generic-poky/scripts/create-pull-request

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git-pull: add the new create-pull-request script The previous create-pull-request only generated a cover letter. When used to send to the list, it did not include the patches, which made it difficult to perform peer review. A pull request without patches is typically only sent by a maintainer. As we are not all maintainers, we need a means to easily submit patches for review. As we are accustomed to making pull requests, this script retains a git-pull-style cover letter, while sending the relevant patches as responses to the pull. This will provide the necessary context for peer review, and still allow people to collapse threads and see no more mail than they were previously. This version retains the relative_to, commit_id, and contrib_branch arguments from the original, along with their default values. It adds several more, resulting in a highly flexible tool. The script creates a pull directory (pull-$$ by default, configurable via the -o option) and populates it with a git-format-patch generated patch series and cover letter. The cover letter is modified to include the git and http pull URLs and branch name, as well as a basic signature from the author pulled from git's user.name and user.email config. git-format-patch provides the shortlog and diffstat of the series. Breaking a bit from the original, this script maintains the [PATCH] subject prefix in the cover letter (as opposed to [GIT PULL]. This is better suited to the majority of developers (who are not maintainers). This prefix is configurable with the -p option, allowing you to create an [RFC PATCH] prefix, for example. By default, the generated cover letter with contain "*** SUBJECT HERE ***" and "*** BLURB HERE ***" tokens which you should replace with something appropriate prior to sending the messages. When developing multiple versions of a patch series, it can save time to maintain a message.txt file, rather than having to retype the message body of the cover letter every time. The -m option allows you to specify a message file and replace the "*** BLURB HERE ***" token of the cover letter with the contents of the message file. Finally, the -s option will replace the "*** SUBJECT HERE ***" token in the cover letter with the specified subject. The generated patches are suitable for sending via sendmail. Signed-off-by: Darren Hart <dvhart@linux.intel.com> CC: Nitin A Kamble <nitin.a.kamble@intel.com> CC: Richard Purdie <rpurdie@linux.intel.com> CC: Saul Wold <saul.wold@intel.com> CC: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com>
2010-11-06 13:42:28 +00:00
#!/bin/bash
ODIR=pull-$$
RELATIVE_TO="master"
COMMIT_ID="HEAD"
PREFIX="PATCH"
usage() {
CMD=$(basename $0)
cat <<EOM
Usage: $CMD [-h] [-o output_dir] [-m msg_body_file] [-s subject] [-r relative_to] [-i commit_id] -u remote -b branch
-b branch Branch name in the specified remote
git-pull: add the new create-pull-request script The previous create-pull-request only generated a cover letter. When used to send to the list, it did not include the patches, which made it difficult to perform peer review. A pull request without patches is typically only sent by a maintainer. As we are not all maintainers, we need a means to easily submit patches for review. As we are accustomed to making pull requests, this script retains a git-pull-style cover letter, while sending the relevant patches as responses to the pull. This will provide the necessary context for peer review, and still allow people to collapse threads and see no more mail than they were previously. This version retains the relative_to, commit_id, and contrib_branch arguments from the original, along with their default values. It adds several more, resulting in a highly flexible tool. The script creates a pull directory (pull-$$ by default, configurable via the -o option) and populates it with a git-format-patch generated patch series and cover letter. The cover letter is modified to include the git and http pull URLs and branch name, as well as a basic signature from the author pulled from git's user.name and user.email config. git-format-patch provides the shortlog and diffstat of the series. Breaking a bit from the original, this script maintains the [PATCH] subject prefix in the cover letter (as opposed to [GIT PULL]. This is better suited to the majority of developers (who are not maintainers). This prefix is configurable with the -p option, allowing you to create an [RFC PATCH] prefix, for example. By default, the generated cover letter with contain "*** SUBJECT HERE ***" and "*** BLURB HERE ***" tokens which you should replace with something appropriate prior to sending the messages. When developing multiple versions of a patch series, it can save time to maintain a message.txt file, rather than having to retype the message body of the cover letter every time. The -m option allows you to specify a message file and replace the "*** BLURB HERE ***" token of the cover letter with the contents of the message file. Finally, the -s option will replace the "*** SUBJECT HERE ***" token in the cover letter with the specified subject. The generated patches are suitable for sending via sendmail. Signed-off-by: Darren Hart <dvhart@linux.intel.com> CC: Nitin A Kamble <nitin.a.kamble@intel.com> CC: Richard Purdie <rpurdie@linux.intel.com> CC: Saul Wold <saul.wold@intel.com> CC: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com>
