------------- |
| |
| 1. Update docs to mention the move, so people are aware of what is going on. |
| 2. Set up a read-only version of the GitHub project, mirroring our current SVN |
| repository. |
| 3. Add the required bots to implement the commit emails, as well as the |
| umbrella repository update (if the multirepo is selected) or the read-only |
| Git views for the sub-projects (if the monorepo is selected). |
| |
| Step #2 : Git Move |
| ------------------ |
| |
| 4. Update the buildbots to pick up updates and commits from the GitHub |
| repository. Not all bots have to migrate at this point, but it'll help |
| provide infrastructure testing. |
| 5. Update Phabricator to pick up commits from the GitHub repository. |
| 6. LNT and llvmlab have to be updated: they rely on unique monotonically |
| increasing integer across branch [MatthewsRevNum]_. |
| 7. Instruct downstream integrators to pick up commits from the GitHub |
| repository. |
| 8. Review and prepare an update for the LLVM documentation. |
| |
| Until this point nothing has changed for developers, it will just |
| boil down to a lot of work for buildbot and other infrastructure |
| owners. |
| |
| The migration will pause here until all dependencies have cleared, and all |
| problems have been solved. |
| |
| Step #3: Write Access Move |
| -------------------------- |
| |
| 9. Collect developers' GitHub account information, and add them to the project. |
| 10. Switch the SVN repository to read-only and allow pushes to the GitHub repository. |
| 11. Update the documentation. |
| 12. Mirror Git to SVN. |
| |
| Step #4 : Post Move |
| ------------------- |
| |
| 13. Archive the SVN repository. |
| 14. Update links on the LLVM website pointing to viewvc/klaus/phab etc. to |
| point to GitHub instead. |
| |
| One or Multiple Repositories? |
| ============================= |
| |
| There are two major variants for how to structure our Git repository: The |
| "multirepo" and the "monorepo". |
| |
| Multirepo Variant |
| ----------------- |
| |
| This variant recommends moving each LLVM sub-project to a separate Git |
| repository. This mimics the existing official read-only Git repositories |
| (e.g., http://llvm.org/git/compiler-rt.git), and creates new canonical |
| repositories for each sub-project. |
| |
| This will allow the individual sub-projects to remain distinct: a |
| developer interested only in compiler-rt can checkout only this repository, |
| build it, and work in isolation of the other sub-projects. |
| |
| A key need is to be able to check out multiple projects (i.e. lldb+clang+llvm or |
| clang+llvm+libcxx for example) at a specific revision. |
| |
| A tuple of revisions (one entry per repository) accurately describes the state |
| across the sub-projects. |
| For example, a given version of clang would be |
| *<LLVM-12345, clang-5432, libcxx-123, etc.>*. |
| |
| Umbrella Repository |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| To make this more convenient, a separate *umbrella* repository will be |
| provided. This repository will be used for the sole purpose of understanding |
| the sequence in which commits were pushed to the different repositories and to |
| provide a single revision number. |
| |
| This umbrella repository will be read-only and continuously updated |
| to record the above tuple. The proposed form to record this is to use Git |
| [submodules]_, possibly along with a set of scripts to help check out a |
| specific revision of the LLVM distribution. |
| |
| A regular LLVM developer does not need to interact with the umbrella repository |
| -- the individual repositories can be checked out independently -- but you would |
| need to use the umbrella repository to bisect multiple sub-projects at the same |
| time, or to check-out old revisions of LLVM with another sub-project at a |
| consistent state. |
| |
| This umbrella repository will be updated automatically by a bot (running on |
| notice from a webhook on every push, and periodically) on a per commit basis: a |
| single commit in the umbrella repository would match a single commit in a |
| sub-project. |
| |
| Living Downstream |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Downstream SVN users can use the read/write SVN bridges with the following |
| caveats: |
| |
| * Be prepared for a one-time change to the upstream revision numbers. |
