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[Automake-commit] [SCM] GNU Automake branch, experimental/missing-not-to
From: |
Stefano Lattarini |
Subject: |
[Automake-commit] [SCM] GNU Automake branch, experimental/missing-not-touch-just-warn, created. v1.12.1-87-g8feee5e |
Date: |
Wed, 20 Jun 2012 18:38:35 +0000 |
This is an automated email from the git hooks/post-receive script. It was
generated because a ref change was pushed to the repository containing
the project "GNU Automake".
http://git.sv.gnu.org/gitweb/?p=automake.git;a=commitdiff;h=8feee5ec1c2fa3bde2c2ba242b03bdde97d58b47
The branch, experimental/missing-not-touch-just-warn has been created
at 8feee5ec1c2fa3bde2c2ba242b03bdde97d58b47 (commit)
- Log -----------------------------------------------------------------
commit 8feee5ec1c2fa3bde2c2ba242b03bdde97d58b47
Author: Stefano Lattarini <address@hidden>
Date: Fri Jun 15 11:13:00 2012 +0200
missing: do not touch timestamps; only warn for out-of-date files
Before this change, the missing script had a twofold role:
- it warned the user if some required maintainer tools was missing,
or too old;
- in such a case, it tried to "fix" the timestamp of the files that
should have been rebuilt by that tool (without actually updating
the file contents, of course), to allow the build to continue.
The second capability used to be quite useful in the days when most
projects committed files generated by maintainer-only tools in their
VCS repository (today the trend is not to keep such generated files
VCS-committed anymore). In such a setup, the "timestamp-fixing"
capability of 'missing' was quite useful, in that it allowed users
lacking some required maintainer tool to build from a VCS checkout
in the face of skewed timestamps (as could have been caused by
"cvs update" or "git checkout").
But then, when the automatic remake rules kicked in due to the
generated files being *actually out-of-date* (e.g., because the user
had modified 'configure.ac' but lacked a modern-enough autoconf to
rebuild it), that behaviour of 'missing' caused the same problem that
plagued AM_MAINTAINER_MODE; i.e., the user would get non-dependable
builds and inconsistent statuses of the build tree -- changes to
source files don't reflect on generated files, and this can be very
confusing and cause hard-to-spot errors).
So we now believe that the best approach to deal with timestamp-related
issues is not to have 'missing' to "automagically" try to resolve
them (with all the risk and brittleness entailed), but rather to
suggest those projects still keeping generated files committed in their
VCS to provide a proper (say) 'fix-timestamp.sh' script that touches
the timestamp of the checked-out files, to ensure no spurious rebuild
will be triggered. As a bonus, such a script can be more aware of the
particularities, nooks and corner cases of a project, and thus more
reliable than the old 'missing' script.
An example of this approach is offered by GNU awk (release 4.0.1, Git
tag 'gawk-4.0.1', commit b85b04e8). The GNU awk maintainers commit
the Autotools-generated files (configure, Makefile.in, etc.) and other
generated in the project's Git repository, but offer a useful (albeit
IMHO poorly named) 'bootstrap.sh' script that fixes the timestamps of
those files, to ensure no useless remake is triggered in a freshly
clones repository:
#! /bin/sh
# bootstrap.sh --- touch relevant files to avoid out-of-date issues
# in Git sandboxes
touch aclocal.m4
find awklib -type f -print | xargs touch
sleep 1
touch configure
sleep 2
touch configh.in
sleep 1
touch test/Maketests
find . -name Makefile.in -print | xargs touch
touch doc/*.info
touch po/*.gmo
touch po/stamp-po
touch awkgram.c
touch command.c
touch version.c
Signed-off-by: Stefano Lattarini <address@hidden>
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