2010-11-06 13:42:28 +00:00
-h Display this help message
-i commit_id Ending commit (default: HEAD)
git-pull: add the new create-pull-request script The previous create-pull-request only generated a cover letter. When used to send to the list, it did not include the patches, which made it difficult to perform peer review. A pull request without patches is typically only sent by a maintainer. As we are not all maintainers, we need a means to easily submit patches for review. As we are accustomed to making pull requests, this script retains a git-pull-style cover letter, while sending the relevant patches as responses to the pull. This will provide the necessary context for peer review, and still allow people to collapse threads and see no more mail than they were previously. This version retains the relative_to, commit_id, and contrib_branch arguments from the original, along with their default values. It adds several more, resulting in a highly flexible tool. The script creates a pull directory (pull-$$ by default, configurable via the -o option) and populates it with a git-format-patch generated patch series and cover letter. The cover letter is modified to include the git and http pull URLs and branch name, as well as a basic signature from the author pulled from git's user.name and user.email config. git-format-patch provides the shortlog and diffstat of the series. Breaking a bit from the original, this script maintains the [PATCH] subject prefix in the cover letter (as opposed to [GIT PULL]. This is better suited to the majority of developers (who are not maintainers). This prefix is configurable with the -p option, allowing you to create an [RFC PATCH] prefix, for example. By default, the generated cover letter with contain "*** SUBJECT HERE ***" and "*** BLURB HERE ***" tokens which you should replace with something appropriate prior to sending the messages. When developing multiple versions of a patch series, it can save time to maintain a message.txt file, rather than having to retype the message body of the cover letter every time. The -m option allows you to specify a message file and replace the "*** BLURB HERE ***" token of the cover letter with the contents of the message file. Finally, the -s option will replace the "*** SUBJECT HERE ***" token in the cover letter with the specified subject. The generated patches are suitable for sending via sendmail. Signed-off-by: Darren Hart <dvhart@linux.intel.com> CC: Nitin A Kamble <nitin.a.kamble@intel.com> CC: Richard Purdie <rpurdie@linux.intel.com> CC: Saul Wold <saul.wold@intel.com> CC: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com>
2010-11-06 13:42:28 +00:00
-m msg_body_file The file containing a blurb to be inserted into the summary email
-o output_dir Specify the output directory for the messages (default: pull-PID)
-p prefix Use [prefix N/M] instead of [PATCH N/M] as the subject prefix
git-pull: add the new create-pull-request script The previous create-pull-request only generated a cover letter. When used to send to the list, it did not include the patches, which made it difficult to perform peer review. A pull request without patches is typically only sent by a maintainer. As we are not all maintainers, we need a means to easily submit patches for review. As we are accustomed to making pull requests, this script retains a git-pull-style cover letter, while sending the relevant patches as responses to the pull. This will provide the necessary context for peer review, and still allow people to collapse threads and see no more mail than they were previously. This version retains the relative_to, commit_id, and contrib_branch arguments from the original, along with their default values. It adds several more, resulting in a highly flexible tool. The script creates a pull directory (pull-$$ by default, configurable via the -o option) and populates it with a git-format-patch generated patch series and cover letter. The cover letter is modified to include the git and http pull URLs and branch name, as well as a basic signature from the author pulled from git's user.name and user.email config. git-format-patch provides the shortlog and diffstat of the series. Breaking a bit from the original, this script maintains the [PATCH] subject prefix in the cover letter (as opposed to [GIT PULL]. This is better suited to the majority of developers (who are not maintainers). This prefix is configurable with the -p option, allowing you to create an [RFC PATCH] prefix, for example. By default, the generated cover letter with contain "*** SUBJECT HERE ***" and "*** BLURB HERE ***" tokens which you should replace with something appropriate prior to sending the messages. When developing multiple versions of a patch series, it can save time to maintain a message.txt file, rather than having to retype the message body of the cover letter every time. The -m option allows you to specify a message file and replace the "*** BLURB HERE ***" token of the cover letter with the contents of the message file. Finally, the -s option will replace the "*** SUBJECT HERE ***" token in the cover letter with the specified subject. The generated patches are suitable for sending via sendmail. Signed-off-by: Darren Hart <dvhart@linux.intel.com> CC: Nitin A Kamble <nitin.a.kamble@intel.com> CC: Richard Purdie <rpurdie@linux.intel.com> CC: Saul Wold <saul.wold@intel.com> CC: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com>
