Le jeudi 28 juillet 2011 à 18:48 +0200, Jens Lehmann a écrit : > Am 28.07.2011 10:57, schrieb henri GEIST: > > In the current code it was not possible to add a gitlink to a repository > > outside of the main repository. > Of course that is why I have done the patch. > Me thinks this is a *feature* this patch removes (as I understand it it was > a major design decision that everything /inside/ a directory is controlled > by git). > That is still the case. It is not a matter of disabling any control of git in its own repository. It is just a matter of adding inside the git repository a reference (dependency) to an other git repository. > > This pach : > <snip> > > - Still forbids to add anything else. > > Why? If you let submodules live outside the tree I don't see any reason why > regular files shouldn't live there too (Disclaimer: I d not think that would > be a good idea either ;-). > there is regular file in the submodule repository but they are controled by the submodule itself. Then the main repository do not need to handle them. Just like you I think that regular file should not be touche outside of the repository by git. Because in this case it is not just a reference that is managed but the file itself. And this way there is a risk to overwrite some data not under revision control outside of the repository. > What you want looks like this: > > -+- lib1 #registered as submodule of project1 *and* project2 but not here > +- project1 # submodule of the superproject > | +- ../lib1 > +- project2 # submodule of the superproject > +- ../lib1 > In fact no. What I want is to have this: -+- lib1 +- project1 +- project2 With : - lib1 not knowing anything about projects 1 & 2 - project1 not knowing anything about project2 and vice et versa - project1 knowing that it need lib1 in version N. - project2 knowing that it need lib1 in version M. I know that means a conflict in the required lib version but it is required by the independence of projects 1 & 2 which do not have to know what happen in the other one. And in fact it is just what I want, it enable me if I decide to work on an optional "BigProject" depending on both project 1 & 2. Then If lib1 is in version M: - a git status in project2 will say nothing - a git status in project1 will say "modified: ../lib1 (modified content) - a git status in BigProject will say "modified: ../project1 (modified content) Then I know that I need to update project1 to work with the last version M of lib1. > You are opening a can of worms by having two different repos point to the same > submodule living in a third repo (which also happens to be their superproject > and must somehow ignore it). You'll have two SHA1s for a single submodule; > "git submodule foreach --recursive" will have interesting results too; and so > on. Not good. > As I just said before it is my purpose to do it like that. If you want to avoid this just put (project1 lib1) and (project2 lib2) in different places on your hard disk Let say a concret exemple 3 different teams work on libtiff, libpng, and libjpeg they are totally unrelated. One more team is working on the "gimp". And they need those 3 libs in specific versions not necessarily there heads. One other unrelated team is working on "gqview" and need the same libs in other specifics versions (Why should they know what te gimp team does) Neither "gimp" and "gqview" project will contain directory with those libs inside. They just depend on them. And the last team work on the gnome project which need the "gimp" and "gqview". It will be this team witch have to care about having both "gimp" and "gqview" sharing the same libs version> And has well the gnome project will not contain "gqview" and "gimp" in its own tree. It will also depend on them. It is just the same with aptitude on debian. Each package know there dependency by themselves, does not contain there dependencies, and do not need a bigger superpackage to tell them what are there own dependencies. > What about solving that with a "ln -s ../lib1" in "project1" and "project2" > (you seem to need that for your build environment) and adding the submodule > "lib1" to the superproject just like "project1" and "project2"? > For my build environment I do not use simlinks. I use tu put : #include "../lib1/lib1.h" in project1/project1.c And even if I do not face this problem myself, simlinks do not work so well on Windows. And Still I realy want to have every project knowing there own dependency by themselves and not needing an external superproject to tell them what they need. Henri GEIST -- 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