I was going to comment inline but I think the general question can be read as "why would you want this?". For me it's just an extra bit of automation. It would keep me from having to make release tarballs. I would just refer all the users to a gitweb snapshot link of the "v..." tag. Having a release tarball with "projectname-version" with a single directory called "projectname-version/" in it is just good practice if you ask me. Therefore it would benefit any developer like me :D : a spare time hobbyist who likes to automate as much of the administrative tasks, that go into running an open source project, as possible. Greets, Bram PS I've found that cgit: http://hjemli.net/git/cgit/ has this feature, so I'm probably going to give that a try and get back to you if I find any problems with it (the feature that is). On Sun, 2009-11-08 at 10:53 -0800, Junio C Hamano wrote: > Bram Neijt <bneijt@xxxxxxxxx> writes: > > > I would like to create release snapshots with a git tag like "v0.0.1". > > For proper Debian packaging, a release snapshot of tag "v0.0.1" would > > have to be named "project-0.0.1.tar.gz" and contain a single directory > > with "project-0.0.1/" in the archive. > > What the intended audience of this feature? IOW, > > - who are going to "click" such a link on gitweb to obtain > project-0.0.1.tar.gz with project-0.0.1/? > > - how are they going to use that tarball? > > I somehow suspect that they won't be the official Debian distro packagers. > > Most likely they actually have a clone of the upstream project (how else > they can stay up to date? In addition they would want to track their own > changes), so it would be more efficient for them to generate such a > tarball from a tag, and more importantly, doing it locally means that they > can they can verify the tag (and the whole history leading to it) before > doing so, instead of relying on somebody else's gitweb. > > You could be a mere Debian user who produces a *.deb for his own use out > of such tarball, and in such a case you are a lot less likely be tracking > the project (meaning, reading the history and keeping track of fixed bugs, > new regressions and such) than just getting a snapshot that happens to be > there and building it blindly, and I can understand it would be nicer if > you did not have to unpack, rename and regenerate an archive. > > Also, whose gitweb installations are you envisioning to enable this new > feature? Are you going to convince all the gitweb administrators of > projects packaged by Debian (and derivatives) that have gitweb, and what > are the incentive for these upstream projects to do so? I would guess > that most of the upstream projects do not consider Debian as their sole > target distribution, and it would be a tough sell if changing the snapshot > name to suit Debian breaks some other distro's (or human users) needs. > > Jakub is polishing Mark's patch to change the snapshot name and contents > hierarchy, but I think it won't satisfy Debian's naming guideline (it will > have v0.0.1, not 0.0.1 in the name). Changing the series's default to > drop 'v' from the beginning of the tagname when the rest of it consists of > all digits and dots would not be a correct solution, as Debian is not the > only system in the world and other people may want different naming rules. > > In order to make his series useful for your objective, it probably would > require a bit more customizability, but because I cannot tell whom such a > feature is really trying to help, and what the deployment plans are, I > cannot judge if extra complexity to add such a customizability is worth > it. Also because there will be conflicts in the desired archive format > ("Distro X people want this kind of archive, distro Y people want this > different kind"), the choice somehow how to come from whoever is clicking > the link, not from the gitweb administrator, and it probably would mean > the codepath involved would need a lot more careful audit than just a > server only "this gitweb installation would use this format" > configuration. > -- > To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe git" in > the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe git" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html