On Sat, May 19, 2007 at 15:17:04 +0200, Florian Weimer wrote: > I'd like to build something that integrates a Debian autobuilder > (sbuilder probably) with GIT. The intent is to get rid of a > designated integrator (our team is of a size where this seems a > reasonable thing to do[1]) and ensure predictable builds, independent > of what developers happen to have installed on their local > workstations. That's definitely a useful and reasonable thing to do. > Basically, what I want to do is this: > > 1. Perform a checkout from a specific branch. > > 2. Synthesize a new version number that is bigger than the previous > one. (This needs to keep a bit of extra-repository state. At > this stage, it's probably a good idea to ensure that the previous > commit built on this branch is an ancestor of the current HEAD.) > > 3. Generate a fake Debian changelog entry giving the HEAD commit and > the branch name, using the generated version number. > > 4. Build the whole thing in a controlled environment. > > 5. Store the build log for later review. > > 6. If the build was successful, transfer the packages to some > repository (based on the branch that was used). I don't think there is actually too much code that would be common for various git users. It has some code common for Debian developers, either using Git or even other version control: 1. This is one or at most few commands in a script or makefile, so not much room for generic stuff there. 2. This is something big conitnuous integration suites have complex system to solve, just to hide the fact that it's worth few lines of perl. However: - You might want to make up something Debian specific. Something like looking at latest entry in debian/changelog (that would be the last release) and adding an extra number to that. - Alternatively you could use git describe to get the version number of last release. Since it's fast-forward only, next build is always from descendant of previous, so you might even use git-describe output directly. 3. This is mostly Debian-specific. If you remember commit id of previous build -- or leave the entries in debian/changelog around -- you can put the short log in the entry, but that's single git command once you have the respective version ids. 4. These are Debian-specific commands, but would be the same for every Debian package. 5. This is mainly issue of sbuild setup, no? 6. Again, sbuild -- and therefore Debian -- specific (but reusable in Debian). IMHO generic tools won't help you much, because every other command is Debian specific. What *CAN* help you is the script in /usr/share/doc/git-core/contrib/continuous that will make sure the package is built whenever there are some new changes on the branch while not doing unnecessary work. There are actually even big projects with web interface and stuff to do this kind of thing, but they don't actually cover your steps above except 1 and 2. 1 is trivial and for 2 you have to tell it how to create those numbers anyway, so it won't buy you much. IMHO the git contrib/continuous scripts can do the same for you with much less overhead. -- Jan 'Bulb' Hudec <bulb@xxxxxx>
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