Mercurial > hgbook
comparison en/ch12-mq-collab.xml @ 776:019040fbf5f5
merged to upstream: phase 1
author | Yoshiki Yazawa <yaz@honeyplanet.jp> |
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date | Tue, 21 Apr 2009 00:36:40 +0900 |
parents | 1c13ed2130a7 |
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1 <!-- vim: set filetype=docbkxml shiftwidth=2 autoindent expandtab tw=77 : --> | |
2 | |
3 <chapter id="chap:mq-collab"> | |
4 <?dbhtml filename="advanced-uses-of-mercurial-queues.html"?> | |
5 <title>Advanced uses of Mercurial Queues</title> | |
6 | |
7 <para id="x_15d">While it's easy to pick up straightforward uses of Mercurial | |
8 Queues, use of a little discipline and some of MQ's less | |
9 frequently used capabilities makes it possible to work in | |
10 complicated development environments.</para> | |
11 | |
12 <para id="x_15e">In this chapter, I will use as an example a technique I have | |
13 used to manage the development of an Infiniband device driver for | |
14 the Linux kernel. The driver in question is large (at least as | |
15 drivers go), with 25,000 lines of code spread across 35 source | |
16 files. It is maintained by a small team of developers.</para> | |
17 | |
18 <para id="x_15f">While much of the material in this chapter is specific to | |
19 Linux, the same principles apply to any code base for which you're | |
20 not the primary owner, and upon which you need to do a lot of | |
21 development.</para> | |
22 | |
23 <sect1> | |
24 <title>The problem of many targets</title> | |
25 | |
26 <para id="x_160">The Linux kernel changes rapidly, and has never been | |
27 internally stable; developers frequently make drastic changes | |
28 between releases. This means that a version of the driver that | |
29 works well with a particular released version of the kernel will | |
30 not even <emphasis>compile</emphasis> correctly against, | |
31 typically, any other version.</para> | |
32 | |
33 <para id="x_161">To maintain a driver, we have to keep a number of distinct | |
34 versions of Linux in mind.</para> | |
35 <itemizedlist> | |
36 <listitem><para id="x_162">One target is the main Linux kernel development | |
37 tree. Maintenance of the code is in this case partly shared | |
38 by other developers in the kernel community, who make | |
39 <quote>drive-by</quote> modifications to the driver as they | |
40 develop and refine kernel subsystems.</para> | |
41 </listitem> | |
42 <listitem><para id="x_163">We also maintain a number of | |
43 <quote>backports</quote> to older versions of the Linux | |
44 kernel, to support the needs of customers who are running | |
45 older Linux distributions that do not incorporate our | |
46 drivers. (To <emphasis>backport</emphasis> a piece of code | |
47 is to modify it to work in an older version of its target | |
48 environment than the version it was developed for.)</para> | |
49 </listitem> | |
50 <listitem><para id="x_164">Finally, we make software releases on a schedule | |
51 that is necessarily not aligned with those used by Linux | |
52 distributors and kernel developers, so that we can deliver | |
53 new features to customers without forcing them to upgrade | |
54 their entire kernels or distributions.</para> | |
55 </listitem></itemizedlist> | |
56 | |
57 <sect2> | |
58 <title>Tempting approaches that don't work well</title> | |
59 | |
60 <para id="x_165">There are two <quote>standard</quote> ways to maintain a | |
61 piece of software that has to target many different | |
62 environments.</para> | |
63 | |
64 <para id="x_166">The first is to maintain a number of branches, each | |
65 intended for a single target. The trouble with this approach | |
66 is that you must maintain iron discipline in the flow of | |
67 changes between repositories. A new feature or bug fix must | |
68 start life in a <quote>pristine</quote> repository, then | |
69 percolate out to every backport repository. Backport changes | |
70 are more limited in the branches they should propagate to; a | |
71 backport change that is applied to a branch where it doesn't | |
72 belong will probably stop the driver from compiling.</para> | |
73 | |
74 <para id="x_167">The second is to maintain a single source tree filled with | |
75 conditional statements that turn chunks of code on or off | |
76 depending on the intended target. Because these | |
