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| Doing the BK Thing, Penguin-Style |
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| This set of notes is intended mainly for kernel developers, occasional |
| or full-time, but sysadmins and power users may find parts of it useful |
| as well. It assumes at least a basic familiarity with CVS, both at a |
| user level (use on the cmd line) and at a higher level (client-server model). |
| Due to the author's background, an operation may be described in terms |
| of CVS, or in terms of how that operation differs from CVS. |
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| This is -not- intended to be BitKeeper documentation. Always run |
| "bk help <command>" or in X "bk helptool <command>" for reference |
| documentation. |
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| BitKeeper Concepts |
| ------------------ |
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| In the true nature of the Internet itself, BitKeeper is a distributed |
| system. When applied to revision control, this means doing away with |
| client-server, and changing to a parent-child model... essentially |
| peer-to-peer. On the developer's end, this also represents a |
| fundamental disruption in the standard workflow of changes, commits, |
| and merges. You will need to take a few minutes to think about |
| how to best work under BitKeeper, and re-optimize things a bit. |
| In some sense it is a bit radical, because it might described as |
| tossing changes out into a maelstrom and having them magically |
| land at the right destination... but I'm getting ahead of myself. |
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| Let's start with this progression: |
| Each BitKeeper source tree on disk is a repository unto itself. |
| Each repository has a parent (except the root/original, of course). |
| Each repository contains a set of a changesets ("csets"). |
| Each cset is one or more changed files, bundled together. |
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| Each tree is a repository, so all changes are checked into the local |
| tree. When a change is checked in, all modified files are grouped |
| into a logical unit, the changeset. Internally, BK links these |
| changesets in a tree, representing various converging and diverging |
| lines of development. These changesets are the bread and butter of |
| the BK system. |
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| After the concept of changesets, the next thing you need to get used |
| to is having multiple copies of source trees lying around. This -really- |
| takes some getting used to, for some people. Separate source trees |
| are the means in BitKeeper by which you delineate parallel lines |
| of development, both minor and major. What would be branches in |
| CVS become separate source trees, or "clones" in BitKeeper [heh, |
| or Star Wars] terminology. |
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| Clones and changesets are the tools from which most of the power of |
| BitKeeper is derived. As mentioned earlier, each clone has a parent, |
| the tree used as the source when the new clone was created. In a |
| CVS-like setup, the parent would be a remote server on the Internet, |
| and the child is your local clone of that tree. |
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| Once you have established a common baseline between two source trees -- |
| a common parent -- then you can merge changesets between those two |
| trees with ease. Merging changes into a tree is called a "pull", and |
| is analagous to 'cvs update'. A pull downloads all the changesets in |
| the remote tree you do not have, and merges them. Sending changes in |
| one tree to another tree is called a "push". Push sends all changes |
| in the local tree the remote does not yet have, and merges them. |
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| From these concepts come some initial command examples: |
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| 1) bk clone -q http://linux.bkbits.net/linux-2.5 linus-2.5 |
| Download a 2.5 stock kernel tree, naming it "linus-2.5" in the local dir. |
| The "-q" disables listing every single file as it is downloaded. |
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| 2) bk clone -ql linus-2.5 alpha-2.5 |
| Create a separate source tree for the Alpha AXP architecture. |
| The "-l" uses hard links instead of copying data, since both trees are |
| on the local disk. You can also replace the above with "bk lclone -q ..." |
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| You only clone a tree -once-. After cloning the tree lives a long time |
| on disk, being updating by pushes and pulls. |
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| 3) cd alpha-2.5 ; bk pull http://gkernel.bkbits.net/alpha-2.5 |
| Download changes in "alpha-2.5" repository which are not present |
| in the local repository, and merge them into the source tree. |
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| 4) bk -r co -q |
| Because every tree is a repository, files must be checked out before |
| they will be in their standard places in the source tree. |
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| 5) bk vi fs/inode.c # example change... |
| bk citool # checkin, using X tool |
| bk push bk://gkernel@bkbits.net/alpha-2.5 # upload change |
| Typical example of a BK sequence that would replace the analagous CVS |
| situation, |
| vi fs/inode.c |
| cvs commit |
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| As this is just supposed to be a quick BK intro, for more in-depth |
| tutorials, live working demos, and docs, see http://www.bitkeeper.com/ |
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| BK and Kernel Development Workflow |
| ---------------------------------- |
| Currently the latest 2.5 tree is available via "bk clone $URL" |
| and "bk pull $URL" at http://linux.bkbits.net/linux-2.5 |
| This should change in a few weeks to a kernel.org URL. |
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| A big part of using BitKeeper is organizing the various trees you have |
| on your local disk, and organizing the flow of changes among those |
| trees, and remote trees. If one were to graph the relationships between |
| a desired BK setup, you are likely to see a few-many-few graph, like |
| this: |
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| linux-2.5 |
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| merge-to-linus-2.5 |
| / | | |
| / | | |
| vm-hacks bugfixes filesys personal-hacks |
| \ | | / |
| \ | | / |
| \ | | / |
| testing-and-validation |
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| Since a "bk push" sends all changes not in the target tree, and |
| since a "bk pull" receives all changes not in the source tree, you want |
| to make sure you are only pushing specific changes to the desired tree, |
| not all changes from "peer parent" trees. For example, pushing a change |
| from the testing-and-validation tree would probably be a bad idea, |
| because it will push all changes from vm-hacks, bugfixes, filesys, and |
| personal-hacks trees into the target tree. |
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| One would typically work on only one "theme" at a time, either |
| vm-hacks or bugfixes or filesys, keeping those changes isolated in |
| their own tree during development, and only merge the isolated with |