2010-11-06 13:42:28 +00:00
-r relative_to Starting commit (default: master)
-s subject The subject to be inserted into the summary email
-u remote The git remote where the branch is located
git-pull: add the new create-pull-request script The previous create-pull-request only generated a cover letter. When used to send to the list, it did not include the patches, which made it difficult to perform peer review. A pull request without patches is typically only sent by a maintainer. As we are not all maintainers, we need a means to easily submit patches for review. As we are accustomed to making pull requests, this script retains a git-pull-style cover letter, while sending the relevant patches as responses to the pull. This will provide the necessary context for peer review, and still allow people to collapse threads and see no more mail than they were previously. This version retains the relative_to, commit_id, and contrib_branch arguments from the original, along with their default values. It adds several more, resulting in a highly flexible tool. The script creates a pull directory (pull-$$ by default, configurable via the -o option) and populates it with a git-format-patch generated patch series and cover letter. The cover letter is modified to include the git and http pull URLs and branch name, as well as a basic signature from the author pulled from git's user.name and user.email config. git-format-patch provides the shortlog and diffstat of the series. Breaking a bit from the original, this script maintains the [PATCH] subject prefix in the cover letter (as opposed to [GIT PULL]. This is better suited to the majority of developers (who are not maintainers). This prefix is configurable with the -p option, allowing you to create an [RFC PATCH] prefix, for example. By default, the generated cover letter with contain "*** SUBJECT HERE ***" and "*** BLURB HERE ***" tokens which you should replace with something appropriate prior to sending the messages. When developing multiple versions of a patch series, it can save time to maintain a message.txt file, rather than having to retype the message body of the cover letter every time. The -m option allows you to specify a message file and replace the "*** BLURB HERE ***" token of the cover letter with the contents of the message file. Finally, the -s option will replace the "*** SUBJECT HERE ***" token in the cover letter with the specified subject. The generated patches are suitable for sending via sendmail. Signed-off-by: Darren Hart <dvhart@linux.intel.com> CC: Nitin A Kamble <nitin.a.kamble@intel.com> CC: Richard Purdie <rpurdie@linux.intel.com> CC: Saul Wold <saul.wold@intel.com> CC: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com>
2010-11-06 13:42:28 +00:00
Examples:
$CMD -u contrib -b nitin/basic
$CMD -u contrib -r distro/master -i nitin/distro -b nitin/distro
$CMD -u contrib -r master -i misc -b nitin/misc -o pull-misc
$CMD -u contrib -p "RFC PATCH" -b nitin/experimental
git-pull: add the new create-pull-request script The previous create-pull-request only generated a cover letter. When used to send to the list, it did not include the patches, which made it difficult to perform peer review. A pull request without patches is typically only sent by a maintainer. As we are not all maintainers, we need a means to easily submit patches for review. As we are accustomed to making pull requests, this script retains a git-pull-style cover letter, while sending the relevant patches as responses to the pull. This will provide the necessary context for peer review, and still allow people to collapse threads and see no more mail than they were previously. This version retains the relative_to, commit_id, and contrib_branch arguments from the original, along with their default values. It adds several more, resulting in a highly flexible tool. The script creates a pull directory (pull-$$ by default, configurable via the -o option) and populates it with a git-format-patch generated patch series and cover letter. The cover letter is modified to include the git and http pull URLs and branch name, as well as a basic signature from the author pulled from git's user.name and user.email config. git-format-patch provides the shortlog and diffstat of the series. Breaking a bit from the original, this script maintains the [PATCH] subject prefix in the cover letter (as opposed to [GIT PULL]. This is better suited to the majority of developers (who are not maintainers). This prefix is configurable with the -p option, allowing you to create an [RFC PATCH] prefix, for example. By default, the generated cover letter with contain "*** SUBJECT