Le jeudi 04 août 2011 à 19:45 +0200, Jens Lehmann a écrit : > Am 04.08.2011 00:29, schrieb henri GEIST: > > Le mercredi 03 août 2011 à 23:30 +0200, Jens Lehmann a écrit : > >> Am 03.08.2011 21:41, schrieb Junio C Hamano: > >>> Jens Lehmann <Jens.Lehmann@xxxxxx> writes: > >> But when you fetch a new version of Gimp into your submodule, it would be > >> really nice if the superproject could be notified that the Gimp developers > >> updated to 1.2.4 of Glib and inform you that an update of Glib might be > >> appropriate. That could avoid having you to dig through compiler errors to > >> find out that the new foobar() function from Glib 1.2.4 is needed (and if > >> you need to pull in a bugfix in Glib, you might notice that *a lot* later > >> when you forget to do that). > >> > > > > Exact, I am really happy to read this. > > And better do not bother to have the suproject. > > I don't get this, you can't get rid of the superproject. Of corse I can. I have done It the patch I have submit has been done for an do it successfully. I am doing it every day. I have in the same "directory" not repository. Two repository "gimp" and "libpng". I cd in the gimp directory. And do "git add ../libpng" and it is done. The gimp repository track the "../libpng" repository by its path and sha1. I do not need anything else. > > > cd to gimp directory, type git status it can tell you every thing and > > when your satisfied you just have to type make. > > At this point the superproject have not any use. > > "git status" inside the submodule won't tell you anything about the > dependencies, Of corse It does if the repository add been add It will just like any other submodules inside of the repository Git status is even unable to see the difference. Essential because there is no difference. > but a "git status" in the superproject should. Yes but I have no and want not to have a superproject. > The submodule shouldn't know where exactly the submodules it depends on lives, that is > the decision of the superproject, not the submodule. Why not in my case it is needed has in "gimp.c" I have #include "../libpng.h" If the code need to know where is libpng why the repository should not know it as well ? > > >>>> In addition to that, it can (but mustn't) specify any of the following: > >>> > >>> I am guessing you meant "does not have to", instead of mustn't, here... > >> > >> Sure, thanks for deciphering that. > >> > >>>> a) Of this submodule "foo" I need at least that version because I won't > >>>> compile/work with older versions of that. (this can be tightened to > >>>> "exactly that version" to give henri the behavior he wants, but that > >>>> should be policy, not mandatory) > >>> > >>> The "loose collection of projects" approach like that has its uses, and it > >>> is called "repo". Why re-invent it? The behaviour Henri wants to specify > >>> the exact version is how git submodules work already, so I do not see > >>> there is anything to be done here. > >> > >> Let me make this clear: this is not about changing how submodules are > >> committed in a superproject. It is not about having a loose collection of > >> projects, they stay tied together in a defined state by the superproject. > >> > > > > Yes but for me, from when I started this this topic, it was all about > > having a loose collection of project with dependency references between > > them. And get rid of the superproject. > > It is my first and only goal. > > But I fail to see how that would improve anything. > It improve my life and the life of my team has developers everyday. All my team agree on this point. In fact they asked me to implement it. Because we used to have a superproject and it does not scale well. The "gimp" team and the "gqview" team shares the libpng but at there point of view they are not related they even not need to know that the other one exist. Then they will never share the same superproject. It has no sens for them. Then in your model you will need a superproject by project. I think we should put all that you put in the superproject in the project itself. Then there will be only one project by project. And if the dependency are not part of the superproject, this remove the burden of each team to redefine all the dependencies recursively in any dependency they have. has the original "libpng" team have done it in the "libpng" project and not in there own superprojec witch the can not share. > >> Henri wanted it a bit upside down: any submodule could request a certain > >> version of another submodule somewhere else in the repo. And he wanted to > >> use gitlinks from one submodule to another for that, which I - hopefully - > >> convinced him was no good idea. > >> > > > > You just convince me that submodules are more than I need and to make a > > lighter independent version of submodules which will never been followed > > by git commands. > > Submodules are what you need, but it's no use to implement dependencies by > using gitlinks that point outside of their repositories. > Submodules is not what I need. What I need is pointers to external repository tracked by git. Submodule was to my eyes the logical tool to do it. And I had made a patch to enable the tracking of external repository just has they do for internal ones. You convince me that you think prohibiting me to do so is a feature to your eyes. Because gitlinks and submodules can do more than this and you do not want those other things to work outside of the repository. Then I propose to cook a kind of "my_light_gitlinks" which do only that. > >>>> b) And if you don't know where to get it, use this url > >>> > >>> Again that is the job of .gitmodules in the superproject. > >> > >> Yes. But this idea is about how the url could get into the .gitmodules of > >> the superproject in the first place. That can make it easier for the > >> superproject's developer to import a submodule into his repo and much more > >> important: it makes it possible to pull in submodule dependencies > >> automatically e.g. when running "git submodule add --resolve-dependencies > >> Gimp". > > > > Only if you have a superproject. > > If not do the same thing from the gimp repository, now it contain all > > necessary infos to do the job. > > No, it doesn't. Apart from the Gimp project telling you what version it > wants, you need to have a place to record the version that the user really > used. And that won't work without a superproject. > the version of "libpng" that the user really use is stored in his "libpng" repository ! And tracked by every project depending on it. > >>>> That is all stuff the submodule knows better than the superproject. > >>> > >>> Not necessarily. The version A0 of submodule A may depend on submodule B > >>> and may also know it must have at least version B0 of that submodule, but > >>> the superproject would know other constraints, e.g. the superproject > >>> itself also calls into submodule B and wants a newer version B1 of it. > >> > >> Right. That's what I tried to explain to Henri, the superproject ties it all > >> together. But I also like his idea to add a way to communicate information > >> from the submodule to the superproject, and give the superproject a choice > >> if it wants to use it. > >> > > > > yes but the superproject contain no code in your design. > > Then it will never need anything by itself. > > It is only a container which you will inform with data already known by > > the submodules I do not see any value to it. > > But being the container that ties it all together is more than enough value. > It has absolutely no value to have a git repository as a container. A simple directory will do it very well. Henri -- 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