77 <quote>ifdefs</quote> are not allowed in the Linux kernel | |
78 tree, a manual or automatic process must be followed to strip | |
79 them out and yield a clean tree. A code base maintained in | |
80 this fashion rapidly becomes a rat's nest of conditional | |
81 blocks that are difficult to understand and maintain.</para> | |
82 | |
83 <para id="x_168">Neither of these approaches is well suited to a situation | |
84 where you don't <quote>own</quote> the canonical copy of a | |
85 source tree. In the case of a Linux driver that is | |
86 distributed with the standard kernel, Linus's tree contains | |
87 the copy of the code that will be treated by the world as | |
88 canonical. The upstream version of <quote>my</quote> driver | |
89 can be modified by people I don't know, without me even | |
90 finding out about it until after the changes show up in | |
91 Linus's tree.</para> | |
92 | |
93 <para id="x_169">These approaches have the added weakness of making it | |
94 difficult to generate well-formed patches to submit | |
95 upstream.</para> | |
96 | |
97 <para id="x_16a">In principle, Mercurial Queues seems like a good candidate | |
98 to manage a development scenario such as the above. While | |
99 this is indeed the case, MQ contains a few added features that | |
100 make the job more pleasant.</para> | |
101 | |
102 </sect2> | |
103 </sect1> | |
104 <sect1> | |
105 <title>Conditionally applying patches with guards</title> | |
106 | |
107 <para id="x_16b">Perhaps the best way to maintain sanity with so many targets | |
108 is to be able to choose specific patches to apply for a given | |
109 situation. MQ provides a feature called <quote>guards</quote> | |
110 (which originates with quilt's <literal>guards</literal> | |
111 command) that does just this. To start off, let's create a | |
112 simple repository for experimenting in.</para> | |
113 | |
114 &interaction.mq.guards.init; | |
115 | |
116 <para id="x_16c">This gives us a tiny repository that contains two patches | |
117 that don't have any dependencies on each other, because they | |
118 touch different files.</para> | |
119 | |
120 <para id="x_16d">The idea behind conditional application is that you can | |
121 <quote>tag</quote> a patch with a <emphasis>guard</emphasis>, | |
122 which is simply a text string of your choosing, then tell MQ to | |
123 select specific guards to use when applying patches. MQ will | |
124 then either apply, or skip over, a guarded patch, depending on | |
125 the guards that you have selected.</para> | |
126 | |
127 <para id="x_16e">A patch can have an arbitrary number of guards; each one is | |
128 <emphasis>positive</emphasis> (<quote>apply this patch if this | |
129 guard is selected</quote>) or <emphasis>negative</emphasis> | |
130 (<quote>skip this patch if this guard is selected</quote>). A | |
131 patch with no guards is always applied.</para> | |
132 | |
133 </sect1> | |
134 <sect1> | |
135 <title>Controlling the guards on a patch</title> | |
136 | |
137 <para id="x_16f">The <command role="hg-ext-mq">qguard</command> command lets | |
138 you determine which guards should apply to a patch, or display | |
139 the guards that are already in effect. Without any arguments, it | |
140 displays the guards on the current topmost patch.</para> | |
141 | |
142 &interaction.mq.guards.qguard; | |
143 | |
144 <para id="x_170">To set a positive guard on a patch, prefix the name of the | |
145 guard with a <quote><literal>+</literal></quote>.</para> | |
146 | |
147 &interaction.mq.guards.qguard.pos; | |
148 | |
149 <para id="x_171">To set a negative guard | |
150 on a patch, prefix the name of the guard with a | |
151 <quote><literal>-</literal></quote>.</para> | |
152 | |
153 &interaction.mq.guards.qguard.neg; | |
154 | |
155 <note> | |
156 <para id="x_172"> The <command role="hg-ext-mq">qguard</command> command | |
157 <emphasis>sets</emphasis> the guards on a patch; it doesn't | |
158 <emphasis>modify</emphasis> them. What this means is that if | |
159 you run <command role="hg-cmd">hg qguard +a +b</command> on a | |
160 patch, then <command role="hg-cmd">hg qguard +c</command> on | |
161 the same patch, the <emphasis>only</emphasis> guard that will | |
162 be set on it afterwards is <literal>+c</literal>.</para> | |
163 </note> | |
164 | |
165 <para id="x_173">Mercurial stores guards in the <filename | |