HERE ***" and "*** BLURB HERE ***" tokens which you should replace with something appropriate prior to sending the messages. When developing multiple versions of a patch series, it can save time to maintain a message.txt file, rather than having to retype the message body of the cover letter every time. The -m option allows you to specify a message file and replace the "*** BLURB HERE ***" token of the cover letter with the contents of the message file. Finally, the -s option will replace the "*** SUBJECT HERE ***" token in the cover letter with the specified subject. The generated patches are suitable for sending via sendmail. Signed-off-by: Darren Hart <dvhart@linux.intel.com> CC: Nitin A Kamble <nitin.a.kamble@intel.com> CC: Richard Purdie <rpurdie@linux.intel.com> CC: Saul Wold <saul.wold@intel.com> CC: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com>
2010-11-06 13:42:28 +00:00
EOM
}
# Parse and validate arguments
while getopts "b:hi:m:o:p:r:s:u:" OPT; do
case $OPT in
b)
BRANCH="$OPTARG"
;;
h)
usage
exit 0
;;
i)
COMMIT_ID="$OPTARG"
;;
m)
BODY="$OPTARG"
if [ ! -e "$BODY" ]; then
echo "ERROR: Body file does not exist"
exit 1
fi
;;
o)
ODIR="$OPTARG"
;;
p)
PREFIX="$OPTARG"
;;
r)
RELATIVE_TO="$OPTARG"
;;
s)
SUBJECT="$OPTARG"
;;
u)
REMOTE="$OPTARG"
REMOTE_URL=$(git config remote.$REMOTE.url)
if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then
echo "ERROR: git config failed to find a url for '$REMOTE'"
exit 1
fi
# Rewrite known private URLs to public URLs
# Determine the repository name for use in the WEB_URL later
case "$REMOTE_URL" in
ssh://git@git.pokylinux.org*)
REMOTE_REPO=$(echo $REMOTE_URL | sed "s#.*/\(.*\)#\1#")
REMOTE_URL=${REMOTE_URL/'ssh://git@'/'git://'}
;;
ssh://git@git.yoctoproject.org*)
REMOTE_REPO=$(echo $REMOTE_URL | sed "s#.*/\(.*\)#\1#")
REMOTE_URL=${REMOTE_URL/"ssh://git@"/"git://"}
;;
esac
# The .git suffix is optional in the URL, drop in for the REPO
REMOTE_REPO=${REMOTE_REPO%.git}
;;
esac
git-pull: add the new create-pull-request script The previous create-pull-request only generated a cover letter. When used to send to the list, it did not include the patches, which made it difficult to perform peer review. A pull request without patches is typically only sent by a maintainer. As we are not all maintainers, we need a means to easily submit patches for review. As we are accustomed to making pull requests, this script retains a git-pull-style cover letter, while sending the relevant patches as responses to the pull. This will provide the necessary context for peer review, and still allow people to collapse threads and see no more mail than they were previously. This version retains the relative_to, commit_id, and contrib_branch arguments from the original, along with their default values. It adds several more, resulting in a highly flexible tool. The script creates a pull directory (pull-$$ by default, configurable via the -o option) and populates it with a git-format-patch generated patch series and cover letter. The cover letter is modified to include the git and http pull URLs and branch name, as well as a basic signature from the author pulled from git's user.name and user.email config. git-format-patch provides the shortlog and diffstat of the series. Breaking a bit from the original, this script maintains the [PATCH] subject prefix in the cover letter (as opposed to [GIT PULL]. This is better suited to the majority of developers (who are not maintainers). This prefix is configurable with the -p option, allowing you to create an [RFC PATCH] prefix, for example. By default, the generated cover letter with contain "*** SUBJECT HERE ***" and "*** BLURB HERE ***" tokens which you should replace with something appropriate prior to sending the messages. When developing multiple versions of a patch series, it can save time to maintain a message.txt file, rather than having to retype the message body of the cover letter every time. The -m option allows you to specify a message file and replace the "*** BLURB HERE ***" token of the cover letter with the contents of the message file. Finally, the -s option will replace the "*** SUBJECT HERE ***" token in the cover letter with the specified subject. The generated patches are suitable for sending via sendmail. Signed-off-by: Darren Hart <dvhart@linux.intel.com> CC: Nitin A Kamble <nitin.a.kamble@intel.com> CC: Richard Purdie <rpurdie@linux.intel.com> CC: Saul Wold <saul.wold@intel.com> CC: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com>
2010-11-06 13:42:28 +00:00
done
if [ -z "$BRANCH" ] || [ -z "$REMOTE_URL" ]; then
usage
exit 1