| * The upstream sub-project revision numbers will no longer be in sync. |
| |
| Downstream Git users can continue without any major changes, with the minor |
| change of upstreaming using `git push` instead of `git svn dcommit`. |
| |
| Git users also have the option of adopting an umbrella repository downstream. |
| The tooling for the upstream umbrella can easily be reused for downstream needs, |
| incorporating extra sub-projects and branching in parallel with sub-project |
| branches. |
| |
| Multirepo Preview |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| As a preview (disclaimer: this rough prototype, not polished and not |
| representative of the final solution), you can look at the following: |
| |
| * Repository: https://github.com/llvm-beanz/llvm-submodules |
| * Update bot: http://beanz-bot.com:8180/jenkins/job/submodule-update/ |
| |
| Concerns |
| ^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| * Because GitHub does not allow server-side hooks, and because there is no |
| "push timestamp" in Git, the umbrella repository sequence isn't totally |
| exact: commits from different repositories pushed around the same time can |
| appear in different orders. However, we don't expect it to be the common case |
| or to cause serious issues in practice. |
| * You can't have a single cross-projects commit that would update both LLVM and |
| other sub-projects (something that can be achieved now). It would be possible |
| to establish a protocol whereby users add a special token to their commit |
| messages that causes the umbrella repo's updater bot to group all of them |
| into a single revision. |
| * Another option is to group commits that were pushed closely enough together |
| in the umbrella repository. This has the advantage of allowing cross-project |
| commits, and is less sensitive to mis-ordering commits. However, this has the |
| potential to group unrelated commits together, especially if the bot goes |
| down and needs to catch up. |
| * This variant relies on heavier tooling. But the current prototype shows that |
| it is not out-of-reach. |
| * Submodules don't have a good reputation / are complicating the command line. |
| However, in the proposed setup, a regular developer will seldom interact with |
| submodules directly, and certainly never update them. |
| * Refactoring across projects is not friendly: taking some functions from clang |
| to make it part of a utility in libSupport wouldn't carry the history of the |
| code in the llvm repo, preventing recursively applying `git blame` for |
| instance. However, this is not very different than how most people are |
| Interacting with the repository today, by splitting such change in multiple |
| commits. |
| |
| Workflows |
| ^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| * :ref:`Checkout/Clone a Single Project, without Commit Access <workflow-checkout-commit>`. |
| * :ref:`Checkout/Clone a Single Project, with Commit Access <workflow-multicheckout-nocommit>`. |
| * :ref:`Checkout/Clone Multiple Projects, with Commit Access <workflow-multicheckout-multicommit>`. |
| * :ref:`Commit an API Change in LLVM and Update the Sub-projects <workflow-cross-repo-commit>`. |
| * :ref:`Branching/Stashing/Updating for Local Development or Experiments <workflow-multi-branching>`. |
| * :ref:`Bisecting <workflow-multi-bisecting>`. |
| |
| Monorepo Variant |
| ---------------- |
| |
| This variant recommends moving all LLVM sub-projects to a single Git repository, |
| similar to https://github.com/llvm-project/llvm-project. |
| This would mimic an export of the current SVN repository, with each sub-project |
| having its own top-level directory. |
| Not all sub-projects are used for building toolchains. In practice, www/ |
| and test-suite/ will probably stay out of the monorepo. |
| |
| Putting all sub-projects in a single checkout makes cross-project refactoring |
| naturally simple: |
| |
| * New sub-projects can be trivially split out for better reuse and/or layering |
| (e.g., to allow libSupport and/or LIT to be used by runtimes without adding a |
| dependency on LLVM). |
| * Changing an API in LLVM and upgrading the sub-projects will always be done in |
| a single commit, designing away a common source of temporary build breakage. |
| * Moving code across sub-project (during refactoring for instance) in a single |
