So far, only :
- emmanuel
- steve
- max
- hardy
- adam
have read-write access to hibernate-core on GitHub
If you used to have access to SVN and actually use it ;), please email me your github
acocunt and I will grant you access. You can also ping me on IRC.
Emmanuel
On 7 oct. 2010, at 11:30, Emmanuel Bernard wrote:
Hibernate Core now uses Git as the version control system.
You can access it at
http://github.com/hibernate/hibernate-core
Core on Git
We have imported the SVN history (at least what GIT could extract) and pushed the SVN
trunk, branch 3.5 and branch 3.3. If you need more of the legacy branches or tags, let me
know, that can be arranged.
If you want to contribute a fix or new feature, either use the pure Git approach, or use
the GitHub fork capability (see
http://help.github.com/forking/ and
http://help.github.com/pull-requests/ ) The benefit of the GitHub approach is that we can
comment on the pull request and code though I am far from an expert so far and their flow
could easily be improved (slightly confusing).
If you still want to do it the old way a provide a patch file, that's ok too.
Tips on Git
Here are some tips on Git:
o read Pro Git
http://progit.org/book/ awesome book and very practical. It has a free
html and epub version (buying the tree version is recommended to repay the author).
o prefer the git protocol when cloning over http (so say the experts). At the very least
that will be much faster. cloning the repo from GitHub took me less than 3 minutes
#for people with read/write access
git clone git@github.com:hibernate/hibernate-core.git
#for people with read-only access
git clone
git://github.com/hibernate/hibernate-core.git
It will create a "remote" link named origin. I usually tend to rename it to
reflect what it is really.
git remote rename origin core-on-github
o always work on a topic branch and merge your work when you are done
git checkout master
git checkout -b HHH-XXX
hack commit hack commit
Likewise if you want to share a work with somebody from the Hibernate team, push or
define the pull request of your topic branch (though make sure your topic branch is above
master).
o prefer small commits, they will be more readable and will very unlikely fail on merge
o write good comments (short one line including the issue at stack followed by a blank
line and a more detailed explanation if needed)
`HHH-XXX Fix NPE on persist
Fix stupid bug by Gavin that lead to a NPE when persisting objects with components`
o prefer rebase over merge
Rebase put changes from the branch you forked below the new commits you have done and
thus keep the history linear.
got checkout HHH-XXX
git rebase master
DO NOT rebase a branch that you have shared publicly (unless you know people won't
use it or you wish them harm).
o while you are at rebasing, you can rewrite your commit history to clean comments or
merge some commits together (named squashing)
git rebase -i HEAD~6 (go back 6 commits in time)
o once you're fed up with typing longish command lines, use aliases (see below)
o I've put a copy of my ~/.gitconfig file in case people want to copy some things
including aliases (see below)
o if you use Mac OS X, GitX is a fantastic tool, in particular to do interactive staging
and commit only some parts of a file
o you can read this blog entry that was some more info
http://blog.emmanuelbernard.com/2010/05/git-how-my-life-has-improved-sinc...
o feel free to add your tips to this email thread, I'll likely compile them in a blog
entry.
~/.gitconfig
[user]
name = Redacted
email = redacted(a)redacted.com
signingkey = id_key.pub
[core]
editor = open -nW -a Smultron
[merge]
tool = opendiff
[color]
ui = auto
[color "branch"]
current = yellow reverse
local = yellow
remote = green
[color "diff"]
meta = yellow bold
frag = magenta bold
old = red bold
new = green bold
[color "status"]
added = yellow
changed = green
untracked = cyan
[github]
user = redacted
token = redacted
[alias]
co = checkout
undo = reset --hard
cb = checkout -b
br = branch
cp = cherry-pick
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