git-pull: add the new create-pull-request script The previous create-pull-request only generated a cover letter. When used to send to the list, it did not include the patches, which made it difficult to perform peer review. A pull request without patches is typically only sent by a maintainer. As we are not all maintainers, we need a means to easily submit patches for review. As we are accustomed to making pull requests, this script retains a git-pull-style cover letter, while sending the relevant patches as responses to the pull. This will provide the necessary context for peer review, and still allow people to collapse threads and see no more mail than they were previously. This version retains the relative_to, commit_id, and contrib_branch arguments from the original, along with their default values. It adds several more, resulting in a highly flexible tool. The script creates a pull directory (pull-$$ by default, configurable via the -o option) and populates it with a git-format-patch generated patch series and cover letter. The cover letter is modified to include the git and http pull URLs and branch name, as well as a basic signature from the author pulled from git's user.name and user.email config. git-format-patch provides the shortlog and diffstat of the series. Breaking a bit from the original, this script maintains the [PATCH] subject prefix in the cover letter (as opposed to [GIT PULL]. This is better suited to the majority of developers (who are not maintainers). This prefix is configurable with the -p option, allowing you to create an [RFC PATCH] prefix, for example. By default, the generated cover letter with contain "*** SUBJECT HERE ***" and "*** BLURB HERE ***" tokens which you should replace with something appropriate prior to sending the messages. When developing multiple versions of a patch series, it can save time to maintain a message.txt file, rather than having to retype the message body of the cover letter every time. The -m option allows you to specify a message file and replace the "*** BLURB HERE ***" token of the cover letter with the contents of the message file. Finally, the -s option will replace the "*** SUBJECT HERE ***" token in the cover letter with the specified subject. The generated patches are suitable for sending via sendmail. Signed-off-by: Darren Hart <dvhart@linux.intel.com> CC: Nitin A Kamble <nitin.a.kamble@intel.com> CC: Richard Purdie <rpurdie@linux.intel.com> CC: Saul Wold <saul.wold@intel.com> CC: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com>
2010-11-06 13:42:28 +00:00
fi
# Set WEB_URL from known remotes
case "$REMOTE_URL" in
*git.yoctoproject.org*)
WEB_URL="http://git.yoctoproject.org/cgit.cgi/$REMOTE_REPO/log/?h=$BRANCH"
;;
*git.pokylinux.org*)
WEB_URL="http://git.pokylinux.org/cgit.cgi/$REMOTE_REPO/log/?h=$BRANCH"
;;
esac
git-pull: add the new create-pull-request script The previous create-pull-request only generated a cover letter. When used to send to the list, it did not include the patches, which made it difficult to perform peer review. A pull request without patches is typically only sent by a maintainer. As we are not all maintainers, we need a means to easily submit patches for review. As we are accustomed to making pull requests, this script retains a git-pull-style cover letter, while sending the relevant patches as responses to the pull. This will provide the necessary context for peer review, and still allow people to collapse threads and see no more mail than they were previously. This version retains the relative_to, commit_id, and contrib_branch arguments from the original, along with their default values. It adds several more, resulting in a highly flexible tool. The script creates a pull directory (pull-$$ by default, configurable via the -o option) and populates it with a git-format-patch generated patch series and cover letter. The cover letter is modified to include the git and http pull URLs and branch name, as well as a basic signature from the author pulled from git's user.name and user.email config. git-format-patch provides the shortlog and diffstat of the series. Breaking a bit from the original, this script maintains the [PATCH] subject prefix in the cover letter (as opposed to [GIT PULL]. This is better suited to the majority of developers (who are not maintainers). This prefix is configurable with the -p option, allowing you to create an [RFC PATCH] prefix, for example. By default, the generated cover letter with contain "*** SUBJECT HERE ***" and "*** BLURB HERE ***" tokens which you should replace with something appropriate prior to sending the messages. When developing multiple versions of a patch series, it can save time to maintain a message.txt file, rather than having to retype the message body of the cover letter every time. The -m option allows you to specify a message file and replace the "*** BLURB HERE ***" token of the cover letter with the contents of the message file. Finally, the -s option will replace the "*** SUBJECT HERE ***" token in the cover letter with the specified subject. The generated patches are suitable for sending via sendmail. Signed-off-by: Darren Hart <dvhart@linux.intel.com> CC: Nitin A Kamble <nitin.a.kamble@intel.com> CC: Richard Purdie <rpurdie@linux.intel.com> CC: Saul Wold <saul.wold@intel.com> CC: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com>
2010-11-06 13:42:28 +00:00
# Perform a sanity test on the web URL. Issue a warning if it is not
# accessible, but do not abort as users may want to run offline.
if [ -n "$WEB_URL" ]; then
wget -q $WEB_URL -O /dev/null
if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then
echo "WARNING: Branch '$BRANCH' was not found on the contrib git tree."
echo " Please check your remote and branch parameter before sending."