| other changes when going upstream (to Linus or other maintainers) or |
| downstream (to your "union" trees, like testing-and-validation above). |
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| It should be noted that some of this separation is not just recommended |
| practice, it's actually [for now] -enforced- by BitKeeper. BitKeeper |
| requires that changesets maintain a certain order, which is the reason |
| that "bk push" sends all local changesets the remote doesn't have. This |
| separation may look like a lot of wasted disk space at first, but it |
| helps when two unrelated changes may "pollute" the same area of code, or |
| don't follow the same pace of development, or any other of the standard |
| reasons why one creates a development branch. |
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| Small development branches (clones) will appear and disappear: |
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| -------- A --------- B --------- C --------- D ------- |
| \ / |
| -----short-term devel branch----- |
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| While long-term branches will parallel a tree (or trees), with period |
| merge points. In this first example, we pull from a tree (pulls, |
| "\") periodically, such as what occurs when tracking changes in a |
| vendor tree, never pushing changes back up the line: |
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| -------- A --------- B --------- C --------- D ------- |
| \ \ \ |
| ----long-term devel branch----------------- |
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| And then a more common case in Linux kernel development, a long term |
| branch with periodic merges back into the tree (pushes, "/"): |
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| -------- A --------- B --------- C --------- D ------- |
| \ \ / \ |
| ----long-term devel branch----------------- |
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| Submitting Changes to Linus |
| --------------------------- |
| There's a bit of an art, or style, of submitting changes to Linus. |
| Since Linus's tree is now (you might say) fully integrated into the |
| distributed BitKeeper system, there are several prerequisites to |
| properly submitting a BitKeeper change. All these prereq's are just |
| general cleanliness of BK usage, so as people become experts at BK, feel |
| free to optimize this process further (assuming Linus agrees, of |
| course). |
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| 0) Make sure your tree was originally cloned from the linux-2.5 tree |
| created by Linus. If your tree does not have this as its ancestor, it |
| is impossible to reliably exchange changesets. |
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| 1) Pay attention to your commit text. The commit message that |
| accompanies each changeset you submit will live on forever in history, |
| and is used by Linus to accurately summarize the changes in each |
| pre-patch. Remember that there is no context, so |
| "fix for new scheduler changes" |
| would be too vague, but |
| "fix mips64 arch for new scheduler switch_to(), TIF_xxx semantics" |
| would be much better. |
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| You can and should use the command "bk comment -C<rev>" to update the |
| commit text, and improve it after the fact. This is very useful for |
| development: poor, quick descriptions during development, which get |
| cleaned up using "bk comment" before issuing the "bk push" to submit the |
| changes. |
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| 2) Include an Internet-available URL for Linus to pull from, such as |
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| Pull from: http://gkernel.bkbits.net/net-drivers-2.5 |
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| 3) Include a summary and "diffstat -p1" of each changeset that will be |
| downloaded, when Linus issues a "bk pull". The author auto-generates |
| these summaries using "bk changes -L <parent>", to obtain a listing |
| of all the pending-to-send changesets, and their commit messages. |
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| It is important to show Linus what he will be downloading when he issues |
| a "bk pull", to reduce the time required to sift the changes once they |
| are downloaded to Linus's local machine. |
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| IMPORTANT NOTE: One of the features of BK is that your repository does |
| not have to be up to date, in order for Linus to receive your changes. |
| It is considered a courtesy to keep your repository fairly recent, to |
| lessen any potential merge work Linus may need to do. |
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| 4) Split up your changes. Each maintainer<->Linus situation is likely |
| to be slightly different here, so take this just as general advice. The |
| author splits up changes according to "themes" when merging with Linus. |
| Simultaneous pushes from local development go to special trees which |
| exist solely to house changes "queued" for Linus. Example of the trees: |
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| net-drivers-2.5 -- on-going net driver maintenance |
| vm-2.5 -- VM-related changes |
| fs-2.5 -- filesystem-related changes |
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| Linus then has much more freedom for pulling changes. He could (for |
| example) issue a "bk pull" on vm-2.5 and fs-2.5 trees, to merge their |
| changes, but hold off net-drivers-2.5 because of a change that needs |
| more discussion. |
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| Other maintainers may find that a single linus-pull-from tree is |
| adequate for passing BK changesets to him. |
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| Frequently Answered Questions |
| ----------------------------- |
| 1) How do I change the e-mail address shown in the changelog? |
| A. When you run "bk citool" or "bk commit", set environment |
| variables BK_USER and BK_HOST to the desired username |
| and host/domain name. |
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| 2) How do I use tags / get a diff between two kernel versions? |
| A. Pass the tags Linus uses to 'bk export'. |
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| ChangeSets are in a forward-progressing order, so it's pretty easy |
| to get a snapshot starting and ending at any two points in time. |
| Linus puts tags on each release and pre-release, so you could use |
| these two examples: |
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| bk export -tpatch -hdu -rv2.5.4,v2.5.5 | less |
| # creates patch-2.5.5 essentially |
| bk export -tpatch -du -rv2.5.5-pre1,v2.5.5 | less |
| # changes from pre1 to final |
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| A tag is just an alias for a specific changeset... and since changesets |
| are ordered, a tag is thus a marker for a specific point in time (or |
| specific state of the tree). |
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| 3) Is there an easy way to generate One Big Patch versus mainline, |
| for my long-lived kernel branch? |
| A. Yes. This requires BK 3.x, though. |
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| bk export -tpatch -r`bk repogca bk://linux.bkbits.net/linux-2.5`,+ |
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