166 role="special">series</filename> file; the form in which they | |
167 are stored is easy both to understand and to edit by hand. (In | |
168 other words, you don't have to use the <command | |
169 role="hg-ext-mq">qguard</command> command if you don't want | |
170 to; it's okay to simply edit the <filename | |
171 role="special">series</filename> file.)</para> | |
172 | |
173 &interaction.mq.guards.series; | |
174 | |
175 </sect1> | |
176 <sect1> | |
177 <title>Selecting the guards to use</title> | |
178 | |
179 <para id="x_174">The <command role="hg-ext-mq">qselect</command> command | |
180 determines which guards are active at a given time. The effect | |
181 of this is to determine which patches MQ will apply the next | |
182 time you run <command role="hg-ext-mq">qpush</command>. It has | |
183 no other effect; in particular, it doesn't do anything to | |
184 patches that are already applied.</para> | |
185 | |
186 <para id="x_175">With no arguments, the <command | |
187 role="hg-ext-mq">qselect</command> command lists the guards | |
188 currently in effect, one per line of output. Each argument is | |
189 treated as the name of a guard to apply.</para> | |
190 | |
191 &interaction.mq.guards.qselect.foo; | |
192 | |
193 <para id="x_176">In case you're interested, the currently selected guards are | |
194 stored in the <filename role="special">guards</filename> file.</para> | |
195 | |
196 &interaction.mq.guards.qselect.cat; | |
197 | |
198 <para id="x_177">We can see the effect the selected guards have when we run | |
199 <command role="hg-ext-mq">qpush</command>.</para> | |
200 | |
201 &interaction.mq.guards.qselect.qpush; | |
202 | |
203 <para id="x_178">A guard cannot start with a | |
204 <quote><literal>+</literal></quote> or | |
205 <quote><literal>-</literal></quote> character. The name of a | |
206 guard must not contain white space, but most other characters | |
207 are acceptable. If you try to use a guard with an invalid name, | |
208 MQ will complain:</para> | |
209 | |
210 &interaction.mq.guards.qselect.error; | |
211 | |
212 <para id="x_179">Changing the selected guards changes the patches that are | |
213 applied.</para> | |
214 | |
215 &interaction.mq.guards.qselect.quux; | |
216 | |
217 <para id="x_17a">You can see in the example below that negative guards take | |
218 precedence over positive guards.</para> | |
219 | |
220 &interaction.mq.guards.qselect.foobar; | |
221 | |
222 </sect1> | |
223 <sect1> | |
224 <title>MQ's rules for applying patches</title> | |
225 | |
226 <para id="x_17b">The rules that MQ uses when deciding whether to apply a | |
227 patch are as follows.</para> | |
228 <itemizedlist> | |
229 <listitem><para id="x_17c">A patch that has no guards is always | |
230 applied.</para> | |
231 </listitem> | |
232 <listitem><para id="x_17d">If the patch has any negative guard that matches | |
233 any currently selected guard, the patch is skipped.</para> | |
234 </listitem> | |
235 <listitem><para id="x_17e">If the patch has any positive guard that matches | |
236 any currently selected guard, the patch is applied.</para> | |
237 </listitem> | |
238 <listitem><para id="x_17f">If the patch has positive or negative guards, | |
239 but none matches any currently selected guard, the patch is | |
240 skipped.</para> | |
241 </listitem></itemizedlist> | |
242 | |
243 </sect1> | |
244 <sect1> | |
245 <title>Trimming the work environment</title> | |
246 | |
247 <para id="x_180">In working on the device driver I mentioned earlier, I don't | |
248 apply the patches to a normal Linux kernel tree. Instead, I use | |
249 a repository that contains only a snapshot of the source files | |
250 and headers that are relevant to Infiniband development. This | |
251 repository is 1% the size of a kernel repository, so it's easier | |
252 to work with.</para> | |
253 | |
254 <para id="x_181">I then choose a <quote>base</quote> version on top of which | |
255 the patches are applied. This is a snapshot of the Linux kernel | |
256 tree as of a revision of my choosing. When I take the snapshot, | |
257 I record the changeset ID from the kernel repository in the | |
258 commit message. Since the snapshot preserves the | |
259 <quote>shape</quote> and content of the relevant parts of the | |
260 kernel tree, I can apply my patches on top of either my tiny | |
261 repository or a normal kernel tree.</para> | |