| commit enables accurate `git blame` when tracking code change history. |
| * Tooling based on `git grep` works natively across sub-projects, allowing to |
| easier find refactoring opportunities across projects (for example reusing a |
| datastructure initially in LLDB by moving it into libSupport). |
| * Having all the sources present encourages maintaining the other sub-projects |
| when changing API. |
| |
| Finally, the monorepo maintains the property of the existing SVN repository that |
| the sub-projects move synchronously, and a single revision number (or commit |
| hash) identifies the state of the development across all projects. |
| |
| .. _build_single_project: |
| |
| Building a single sub-project |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Nobody will be forced to build unnecessary projects. The exact structure |
| is TBD, but making it trivial to configure builds for a single sub-project |
| (or a subset of sub-projects) is a hard requirement. |
| |
| As an example, it could look like the following:: |
| |
| mkdir build && cd build |
| # Configure only LLVM (default) |
| cmake path/to/monorepo |
| # Configure LLVM and lld |
| cmake path/to/monorepo -DLLVM_ENABLE_PROJECTS=lld |
| # Configure LLVM and clang |
| cmake path/to/monorepo -DLLVM_ENABLE_PROJECTS=clang |
| |
| .. _git-svn-mirror: |
| |
| Read/write sub-project mirrors |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| With the Monorepo, the existing single-subproject mirrors (e.g. |
| http://llvm.org/git/compiler-rt.git) with git-svn read-write access would |
| continue to be maintained: developers would continue to be able to use the |
| existing single-subproject git repositories as they do today, with *no changes |
| to workflow*. Everything (git fetch, git svn dcommit, etc.) could continue to |
| work identically to how it works today. The monorepo can be set-up such that the |
| SVN revision number matches the SVN revision in the GitHub SVN-bridge. |
| |
| Living Downstream |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Downstream SVN users can use the read/write SVN bridge. The SVN revision |
| number can be preserved in the monorepo, minimizing the impact. |
| |
| Downstream Git users can continue without any major changes, by using the |
| git-svn mirrors on top of the SVN bridge. |
| |
| Git users can also work upstream with monorepo even if their downstream |
| fork has split repositories. They can apply patches in the appropriate |
| subdirectories of the monorepo using, e.g., `git am --directory=...`, or |
| plain `diff` and `patch`. |
| |
| Alternatively, Git users can migrate their own fork to the monorepo. As a |
| demonstration, we've migrated the "CHERI" fork to the monorepo in two ways: |
| |
| * Using a script that rewrites history (including merges) so that it looks |
| like the fork always lived in the monorepo [LebarCHERI]_. The upside of |
| this is when you check out an old revision, you get a copy of all llvm |
| sub-projects at a consistent revision. (For instance, if it's a clang |
| fork, when you check out an old revision you'll get a consistent version |
| of llvm proper.) The downside is that this changes the fork's commit |
| hashes. |
| |
| * Merging the fork into the monorepo [AminiCHERI]_. This preserves the |
| fork's commit hashes, but when you check out an old commit you only get |
| the one sub-project. |
| |
| Monorepo Preview |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| As a preview (disclaimer: this rough prototype, not polished and not |
| representative of the final solution), you can look at the following: |
| |
| * Full Repository: https://github.com/joker-eph/llvm-project |
| * Single sub-project view with *SVN write access* to the full repo: |
| https://github.com/joker-eph/compiler-rt |
| |
| Concerns |
| ^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| * Using the monolithic repository may add overhead for those contributing to a |
| standalone sub-project, particularly on runtimes like libcxx and compiler-rt |
| that don't rely on LLVM; currently, a fresh clone of libcxx is only 15MB (vs. |
| 1GB for the monorepo), and the commit rate of LLVM may cause more frequent |
| `git push` collisions when upstreaming. Affected contributors can continue to |
| use the SVN bridge or the single-subproject Git mirrors with git-svn for |
