git-darcs needs a repository only for tracking. Don't use your working
git-repository. git-darcs will clear all your work that is not commited. It also
needs to temporarily change .gitignore
and _darcs/pref/boring
. By default it
will warn about this. You can add -nw
to avoid the warning. The tutorial never
contains a -nw
, so people don't copy-paste from the tutorial and lose their
work.
The tool is made for developers, while error-handling is okayish, there is almost no error-reporting, you'll have to read the traceback.
Integration tests run on python 3.7 - 3.11.
$ pip install git-darcs
Use the excellent capabilities of darcs to craft consistent, clear and concise patches while the remote repository still remains git. Thats the situation most of us in are because at work we have to use git.
- Convert a git repository to darcs using the linearized history proposed by git-darcs
- Visualize a git-repository using
darcs show dependencies
I prefer to group changes by topic, so I am constantly amending commits/patches.
This is very easy in darcs and more complicated in git. Yes, I know about
--fixup
and --autosquash
in git. Also I can find independent low-risk
patches easily with darcs show dependencies
, so I can constantly make MRs.
Making the final breaking change/MR much smaller. This is less tedious for the
reviewers.
The tutorial covers the main use-case:
- Check-out a git-repo, because at work you have to use git
- Snapshot the latest commit into darcs
- Craft patches: Use the excellent capabilities of darcs to move code between patches to create very consistent and clean patches
- Use
git darcs pull
to bring the darcs-patches back into git and create pull-request
Clone your tracking-repository.
$ git clone https://github.com/adfinis-sygroup/document-merge-service.git dms-track
Cloning into 'document-merge-service'...
.....
Resolving deltas: 100% (1267/1267), done.
Lazily import the git-repository to darcs.
$ git darcs update
Use CTRL-D for a graceful shutdown.
git-darcs will import the latest commit and tag it, so it can update from there, when you pull commits from upstream.
$ (cd dms-track; darcs log)
patch 7997a3365da1022db4b669ea63a37dc3f370a225
Author: Jean-Louis Fuchs <email>
Date: Fri Oct 7 17:40:10 CEST 2022
tagged git-checkpoint 2022-10-07T17:40:10.963827
d3ce714f2d77897e773e89ee3344602fceb1b625
patch 4e917fcc769b7a69858e0b11e7ee5aaffc76fbda
Author: Jean-Louis Fuchs <email>
Date: Fri Oct 7 17:40:10 CEST 2022
* d3ce714 chore(release): v5.0.0
Create the work-repository. Note that git and darcs make sure that no historical data is duplicated on disk (using hardlinks).
$ git darcs clone dms-track/ dms-work
clone: 100%|████████████████████████████████████████████████| 5/5 [00:00<00:00, 37.75it/s]
Now you can implement a new feature.
$ cd dms-work
$ touch document_merge_service/feature.py
$ darcs add document_merge_service/feature.py
Adding './document_merge_service/feature.py'
Finished adding:
./document_merge_service/feature.py
$ darcs record -m "a new feature"
addfile ./document_merge_service/feature.py
Shall I record this change? (1/1) [ynW...], or ? for more options: y
Do you want to Record these changes? [Yglqk...], or ? for more options: y
Finished recording patch 'a new feature'
$ darcs show dependencies | dot -Tpdf -Grankdir=TB -o $ftmp
There are new changes on upstream, let's pull them in.
$ cd ../dms-track/
$ git pull
Updating d3ce714..a6a8e35
Fast-forward
.github/workflows/tests.yml | 6 ++++-
.....
18 files changed, 262 insertions(+), 67 deletions(-)
From now on git-darcs will import every commit, but with a linearized history. That means the history might look different than in git, but no change will be forgotten. (See Linearized History)
$ git darcs update
Use CTRL-D for a graceful shutdown.
commits:
100%|███████████████████████████████████████████████████████| 18/18 [00:00<00:00, 19.14it/s]
We pull the new patches into dms-work
.
$ cd ../dms-track/
$ darcs pull ../dms-track/
Pulling from "/home/jeanlf/Temp/dms-track"...
patch 309682700e7142e37945c45cc3375674012e8050
Author: GitHub <noreply@github.com>
Date: Fri Oct 7 18:07:08 CEST 2022
* 85892f6 fix(docker): fix docker uwsgi command
Shall I pull this patch? (1/19) [ynW...], or ? for more options: a
Finished pulling.
The 18 patches we pulled are now in dms-work
along with a new snapshot-tag.
$ darcs log --from-tag=.
patch 430136524b02be562fdf0f0459594ffa981d386b
Author: Jean-Louis Fuchs <email>
Date: Fri Oct 7 18:07:09 CEST 2022
tagged git-checkpoint 2022-10-07T18:07:09.041126 a6a8e35ae3c3b42b04837a75ff59aa092130f326
patch ef1f2894abd21d0deef19090d4b873bf62af890a
Author: Jean-Louis Fuchs <email>
Date: Fri Oct 7 17:55:22 CEST 2022
* a new feature
We can now either pull the a new feature
-patch into dms-track
or we can
create a temporary dms-stage
so it is easier to clean up after the
merge-request has been accepted. Note git-darcs clone
will copy git-remotes
from the source, so you can push into your fork if it is set up.
If you pull into dms-track
instead, you have to remove patches or commits on
both darcs and git, keeping darcs and git manually in sync.
$ cd ..
$ git darcs clone dms-track/ dms-stage
clone: 100%|████████████████████████████████████████████████| 5/5 [00:00<00:00, 48.32it/s]
$ cd dms-stage
git-darcs pull
tries to emulate darcs pull
.