262 | |
263 <para id="x_182">Normally, the base tree atop which the patches apply should | |
264 be a snapshot of a very recent upstream tree. This best | |
265 facilitates the development of patches that can easily be | |
266 submitted upstream with few or no modifications.</para> | |
267 | |
268 </sect1> | |
269 <sect1> | |
270 <title>Dividing up the <filename role="special">series</filename> | |
271 file</title> | |
272 | |
273 <para id="x_183">I categorise the patches in the <filename | |
274 role="special">series</filename> file into a number of logical | |
275 groups. Each section of like patches begins with a block of | |
276 comments that describes the purpose of the patches that | |
277 follow.</para> | |
278 | |
279 <para id="x_184">The sequence of patch groups that I maintain follows. The | |
280 ordering of these groups is important; I'll describe why after I | |
281 introduce the groups.</para> | |
282 <itemizedlist> | |
283 <listitem><para id="x_185">The <quote>accepted</quote> group. Patches that | |
284 the development team has submitted to the maintainer of the | |
285 Infiniband subsystem, and which he has accepted, but which | |
286 are not present in the snapshot that the tiny repository is | |
287 based on. These are <quote>read only</quote> patches, | |
288 present only to transform the tree into a similar state as | |
289 it is in the upstream maintainer's repository.</para> | |
290 </listitem> | |
291 <listitem><para id="x_186">The <quote>rework</quote> group. Patches that I | |
292 have submitted, but that the upstream maintainer has | |
293 requested modifications to before he will accept | |
294 them.</para> | |
295 </listitem> | |
296 <listitem><para id="x_187">The <quote>pending</quote> group. Patches that | |
297 I have not yet submitted to the upstream maintainer, but | |
298 which we have finished working on. These will be <quote>read | |
299 only</quote> for a while. If the upstream maintainer | |
300 accepts them upon submission, I'll move them to the end of | |
301 the <quote>accepted</quote> group. If he requests that I | |
302 modify any, I'll move them to the beginning of the | |
303 <quote>rework</quote> group.</para> | |
304 </listitem> | |
305 <listitem><para id="x_188">The <quote>in progress</quote> group. Patches | |
306 that are actively being developed, and should not be | |
307 submitted anywhere yet.</para> | |
308 </listitem> | |
309 <listitem><para id="x_189">The <quote>backport</quote> group. Patches that | |
310 adapt the source tree to older versions of the kernel | |
311 tree.</para> | |
312 </listitem> | |
313 <listitem><para id="x_18a">The <quote>do not ship</quote> group. Patches | |
314 that for some reason should never be submitted upstream. | |
315 For example, one such patch might change embedded driver | |
316 identification strings to make it easier to distinguish, in | |
317 the field, between an out-of-tree version of the driver and | |
318 a version shipped by a distribution vendor.</para> | |
319 </listitem></itemizedlist> | |
320 | |
321 <para id="x_18b">Now to return to the reasons for ordering groups of patches | |
322 in this way. We would like the lowest patches in the stack to | |
323 be as stable as possible, so that we will not need to rework | |
324 higher patches due to changes in context. Putting patches that | |
325 will never be changed first in the <filename | |
326 role="special">series</filename> file serves this | |
327 purpose.</para> | |
328 | |
329 <para id="x_18c">We would also like the patches that we know we'll need to | |
330 modify to be applied on top of a source tree that resembles the | |
331 upstream tree as closely as possible. This is why we keep | |
332 accepted patches around for a while.</para> | |
333 | |
334 <para id="x_18d">The <quote>backport</quote> and <quote>do not ship</quote> | |
335 patches float at the end of the <filename | |
336 role="special">series</filename> file. The backport patches | |
337 must be applied on top of all other patches, and the <quote>do | |
338 not ship</quote> patches might as well stay out of harm's | |
339 way.</para> | |
340 | |
341 </sect1> | |
342 <sect1> | |
343 <title>Maintaining the patch series</title> | |
344 | |
345 <para id="x_18e">In my work, I use a number of guards to control which | |
346 patches are to be applied.</para> | |
347 | |
348 <itemizedlist> | |
