1 <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd"> 2 <html lang="en"> 3 <head> 4 <meta http-equiv="content-type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8"> 5 <title>Code Repository</title> 6 <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="mesa.css"> 7 </head> 8 <body> 9 10 <h1>Code Repository</h1> 11 12 <p> 13 Mesa uses <a href="http://git-scm.com"target="_parent">git</a> 14 as its source code management system. 15 </p> 16 17 <p> 18 The master git repository is hosted on 19 <a href="http://www.freedesktop.org" target="_parent">freedesktop.org</a>. 20 </p> 21 22 <p> 23 You may access the repository either as an 24 <a href="#anonymous">anonymous user</a> (read-only) or as a 25 <a href="#developer">developer</a> 26 (read/write). 27 </p> 28 29 <p> 30 You may also 31 <a href="http://cgit.freedesktop.org/mesa/mesa/" 32 target="_parent">browse the main Mesa git repository</a> and the 33 <a href="http://cgit.freedesktop.org/mesa/demos" 34 target="_parent">Mesa demos and tests git repository</a>. 35 </p> 36 37 38 <h2 id="anonymous">Anonymous git Access</h2> 39 40 <p> 41 To get the Mesa sources anonymously (read-only): 42 </p> 43 44 <ol> 45 <li>Install the git software on your computer if needed.<br><br> 46 <li>Get an initial, local copy of the repository with: 47 <pre> 48 git clone git://anongit.freedesktop.org/git/mesa/mesa 49 </pre> 50 <li>Later, you can update your tree from the master repository with: 51 <pre> 52 git pull origin 53 </pre> 54 <li>If you also want the Mesa demos/tests repository: 55 <pre> 56 git clone git://anongit.freedesktop.org/git/mesa/demos 57 </pre> 58 </ol> 59 60 61 <h2 id="developer">Developer git Access</h2> 62 63 <p> 64 Mesa developers need to first have an account on 65 <a href="http://www.freedesktop.org" target="_parent">freedesktop.org</a>. 66 To get an account, please ask Brian or the other Mesa developers for 67 permission. 68 Then, if there are no objections, follow this 69 <a href="http://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/AccountRequests" target="_parent"> 70 procedure</a>. 71 </p> 72 73 <p> 74 Once your account is established: 75 </p> 76 77 <ol> 78 <li>Install the git software on your computer if needed.<br><br> 79 <li>Get an initial, local copy of the repository with: 80 <pre> 81 git clone git+ssh://username (a] git.freedesktop.org/git/mesa/mesa 82 </pre> 83 Replace <em>username</em> with your actual login name.<br><br> 84 <li>Later, you can update your tree from the master repository with: 85 <pre> 86 git pull origin 87 </pre> 88 <li>If you also want the Mesa demos/tests repository: 89 <pre> 90 git clone git+ssh://username (a] git.freedesktop.org/git/mesa/demos 91 </pre> 92 </ol> 93 94 95 <h2>Windows Users</h2> 96 97 <p> 98 If you're <a href="http://git.wiki.kernel.org/index.php/WindowsInstall" target="_parent"> 99 using git on Windows</a> you'll want to enable automatic CR/LF conversion in 100 your local copy of the repository: 101 </p> 102 <pre> 103 git config --global core.autocrlf true 104 </pre> 105 106 <p> 107 This will cause git to convert all text files to CR+LF on checkout, 108 and to LF on commit. 109 </p> 110 <p> 111 Unix users don't need to set this option. 112 </p> 113 <br> 114 115 116 <h2>Development Branches</h2> 117 118 <p> 119 At any given time, there may be several active branches in Mesa's 120 repository. 121 Generally, the trunk contains the latest development (unstable) 122 code while a branch has the latest stable code. 123 </p> 124 125 <p> 126 The command <code>git-branch</code> will list all available branches. 127 </p> 128 129 <p> 130 Questions about branch status/activity should be posted to the 131 mesa3d-dev mailing list. 132 </p> 133 134 <h2>Developer Git Tips</h2> 135 136 <ol> 137 <li>Setting up to edit the master branch 138 <p> 139 If you try to do a pull by just saying<code> git pull </code> 140 and git complains that you have not specified a 141 branch, try: 142 <pre> 143 git config branch.master.remote origin 144 git config branch.master.merge master 145 </pre> 146 <p> 147 Otherwise, you have to say<code> git pull origin master </code> 148 each time you do a pull. 149 </p> 150 <li>Small changes to master 151 <p> 152 If you are an experienced git user working on substancial modifications, 153 you are probably 154 working on a separate branch and would rebase your branch prior to 155 merging with master. 156 But for small changes to the master branch itself, 157 you also need to use the rebase feature in order to avoid an 158 unnecessary and distracting branch in master. 159 </p> 160 <p> 161 If it has been awhile since you've done the initial clone, try 162 <pre> 163 git pull 164 </pre> 165 <p> 166 to get the latest files before you start working. 167 </p> 168 <p> 169 Make your changes and use 170 <pre> 171 git add <files to commit> 172 git commit 173 </pre> 174 <p> 175 to get your changes ready to push back into the fd.o repository. 176 </p> 177 <p> 178 It is possible (and likely) that someone has changed master since 179 you did your last pull. Even if your changes do not conflict with 180 their changes, git will make a fast-forward 181 merge branch, branching from the point in time 182 where you did your last pull and merging it to a point after the other changes. 183 </p> 184 <p> 185 To avoid this, 186 <pre> 187 git pull --rebase 188 git push 189 </pre> 190 <p> 191 If you are familiar with CVS or similar system, this is similar to doing a 192 <code> cvs update </code> in order to update your source tree to 193 the current repository state, instead of the time you did the last update. 194 (CVS doesn't work like git in this respect, but this is easiest way 195 to explain it.) 196 <br> 197 In any case, your repository now looks like you made your changes after 198 all the other changes. 199 </p> 200 <p> 201 If the rebase resulted in conflicts or changes that could affect 202 the proper operation of your changes, you'll need to investigate 203 those before doing the push. 204 </p> 205 <p> 206 If you want the rebase action to be the default action, then 207 <pre> 208 git config branch.master.rebase true 209 git config --global branch.autosetuprebase=always 210 </pre> 211 <p> 212 See <a href="http://www.eecs.harvard.edu/~cduan/technical/git/" target="_parent">Understanding Git Conceptually</a> for a fairly clear explanation about all of this. 213 </p> 214 </ol> 215 216 </body> 217 </html> 218