echo ""
fi
git-pull: add the new create-pull-request script The previous create-pull-request only generated a cover letter. When used to send to the list, it did not include the patches, which made it difficult to perform peer review. A pull request without patches is typically only sent by a maintainer. As we are not all maintainers, we need a means to easily submit patches for review. As we are accustomed to making pull requests, this script retains a git-pull-style cover letter, while sending the relevant patches as responses to the pull. This will provide the necessary context for peer review, and still allow people to collapse threads and see no more mail than they were previously. This version retains the relative_to, commit_id, and contrib_branch arguments from the original, along with their default values. It adds several more, resulting in a highly flexible tool. The script creates a pull directory (pull-$$ by default, configurable via the -o option) and populates it with a git-format-patch generated patch series and cover letter. The cover letter is modified to include the git and http pull URLs and branch name, as well as a basic signature from the author pulled from git's user.name and user.email config. git-format-patch provides the shortlog and diffstat of the series. Breaking a bit from the original, this script maintains the [PATCH] subject prefix in the cover letter (as opposed to [GIT PULL]. This is better suited to the majority of developers (who are not maintainers). This prefix is configurable with the -p option, allowing you to create an [RFC PATCH] prefix, for example. By default, the generated cover letter with contain "*** SUBJECT HERE ***" and "*** BLURB HERE ***" tokens which you should replace with something appropriate prior to sending the messages. When developing multiple versions of a patch series, it can save time to maintain a message.txt file, rather than having to retype the message body of the cover letter every time. The -m option allows you to specify a message file and replace the "*** BLURB HERE ***" token of the cover letter with the contents of the message file. Finally, the -s option will replace the "*** SUBJECT HERE ***" token in the cover letter with the specified subject. The generated patches are suitable for sending via sendmail. Signed-off-by: Darren Hart <dvhart@linux.intel.com> CC: Nitin A Kamble <nitin.a.kamble@intel.com> CC: Richard Purdie <rpurdie@linux.intel.com> CC: Saul Wold <saul.wold@intel.com> CC: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com>
2010-11-06 13:42:28 +00:00
fi
if [ -e $ODIR ]; then
echo "ERROR: output directory $ODIR exists."
exit 1
fi
mkdir $ODIR
# Generate the patches and cover letter
git format-patch -M --subject-prefix="$PREFIX" -n -o $ODIR --thread=shallow --cover-letter $RELATIVE_TO..$COMMIT_ID > /dev/null
# Customize the cover letter
CL="$ODIR/0000-cover-letter.patch"
PM="$ODIR/pull-msg"
git request-pull $RELATIVE_TO $REMOTE_URL $COMMIT_ID > "$PM"
if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then
echo "ERROR: git request-pull reported an error"
exit 1
fi
git-pull: add the new create-pull-request script The previous create-pull-request only generated a cover letter. When used to send to the list, it did not include the patches, which made it difficult to perform peer review. A pull request without patches is typically only sent by a maintainer. As we are not all maintainers, we need a means to easily submit patches for review. As we are accustomed to making pull requests, this script retains a git-pull-style cover letter, while sending the relevant patches as responses to the pull. This will provide the necessary context for peer review, and still allow people to collapse threads and see no more mail than they were previously. This version retains the relative_to, commit_id, and contrib_branch arguments from the original, along with their default values. It adds several more, resulting in a highly flexible tool. The script creates a pull directory (pull-$$ by default, configurable via the -o option) and populates it with a git-format-patch generated patch series and cover letter. The cover letter is modified to include the git and http pull URLs and branch name, as well as a basic signature from the author pulled from git's user.name and user.email config. git-format-patch provides the shortlog and diffstat of the series. Breaking a bit from the original, this script maintains the [PATCH] subject prefix in the cover letter (as opposed to [GIT PULL]. This is better suited to the majority of developers (who are not maintainers). This prefix is configurable with the -p option, allowing you to create an [RFC PATCH] prefix, for example. By default, the generated cover letter with contain "*** SUBJECT HERE ***" and "*** BLURB HERE ***" tokens which you should replace with something appropriate prior to sending the messages. When developing multiple versions of a patch series, it can save time to maintain a message.txt file, rather than having to retype the message body of the cover letter every time. The -m option allows you to specify a message file and replace the "*** BLURB HERE ***" token of the cover letter with the contents of the message file. Finally, the -s option will replace the "*** SUBJECT HERE ***" token in the cover letter with the specified subject. The generated patches are suitable for sending via sendmail. Signed-off-by: Darren Hart <dvhart@linux.intel.com> CC: Nitin A Kamble <nitin.a.kamble@intel.com> CC: Richard Purdie <rpurdie@linux.intel.com> CC: Saul Wold <saul.wold@intel.com> CC: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com>