349 <listitem><para id="x_18f"><quote>Accepted</quote> patches are guarded with | |
350 <literal>accepted</literal>. I enable this guard most of | |
351 the time. When I'm applying the patches on top of a tree | |
352 where the patches are already present, I can turn this patch | |
353 off, and the patches that follow it will apply | |
354 cleanly.</para> | |
355 </listitem> | |
356 <listitem><para id="x_190">Patches that are <quote>finished</quote>, but | |
357 not yet submitted, have no guards. If I'm applying the | |
358 patch stack to a copy of the upstream tree, I don't need to | |
359 enable any guards in order to get a reasonably safe source | |
360 tree.</para> | |
361 </listitem> | |
362 <listitem><para id="x_191">Those patches that need reworking before being | |
363 resubmitted are guarded with | |
364 <literal>rework</literal>.</para> | |
365 </listitem> | |
366 <listitem><para id="x_192">For those patches that are still under | |
367 development, I use <literal>devel</literal>.</para> | |
368 </listitem> | |
369 <listitem><para id="x_193">A backport patch may have several guards, one | |
370 for each version of the kernel to which it applies. For | |
371 example, a patch that backports a piece of code to 2.6.9 | |
372 will have a <literal>2.6.9</literal> guard.</para> | |
373 </listitem></itemizedlist> | |
374 <para id="x_194">This variety of guards gives me considerable flexibility in | |
375 determining what kind of source tree I want to end up with. For | |
376 most situations, the selection of appropriate guards is | |
377 automated during the build process, but I can manually tune the | |
378 guards to use for less common circumstances.</para> | |
379 | |
380 <sect2> | |
381 <title>The art of writing backport patches</title> | |
382 | |
383 <para id="x_195">Using MQ, writing a backport patch is a simple process. | |
384 All such a patch has to do is modify a piece of code that uses | |
385 a kernel feature not present in the older version of the | |
386 kernel, so that the driver continues to work correctly under | |
387 that older version.</para> | |
388 | |
389 <para id="x_196">A useful goal when writing a good backport patch is to | |
390 make your code look as if it was written for the older version | |
391 of the kernel you're targeting. The less obtrusive the patch, | |
392 the easier it will be to understand and maintain. If you're | |
393 writing a collection of backport patches to avoid the | |
394 <quote>rat's nest</quote> effect of lots of | |
395 <literal>#ifdef</literal>s (hunks of source code that are only | |
396 used conditionally) in your code, don't introduce | |
397 version-dependent <literal>#ifdef</literal>s into the patches. | |
398 Instead, write several patches, each of which makes | |
399 unconditional changes, and control their application using | |
400 guards.</para> | |
401 | |
402 <para id="x_197">There are two reasons to divide backport patches into a | |
403 distinct group, away from the <quote>regular</quote> patches | |
404 whose effects they modify. The first is that intermingling the | |
405 two makes it more difficult to use a tool like the <literal | |
406 role="hg-ext">patchbomb</literal> extension to automate the | |
407 process of submitting the patches to an upstream maintainer. | |
408 The second is that a backport patch could perturb the context | |
409 in which a subsequent regular patch is applied, making it | |
410 impossible to apply the regular patch cleanly | |
411 <emphasis>without</emphasis> the earlier backport patch | |
412 already being applied.</para> | |
413 | |
414 </sect2> | |
415 </sect1> | |
416 <sect1> | |
417 <title>Useful tips for developing with MQ</title> | |
418 | |
419 <sect2> | |
420 <title>Organising patches in directories</title> | |
421 | |
422 <para id="x_198">If you're working on a substantial project with MQ, it's | |
423 not difficult to accumulate a large number of patches. For | |
424 example, I have one patch repository that contains over 250 | |
425 patches.</para> | |
426 | |
427 <para id="x_199">If you can group these patches into separate logical | |
428 categories, you can if you like store them in different | |
429 directories; MQ has no problems with patch names that contain | |
430 path separators.</para> | |
431 | |
432 </sect2> | |
433 <sect2 id="mq-collab:tips:interdiff"> | |