| read-write. |
| * Using the monolithic repository may add overhead for those *integrating* a |
| standalone sub-project, even if they aren't contributing to it, due to the |
| same disk space concern as the point above. The availability of the |
| sub-project Git mirror addresses this, even without SVN access. |
| * Preservation of the existing read/write SVN-based workflows relies on the |
| GitHub SVN bridge, which is an extra dependency. Maintaining this locks us |
| into GitHub and could restrict future workflow changes. |
| |
| Workflows |
| ^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| * :ref:`Checkout/Clone a Single Project, without Commit Access <workflow-checkout-commit>`. |
| * :ref:`Checkout/Clone a Single Project, with Commit Access <workflow-monocheckout-nocommit>`. |
| * :ref:`Checkout/Clone Multiple Projects, with Commit Access <workflow-monocheckout-multicommit>`. |
| * :ref:`Commit an API Change in LLVM and Update the Sub-projects <workflow-cross-repo-commit>`. |
| * :ref:`Branching/Stashing/Updating for Local Development or Experiments <workflow-mono-branching>`. |
| * :ref:`Bisecting <workflow-mono-bisecting>`. |
| |
| Multi/Mono Hybrid Variant |
| ------------------------- |
| |
| This variant recommends moving only the LLVM sub-projects that are *rev-locked* |
| to LLVM into a monorepo (clang, lld, lldb, ...), following the multirepo |
| proposal for the rest. While neither variant recommends combining sub-projects |
| like www/ and test-suite/ (which are completely standalone), this goes further |
| and keeps sub-projects like libcxx and compiler-rt in their own distinct |
| repositories. |
| |
| Concerns |
| ^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| * This has most disadvantages of multirepo and monorepo, without bringing many |
| of the advantages. |
| * Downstream have to upgrade to the monorepo structure, but only partially. So |
| they will keep the infrastructure to integrate the other separate |
| sub-projects. |
| * All projects that use LIT for testing are effectively rev-locked to LLVM. |
| Furthermore, some runtimes (like compiler-rt) are rev-locked with Clang. |
| It's not clear where to draw the lines. |
| |
| |
| Workflow Before/After |
| ===================== |
| |
| This section goes through a few examples of workflows, intended to illustrate |
| how end-users or developers would interact with the repository for |
| various use-cases. |
| |
| .. _workflow-checkout-commit: |
| |
| Checkout/Clone a Single Project, without Commit Access |
| ------------------------------------------------------ |
| |
| Except the URL, nothing changes. The possibilities today are:: |
| |
| svn co http://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk llvm |
| # or with Git |
| git clone http://llvm.org/git/llvm.git |
| |
| After the move to GitHub, you would do either:: |
| |
| git clone https://github.com/llvm-project/llvm.git |
| # or using the GitHub svn native bridge |
| svn co https://github.com/llvm-project/llvm/trunk |
| |
| The above works for both the monorepo and the multirepo, as we'll maintain the |
| existing read-only views of the individual sub-projects. |
| |
| Checkout/Clone a Single Project, with Commit Access |
| --------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| Currently |
| ^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| # direct SVN checkout |
| svn co https://user@llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk llvm |
| # or using the read-only Git view, with git-svn |
| git clone http://llvm.org/git/llvm.git |
| cd llvm |
| git svn init https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk --username=<username> |
| git config svn-remote.svn.fetch :refs/remotes/origin/master |
| git svn rebase -l # -l avoids fetching ahead of the git mirror. |
| |
| Commits are performed using `svn commit` or with the sequence `git commit` and |
| `git svn dcommit`. |
| |
| .. _workflow-multicheckout-nocommit: |
| |
| Multirepo Variant |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| With the multirepo variant, nothing changes but the URL, and commits can be |
| performed using `svn commit` or `git commit` and `git push`:: |
| |
| git clone https://github.com/llvm/llvm.git llvm |
| # or using the GitHub svn native bridge |
| svn co https://github.com/llvm/llvm/trunk/ llvm |