2010-11-06 13:42:28 +00:00
# The cover letter already has a diffstat, remove it from the pull-msg
# before inserting it.
sed -n "0,\#$REMOTE_URL# p" "$PM" | sed -i "/BLURB HERE/ r /dev/stdin" "$CL"
rm "$PM"
git-pull: add the new create-pull-request script The previous create-pull-request only generated a cover letter. When used to send to the list, it did not include the patches, which made it difficult to perform peer review. A pull request without patches is typically only sent by a maintainer. As we are not all maintainers, we need a means to easily submit patches for review. As we are accustomed to making pull requests, this script retains a git-pull-style cover letter, while sending the relevant patches as responses to the pull. This will provide the necessary context for peer review, and still allow people to collapse threads and see no more mail than they were previously. This version retains the relative_to, commit_id, and contrib_branch arguments from the original, along with their default values. It adds several more, resulting in a highly flexible tool. The script creates a pull directory (pull-$$ by default, configurable via the -o option) and populates it with a git-format-patch generated patch series and cover letter. The cover letter is modified to include the git and http pull URLs and branch name, as well as a basic signature from the author pulled from git's user.name and user.email config. git-format-patch provides the shortlog and diffstat of the series. Breaking a bit from the original, this script maintains the [PATCH] subject prefix in the cover letter (as opposed to [GIT PULL]. This is better suited to the majority of developers (who are not maintainers). This prefix is configurable with the -p option, allowing you to create an [RFC PATCH] prefix, for example. By default, the generated cover letter with contain "*** SUBJECT HERE ***" and "*** BLURB HERE ***" tokens which you should replace with something appropriate prior to sending the messages. When developing multiple versions of a patch series, it can save time to maintain a message.txt file, rather than having to retype the message body of the cover letter every time. The -m option allows you to specify a message file and replace the "*** BLURB HERE ***" token of the cover letter with the contents of the message file. Finally, the -s option will replace the "*** SUBJECT HERE ***" token in the cover letter with the specified subject. The generated patches are suitable for sending via sendmail. Signed-off-by: Darren Hart <dvhart@linux.intel.com> CC: Nitin A Kamble <nitin.a.kamble@intel.com> CC: Richard Purdie <rpurdie@linux.intel.com> CC: Saul Wold <saul.wold@intel.com> CC: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com>
2010-11-06 13:42:28 +00:00
# Insert the WEB_URL if there is one
if [ -n "$WEB_URL" ]; then
echo " $WEB_URL" | sed -i "\#$REMOTE_URL# r /dev/stdin" "$CL"
fi
git-pull: add the new create-pull-request script The previous create-pull-request only generated a cover letter. When used to send to the list, it did not include the patches, which made it difficult to perform peer review. A pull request without patches is typically only sent by a maintainer. As we are not all maintainers, we need a means to easily submit patches for review. As we are accustomed to making pull requests, this script retains a git-pull-style cover letter, while sending the relevant patches as responses to the pull. This will provide the necessary context for peer review, and still allow people to collapse threads and see no more mail than they were previously. This version retains the relative_to, commit_id, and contrib_branch arguments from the original, along with their default values. It adds several more, resulting in a highly flexible tool. The script creates a pull directory (pull-$$ by default, configurable via the -o option) and populates it with a git-format-patch generated patch series and cover letter. The cover letter is modified to include the git and http pull URLs and branch name, as well as a basic signature from the author pulled from git's user.name and user.email config. git-format-patch provides the shortlog and diffstat of the series. Breaking a bit from the original, this script maintains the [PATCH] subject prefix in the cover letter (as opposed to [GIT PULL]. This is better suited to the majority of developers (who are not maintainers). This prefix is configurable with the -p option, allowing you to create an [RFC PATCH] prefix, for example. By default, the generated cover letter with contain "*** SUBJECT HERE ***" and "*** BLURB HERE ***" tokens which you should replace with something appropriate prior to sending the messages. When developing multiple versions of a patch series, it can save time to maintain a message.txt file, rather than having to retype the message body of the cover letter every time. The -m option allows you to specify a message file and replace the "*** BLURB HERE ***" token of the cover letter with the contents of the message file. Finally, the -s option will replace the "*** SUBJECT HERE ***" token in the cover letter with the specified subject. The generated patches are suitable for sending via sendmail. Signed-off-by: Darren Hart <dvhart@linux.intel.com> CC: Nitin A Kamble <nitin.a.kamble@intel.com> CC: Richard Purdie <rpurdie@linux.intel.com> CC: Saul Wold <saul.wold@intel.com> CC: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com>