434 <title>Viewing the history of a patch</title> | |
435 | |
436 <para id="x_19a">If you're developing a set of patches over a long time, | |
437 it's a good idea to maintain them in a repository, as | |
438 discussed in <xref linkend="sec:mq:repo"/>. If you do | |
439 so, you'll quickly | |
440 discover that using the <command role="hg-cmd">hg | |
441 diff</command> command to look at the history of changes to | |
442 a patch is unworkable. This is in part because you're looking | |
443 at the second derivative of the real code (a diff of a diff), | |
444 but also because MQ adds noise to the process by modifying | |
445 time stamps and directory names when it updates a | |
446 patch.</para> | |
447 | |
448 <para id="x_19b">However, you can use the <literal | |
449 role="hg-ext">extdiff</literal> extension, which is bundled | |
450 with Mercurial, to turn a diff of two versions of a patch into | |
451 something readable. To do this, you will need a third-party | |
452 package called <literal role="package">patchutils</literal> | |
453 <citation>web:patchutils</citation>. This provides a command | |
454 named <command>interdiff</command>, which shows the | |
455 differences between two diffs as a diff. Used on two versions | |
456 of the same diff, it generates a diff that represents the diff | |
457 from the first to the second version.</para> | |
458 | |
459 <para id="x_19c">You can enable the <literal | |
460 role="hg-ext">extdiff</literal> extension in the usual way, | |
461 by adding a line to the <literal | |
462 role="rc-extensions">extensions</literal> section of your | |
463 <filename role="special">~/.hgrc</filename>.</para> | |
464 <programlisting>[extensions] | |
465 extdiff =</programlisting> | |
466 <para id="x_19d">The <command>interdiff</command> command expects to be | |
467 passed the names of two files, but the <literal | |
468 role="hg-ext">extdiff</literal> extension passes the program | |
469 it runs a pair of directories, each of which can contain an | |
470 arbitrary number of files. We thus need a small program that | |
471 will run <command>interdiff</command> on each pair of files in | |
472 these two directories. This program is available as <filename | |
473 role="special">hg-interdiff</filename> in the <filename | |
474 class="directory">examples</filename> directory of the | |
475 source code repository that accompanies this book. <!-- | |
476 &example.hg-interdiff; --></para> | |
477 | |
478 <para id="x_19e">With the <filename role="special">hg-interdiff</filename> | |
479 program in your shell's search path, you can run it as | |
480 follows, from inside an MQ patch directory:</para> | |
481 <programlisting>hg extdiff -p hg-interdiff -r A:B my-change.patch</programlisting> | |
482 <para id="x_19f">Since you'll probably want to use this long-winded command | |
483 a lot, you can get <literal role="hg-ext">hgext</literal> to | |
484 make it available as a normal Mercurial command, again by | |
485 editing your <filename | |
486 role="special">~/.hgrc</filename>.</para> | |
487 <programlisting>[extdiff] | |
488 cmd.interdiff = hg-interdiff</programlisting> | |
489 <para id="x_1a0">This directs <literal role="hg-ext">hgext</literal> to | |
490 make an <literal>interdiff</literal> command available, so you | |
491 can now shorten the previous invocation of <command | |
492 role="hg-ext-extdiff">extdiff</command> to something a | |
493 little more wieldy.</para> | |
494 <programlisting>hg interdiff -r A:B my-change.patch</programlisting> | |
495 | |
496 <note> | |
497 <para id="x_1a1"> The <command>interdiff</command> command works well | |
498 only if the underlying files against which versions of a | |
499 patch are generated remain the same. If you create a patch, | |
500 modify the underlying files, and then regenerate the patch, | |
501 <command>interdiff</command> may not produce useful | |
502 output.</para> | |
503 </note> | |
504 | |
505 <para id="x_1a2">The <literal role="hg-ext">extdiff</literal> extension is | |
506 useful for more than merely improving the presentation of MQ | |
507 patches. To read more about it, go to <xref | |
508 linkend="sec:hgext:extdiff"/>.</para> | |
509 | |
510 </sect2> | |
511 </sect1> | |
512 </chapter> | |
513 | |
514 <!-- | |
515 local variables: | |
516 sgml-parent-document: ("00book.xml" "book" "chapter") | |
517 end: | |
518 --> |