$ git darcs pull ../dms-work/
patch ef1f2894abd21d0deef19090d4b873bf62af890a
Author: Jean-Louis Fuchs <email>
Date: 2022-10-07 15:55:22
Subject: a new feature
Shall I pull this patch? 1/1 [ynwasc], or ? for more options: ?
y: pull this patch
n: don't pull it
w: decide later
a: pull all remaining patches
i: don't pull remaining patches
l: show full log message
f: show full patch
?: help
h: help
c: cancel without pulling
q: cancel without pulling
Shall I pull this patch? 1/1 [ynwasc], or ? for more options: y
resolve: 0it [00:00, ?it/s]
Shall I pull 1 patches? [yn], or ? for more options: y
pull: 100%|█████████████████████████████████████████████████| 1/1 [00:00<00:00, 2.58it/s]
The patch a new feature
is now a git-commit.
$ git show
commit c2541c6c3527d99a7fe69dc43b5863992d919a45 (HEAD -> main)
Author: Jean-Louis Fuchs <email>
Date: Fri Oct 7 20:01:22 2022 +0200
a new feature
diff --git a/document_merge_service/feature.py b/document_merge_service/feature.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..e69de29
$ cd ..
$ rm -r dms-stage
- There is a great video by raichoo the maintainer of hikari
- You have to read the darcs book, you just have to
_darcs/pref/boring
is the equivalent of.gitignore
, but has quite a wide definition of boring by default
git-darcs will playback the history of the git-repository. Every commit that is
recorded will first be checked out in git and then recorded in darcs. For that reason
git-darcs lazily imports the latest commit by default. This is how it is meant
to be used: Using darcs to complement git. You can use it to convert
repositories, if you like the way non-linear history is handled, it will be
sloooow. See also darcs convert import
.
Darcs does not handle chmod
or symbolic links. The easiest way to work around
this is by letting git
do the work. Since I always make git-commits from the
darcs-patches git
will track chmod
and symbolic links for me.
git-darcs will traverse the git-history in topological order. For every commit it encounters, it will test if the previous commit was an ancestor, if not it will ignore that commit for now. That way git-darcs can only "enter" one branch of parallel history. Once it reaches a commit that is an ancestor it will import that commit and log the complete history between it and the last successful commit. So git-darcs creates patches that combine the complete history of a parallel branch.
This git-log
$ git log --oneline --graph
* eef24d8 (HEAD -> master) end > end0
* 841c900 end
* 969ad57 Merge branch 'b'
|\
| * 76ca538 (b) bb2 > bb3
| * 0040cee bb1 > bb2
* | 663168a antiforward > antiforward0
* | 0d94733 Merge branch 'a'
|\ \
| * | d26d325 (a) aa2 > aa3
| * | 8090696 aa1 > aa2
| |/
* / fa7accb antiforward
|/
* 7bc2b76 aa0 > aa1, bb0 > bb1
* 665937d aa > aa0, bb bb0
* 1fd0236 aa, bb
becomes this darcs-log
* eef24d8 end > end0
move ./end ./end0
* 841c900 end
addfile ./end
* 969ad57 Merge branch 'b'
76ca538 bb2 > bb3
0040cee bb1 > bb2
move ./bb1 ./bb3
* 663168a antiforward > antiforward0
move ./antiforward ./antiforward0
* 0d94733 Merge branch 'a'
d26d325 aa2 > aa3
8090696 aa1 > aa2
move ./aa1 ./aa3
* fa7accb antiforward
addfile ./antiforward
* 7bc2b76 aa0 > aa1, bb0 > bb1
move ./aa0 ./aa1
move ./bb0 ./bb1
* 665937d aa > aa0, bb bb0
move ./aa ./aa0
move ./bb ./bb0
* 1fd0236 aa, bb
addfile ./aa
See how 0d94733 Merge branch 'a'
also contains d26d325
and 0d94733
.
$ git-darcs --help
Usage: git-darcs [OPTIONS] COMMAND [ARGS]...
Click entrypoint.
Options:
--help Sow this message and exit.
Commands:
clone Locally clone a tracking-repository to get a working-repository.
pull Pull from source darcs-repository into a tracking-repository.
update Incremental import of git into darcs.
$ git-darcs update --help
Usage: git-darcs update [OPTIONS]
Incremental import of git into darcs.
By default it imports a shallow copy (the current commit). Use `--no-
shallow` to import the complete history.
Options:
-v, --verbose / -nv, --no-verbose
-w, --warn / -nw, --no-warn Warn that repository will be cleared
-b, --base TEXT On first update import from (commit-ish)
-s, --shallow / -ns, --no-shallow
On first update only import current commit
--help Show this message and exit.
$ git-darcs clone --help
Usage: git-darcs clone [OPTIONS] SOURCE DESTINATION
Locally clone a tracking-repository to get a working-repository.
Options:
-v, --verbose / -nv, --no-verbose
--help Show this message and exit.
$ git-darcs pull --help
Usage: git-darcs pull [OPTIONS] SOURCE [DARCS]...
Pull from source darcs-repository into a tracking-repository.
A tracking-repository is created by `git darcs update` and contains a git-
and a darcs-repository. Arguments after `--` are passed to `darcs pull`.
Options:
-v, --verbose / -nv, --no-verbose
-w, --warn / -nw, --no-warn Warn that repository will be cleared
-a, --all / -na, --no-all Pull all patches
-i, --ignore-temp / -ni, --no-ignore-temp
Ignore temporary patches (with 'temp: ')
--help Show this message and exit.