| |
| .. _workflow-monocheckout-nocommit: |
| |
| Monorepo Variant |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| With the monorepo variant, there are a few options, depending on your |
| constraints. First, you could just clone the full repository:: |
| |
| git clone https://github.com/llvm/llvm-projects.git llvm |
| # or using the GitHub svn native bridge |
| svn co https://github.com/llvm/llvm-projects/trunk/ llvm |
| |
| At this point you have every sub-project (llvm, clang, lld, lldb, ...), which |
| :ref:`doesn't imply you have to build all of them <build_single_project>`. You |
| can still build only compiler-rt for instance. In this way it's not different |
| from someone who would check out all the projects with SVN today. |
| |
| You can commit as normal using `git commit` and `git push` or `svn commit`, and |
| read the history for a single project (`git log libcxx` for example). |
| |
| Secondly, there are a few options to avoid checking out all the sources. |
| |
| **Using the GitHub SVN bridge** |
| |
| The GitHub SVN native bridge allows to checkout a subdirectory directly: |
| |
| svn co https://github.com/llvm/llvm-projects/trunk/compiler-rt compiler-rt —username=... |
| |
| This checks out only compiler-rt and provides commit access using "svn commit", |
| in the same way as it would do today. |
| |
| **Using a Subproject Git Nirror** |
| |
| You can use *git-svn* and one of the sub-project mirrors:: |
| |
| # Clone from the single read-only Git repo |
| git clone http://llvm.org/git/llvm.git |
| cd llvm |
| # Configure the SVN remote and initialize the svn metadata |
| $ git svn init https://github.com/joker-eph/llvm-project/trunk/llvm —username=... |
| git config svn-remote.svn.fetch :refs/remotes/origin/master |
| git svn rebase -l |
| |
| In this case the repository contains only a single sub-project, and commits can |
| be made using `git svn dcommit`, again exactly as we do today. |
| |
| **Using a Sparse Checkouts** |
| |
| You can hide the other directories using a Git sparse checkout:: |
| |
| git config core.sparseCheckout true |
| echo /compiler-rt > .git/info/sparse-checkout |
| git read-tree -mu HEAD |
| |
| The data for all sub-projects is still in your `.git` directory, but in your |
| checkout, you only see `compiler-rt`. |
| Before you push, you'll need to fetch and rebase (`git pull --rebase`) as |
| usual. |
| |
| Note that when you fetch you'll likely pull in changes to sub-projects you don't |
| care about. If you are using spasre checkout, the files from other projects |
| won't appear on your disk. The only effect is that your commit hash changes. |
| |
| You can check whether the changes in the last fetch are relevant to your commit |
| by running:: |
| |
| git log origin/master@{1}..origin/master -- libcxx |
| |
| This command can be hidden in a script so that `git llvmpush` would perform all |
| these steps, fail only if such a dependent change exists, and show immediately |
| the change that prevented the push. An immediate repeat of the command would |
| (almost) certainly result in a successful push. |
| Note that today with SVN or git-svn, this step is not possible since the |
| "rebase" implicitly happens while committing (unless a conflict occurs). |
| |
| Checkout/Clone Multiple Projects, with Commit Access |
| ---------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| Let's look how to assemble llvm+clang+libcxx at a given revision. |
| |
| Currently |
| ^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| svn co http://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk llvm -r $REVISION |
| cd llvm/tools |
| svn co http://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/clang/trunk clang -r $REVISION |
| cd ../projects |
| svn co http://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/libcxx/trunk libcxx -r $REVISION |
| |
| Or using git-svn:: |
| |
| git clone http://llvm.org/git/llvm.git |
| cd llvm/ |
| git svn init https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk --username=<username> |
| git config svn-remote.svn.fetch :refs/remotes/origin/master |
| git svn rebase -l |
| git checkout `git svn find-rev -B r258109` |
| cd tools |
| git clone http://llvm.org/git/clang.git |
| cd clang/ |
| git svn init https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/clang/trunk --username=<username> |