2010-11-06 13:42:28 +00:00
# If the user specified a message body, insert it into the cover letter and
# remove the BLURB token.
if [ -n "$BODY" ]; then
sed -i "/BLURB HERE/ r $BODY" "$CL"
sed -i "/BLURB HERE/ d" "$CL"
git-pull: add the new create-pull-request script The previous create-pull-request only generated a cover letter. When used to send to the list, it did not include the patches, which made it difficult to perform peer review. A pull request without patches is typically only sent by a maintainer. As we are not all maintainers, we need a means to easily submit patches for review. As we are accustomed to making pull requests, this script retains a git-pull-style cover letter, while sending the relevant patches as responses to the pull. This will provide the necessary context for peer review, and still allow people to collapse threads and see no more mail than they were previously. This version retains the relative_to, commit_id, and contrib_branch arguments from the original, along with their default values. It adds several more, resulting in a highly flexible tool. The script creates a pull directory (pull-$$ by default, configurable via the -o option) and populates it with a git-format-patch generated patch series and cover letter. The cover letter is modified to include the git and http pull URLs and branch name, as well as a basic signature from the author pulled from git's user.name and user.email config. git-format-patch provides the shortlog and diffstat of the series. Breaking a bit from the original, this script maintains the [PATCH] subject prefix in the cover letter (as opposed to [GIT PULL]. This is better suited to the majority of developers (who are not maintainers). This prefix is configurable with the -p option, allowing you to create an [RFC PATCH] prefix, for example. By default, the generated cover letter with contain "*** SUBJECT HERE ***" and "*** BLURB HERE ***" tokens which you should replace with something appropriate prior to sending the messages. When developing multiple versions of a patch series, it can save time to maintain a message.txt file, rather than having to retype the message body of the cover letter every time. The -m option allows you to specify a message file and replace the "*** BLURB HERE ***" token of the cover letter with the contents of the message file. Finally, the -s option will replace the "*** SUBJECT HERE ***" token in the cover letter with the specified subject. The generated patches are suitable for sending via sendmail. Signed-off-by: Darren Hart <dvhart@linux.intel.com> CC: Nitin A Kamble <nitin.a.kamble@intel.com> CC: Richard Purdie <rpurdie@linux.intel.com> CC: Saul Wold <saul.wold@intel.com> CC: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com>
2010-11-06 13:42:28 +00:00
fi
# If the user specified a subject, replace the SUBJECT token with it.
if [ -n "$SUBJECT" ]; then
sed -i -e "s/\*\*\* SUBJECT HERE \*\*\*/$SUBJECT/" "$CL"
git-pull: add the new create-pull-request script The previous create-pull-request only generated a cover letter. When used to send to the list, it did not include the patches, which made it difficult to perform peer review. A pull request without patches is typically only sent by a maintainer. As we are not all maintainers, we need a means to easily submit patches for review. As we are accustomed to making pull requests, this script retains a git-pull-style cover letter, while sending the relevant patches as responses to the pull. This will provide the necessary context for peer review, and still allow people to collapse threads and see no more mail than they were previously. This version retains the relative_to, commit_id, and contrib_branch arguments from the original, along with their default values. It adds several more, resulting in a highly flexible tool. The script creates a pull directory (pull-$$ by default, configurable via the -o option) and populates it with a git-format-patch generated patch series and cover letter. The cover letter is modified to include the git and http pull URLs and branch name, as well as a basic signature from the author pulled from git's user.name and user.email config. git-format-patch provides the shortlog and diffstat of the series. Breaking a bit from the original, this script maintains the [PATCH] subject prefix in the cover letter (as opposed to [GIT PULL]. This is better suited to the majority of developers (who are not maintainers). This prefix is configurable with the -p option, allowing you to create an [RFC PATCH] prefix, for example. By default, the generated cover letter with contain "*** SUBJECT HERE ***" and "*** BLURB HERE ***" tokens which you should replace with something appropriate prior to sending the messages. When developing multiple versions of a patch series, it can save time to maintain a message.txt file, rather than having to retype the message body of the cover letter every time. The -m option allows you to specify a message file and replace the "*** BLURB HERE ***" token of the cover letter with the contents of the message file. Finally, the -s option will replace the "*** SUBJECT HERE ***" token in the cover letter with the specified subject. The generated patches are suitable for sending via sendmail. Signed-off-by: Darren Hart <dvhart@linux.intel.com> CC: Nitin A Kamble <nitin.a.kamble@intel.com> CC: Richard Purdie <rpurdie@linux.intel.com> CC: Saul Wold <saul.wold@intel.com> CC: Bruce Ashfield <bruce.ashfield@windriver.com>
2010-11-06 13:42:28 +00:00
fi
# Generate report for user
cat <<EOM
The following patches have been prepared:
$(for PATCH in $(ls $ODIR/*); do echo " $PATCH"; done)
Review their content, especially the summary mail:
$CL
When you are satisfied, you can send them with:
send-pull-request -a -p $ODIR
EOM