From 89b1d255064c584d907d9b0952bc083ce0d21755 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Bruce Momjian Date: Mon, 26 Nov 2001 22:42:51 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] Update FAQ_DEV. --- doc/FAQ_DEV | 108 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++-- 1 file changed, 104 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-) diff --git a/doc/FAQ_DEV b/doc/FAQ_DEV index 71439a22e3..9055d38fa7 100644 --- a/doc/FAQ_DEV +++ b/doc/FAQ_DEV @@ -29,6 +29,7 @@ 13) What is CommandCounterIncrement()? 14) Why don't we use threads in the backend? 15) How are RPM's packaged? + 16) How are CVS branches handled? _________________________________________________________________ 1) What tools are available for developers? @@ -36,18 +37,18 @@ Aside from the User documentation mentioned in the regular FAQ, there are several development tools available. First, all the files in the /tools directory are designed for developers. - RELEASE_CHANGES changes we have to make for each release - SQL_keywords standard SQL'92 keywords + RELEASE_CHANGES changes we have to make for each release + SQL_keywords standard SQL'92 keywords backend description/flowchart of the backend directories ccsym find standard defines made by your compiler entab converts tabs to spaces, used by pgindent find_static finds functions that could be made static - find_typedef finds a list of typedefs in the source code + find_typedef finds typedefs in the source code find_badmacros finds macros that use braces incorrectly make_ctags make vi 'tags' file in each directory make_diff make *.orig and diffs of source make_etags make emacs 'etags' files - make_keywords.README make comparison of our keywords and SQL'92 + make_keywords make comparison of our keywords and SQL'92 make_mkid make mkid ID files mkldexport create AIX exports file pgindent indents C source files @@ -530,3 +531,102 @@ stance. IMHO, of course. Of course, there are many projects that DO include all the files necessary to build RPMs from their Official Tarball (TM). + + 16) How are CVS branches managed? + + This was written by Tom Lane: +If you just do basic "cvs checkout", "cvs update", "cvs commit", then +you'll always be dealing with the HEAD version of the files in CVS. +That's what you want for development, but if you need to patch past +stable releases then you have to be able to access and update the +"branch" portions of our CVS repository. We normally fork off a branch +for a stable release just before starting the development cycle for the +next release. + +The first thing you have to know is the branch name for the branch you +are interested in getting at. Unfortunately Marc has been less than +100% consistent in naming the things. One way to check is to apply +"cvs log" to any file that goes back a long time, for example HISTORY +in the top directory: + +$ cvs log HISTORY | more + +RCS file: /home/projects/pgsql/cvsroot/pgsql/HISTORY,v +Working file: HISTORY +head: 1.106 +branch: +locks: strict +access list: +symbolic names: + REL7_1_STABLE: 1.106.0.2 + REL7_1_BETA: 1.79 + REL7_1_BETA3: 1.86 + REL7_1_BETA2: 1.86 + REL7_1: 1.102 + REL7_0_PATCHES: 1.70.0.2 + REL7_0: 1.70 + REL6_5_PATCHES: 1.52.0.2 + REL6_5: 1.52 + REL6_4: 1.44.0.2 + release-6-3: 1.33 + SUPPORT: 1.1.1.1 + PG95-DIST: 1.1.1 +keyword substitution: kv +total revisions: 129; selected revisions: 129 +More---q + +Unfortunately "cvs log" isn't all that great about distinguishing +branches from tags --- it calls 'em all "symbolic names". (A "tag" just +marks a specific timepoint across all files --- it's essentially a +snapshot whereas a branch is a changeable fileset.) Rule of thumb is +that names attached to four-number versions where the third number is +zero represent branches, the others are just tags. Here we can see that +the extant branches are + REL7_1_STABLE + REL7_0_PATCHES + REL6_5_PATCHES +The next commit to the head will be revision 1.107, whereas any changes +committed into the REL7_1_STABLE branch will have revision numbers like +1.106.2.*, corresponding to the branch number 1.106.0.2 (don't ask where +the zero went...). + +OK, so how do you do work on a branch? By far the best way is to create +a separate checkout tree for the branch and do your work in that. Not +only is that the easiest way to deal with CVS, but you really need to +have the whole past tree available anyway to test your work. (And you +*better* test your work. Never forget that dot-releases tend to go out +with very little beta testing --- so whenever you commit an update to a +stable branch, you'd better be doubly sure that it's correct.) + +Normally, to checkout the head branch, you just cd to the place you +want to contain the toplevel "pgsql" directory and say + + cvs ... checkout pgsql + +To get a past branch, you cd to whereever you want it and say + + cvs ... checkout -r BRANCHNAME pgsql + +For example, just a couple days ago I did + + mkdir ~postgres/REL7_1 + cd ~postgres/REL7_1 + cvs ... checkout -r REL7_1_STABLE pgsql + +and now I have a maintenance copy of 7.1.*. + +When you've done a checkout in this way, the branch name is "sticky": +CVS automatically knows that this directory tree is for the branch, +and whenever you do "cvs update" or "cvs commit" in this tree, you'll +fetch or store the latest version in the branch, not the head version. +Easy as can be. + +So, if you have a patch that needs to apply to both the head and a +recent stable branch, you have to make the edits and do the commit +twice, once in your development tree and once in your stable branch +tree. This is kind of a pain, which is why we don't normally fork +the tree right away after a major release --- we wait for a dot-release +or two, so that we won't have to double-patch the first wave of fixes. + + Also, Ian Lance Taylor points out that branches and tags can be + distiguished by using "cvs status -v". -- 2.40.0