| git config svn-remote.svn.fetch :refs/remotes/origin/master |
| git svn rebase -l |
| git checkout `git svn find-rev -B r258109` |
| cd ../../projects/ |
| git clone http://llvm.org/git/libcxx.git |
| cd libcxx |
| git svn init https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/libcxx/trunk --username=<username> |
| git config svn-remote.svn.fetch :refs/remotes/origin/master |
| git svn rebase -l |
| git checkout `git svn find-rev -B r258109` |
| |
| Note that the list would be longer with more sub-projects. |
| |
| .. _workflow-multicheckout-multicommit: |
| |
| Multirepo Variant |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| With the multirepo variant, the umbrella repository will be used. This is |
| where the mapping from a single revision number to the individual repositories |
| revisions is stored.:: |
| |
| git clone https://github.com/llvm-beanz/llvm-submodules |
| cd llvm-submodules |
| git checkout $REVISION |
| git submodule init |
| git submodule update clang llvm libcxx |
| # the list of sub-project is optional, `git submodule update` would get them all. |
| |
| At this point the clang, llvm, and libcxx individual repositories are cloned |
| and stored alongside each other. There are CMake flags to describe the directory |
| structure; alternatively, you can just symlink `clang` to `llvm/tools/clang`, |
| etc. |
| |
| Another option is to checkout repositories based on the commit timestamp:: |
| |
| git checkout `git rev-list -n 1 --before="2009-07-27 13:37" master` |
| |
| .. _workflow-monocheckout-multicommit: |
| |
| Monorepo Variant |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| The repository contains natively the source for every sub-projects at the right |
| revision, which makes this straightforward:: |
| |
| git clone https://github.com/llvm/llvm-projects.git llvm-projects |
| cd llvm-projects |
| git checkout $REVISION |
| |
| As before, at this point clang, llvm, and libcxx are stored in directories |
| alongside each other. |
| |
| .. _workflow-cross-repo-commit: |
| |
| Commit an API Change in LLVM and Update the Sub-projects |
| -------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| Today this is possible, even though not common (at least not documented) for |
| subversion users and for git-svn users. For example, few Git users try to update |
| LLD or Clang in the same commit as they change an LLVM API. |
| |
| The multirepo variant does not address this: one would have to commit and push |
| separately in every individual repository. It would be possible to establish a |
| protocol whereby users add a special token to their commit messages that causes |
| the umbrella repo's updater bot to group all of them into a single revision. |
| |
| The monorepo variant handles this natively. |
| |
| Branching/Stashing/Updating for Local Development or Experiments |
| ---------------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| Currently |
| ^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| SVN does not allow this use case, but developers that are currently using |
| git-svn can do it. Let's look in practice what it means when dealing with |
| multiple sub-projects. |
| |
| To update the repository to tip of trunk:: |
| |
| git pull |
| cd tools/clang |
| git pull |
| cd ../../projects/libcxx |
| git pull |
| |
| To create a new branch:: |
| |
| git checkout -b MyBranch |
| cd tools/clang |
| git checkout -b MyBranch |
| cd ../../projects/libcxx |
| git checkout -b MyBranch |
| |
| To switch branches:: |
| |
| git checkout AnotherBranch |
| cd tools/clang |
| git checkout AnotherBranch |
| cd ../../projects/libcxx |
| git checkout AnotherBranch |
| |
| .. _workflow-multi-branching: |
| |
| Multirepo Variant |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| The multirepo works the same as the current Git workflow: every command needs |
| to be applied to each of the individual repositories. |
| However, the umbrella repository makes this easy using `git submodule foreach` |
| to replicate a command on all the individual repositories (or submodules |
| in this case): |
| |
| To create a new branch:: |
| |
| git submodule foreach git checkout -b MyBranch |
| |
| To switch branches:: |
| |
| git submodule foreach git checkout AnotherBranch |
| |
| .. _workflow-mono-branching: |
| |
| Monorepo Variant |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Regular Git commands are sufficient, because everything is in a single |
| repository: |
| |
| To update the repository to tip of trunk:: |
| |
| git pull |
| |
| To create a new branch:: |
| |
| git checkout -b MyBranch |
| |
| To switch branches:: |
| |
| git checkout AnotherBranch |
| |
| Bisecting |
| --------- |
| |
| Assuming a developer is looking for a bug in clang (or lld, or lldb, ...). |
| |
| Currently |
| ^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| SVN does not have builtin bisection support, but the single revision across |
| sub-projects makes it possible to script around. |
| |
| Using the existing Git read-only view of the repositories, it is possible to use |
| the native Git bisection script over the llvm repository, and use some scripting |
| to synchronize the clang repository to match the llvm revision. |
| |
| .. _workflow-multi-bisecting: |
| |
| Multirepo Variant |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| With the multi-repositories variant, the cross-repository synchronization is |
| achieved using the umbrella repository. This repository contains only |
| submodules for the other sub-projects. The native Git bisection can be used on |
| the umbrella repository directly. A subtlety is that the bisect script itself |
| needs to make sure the submodules are updated accordingly. |
| |
| For example, to find which commit introduces a regression where clang-3.9 |
| crashes but not clang-3.8 passes, one should be able to simply do:: |
| |
| git bisect start release_39 release_38 |
| git bisect run ./bisect_script.sh |
| |
| With the `bisect_script.sh` script being:: |
| |
| #!/bin/sh |
| cd $UMBRELLA_DIRECTORY |
| git submodule update llvm clang libcxx #.... |
| cd $BUILD_DIR |
| |
| ninja clang || exit 125 # an exit code of 125 asks "git bisect" |
| # to "skip" the current commit |
| |
| ./bin/clang some_crash_test.cpp |
| |
| When the `git bisect run` command returns, the umbrella repository is set to |
| the state where the regression is introduced. The commit diff in the umbrella |
| indicate which submodule was updated, and the last commit in this sub-projects |
| is the one that the bisect found. |
| |
| .. _workflow-mono-bisecting: |
| |
| Monorepo Variant |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Bisecting on the monorepo is straightforward, and very similar to the above, |
| except that the bisection script does not need to include the |
| `git submodule update` step. |
| |
| The same example, finding which commit introduces a regression where clang-3.9 |
| crashes but not clang-3.8 passes, will look like:: |
| |
| git bisect start release_39 release_38 |
| git bisect run ./bisect_script.sh |
| |
| With the `bisect_script.sh` script being:: |
| |
| #!/bin/sh |
| cd $BUILD_DIR |
| |
| ninja clang || exit 125 # an exit code of 125 asks "git bisect" |
| # to "skip" the current commit |
| |
| ./bin/clang some_crash_test.cpp |
| |
| Also, since the monorepo handles commits update across multiple projects, you're |
| less like to encounter a build failure where a commit change an API in LLVM and |
| another later one "fixes" the build in clang. |
| |
| |
| References |
| ========== |
| |
| .. [LattnerRevNum] Chris Lattner, http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2011-July/041739.html |
| .. [TrickRevNum] Andrew Trick, http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2011-July/041721.html |
| .. [JSonnRevNum] Joerg Sonnenberg, http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2011-July/041688.html |
| .. [TorvaldRevNum] Linus Torvald, http://git.661346.n2.nabble.com/Git-commit-generation-numbers-td6584414.html |
| .. [MatthewsRevNum] Chris Matthews, http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2016-July/049886.html |
| .. [submodules] Git submodules, https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Git-Tools-Submodules) |
| .. [statuschecks] GitHub status-checks, https://help.github.com/articles/about-required-status-checks/ |
| .. [LebarCHERI] Port *CHERI* to a single repository rewriting history, http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2016-July/102787.html |
| .. [AminiCHERI] Port *CHERI* to a single repository preserving history, http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2016-July/102804.html |