checkoutmanager
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All your checkouts in one config file, one command to update/push/status/whatever them.
Checkoutmanager
Makes bzr/hg/git/svn checkouts in several places according to a
.checkoutmanager.cfg config file (in your home directory).
The advantage: you've got one command with which you can update all your checkouts. And with which you can ask for a list of uncommitted changes. And you can rebuild your entire checkout structure on a new machine just by copying the config file (this was actually the purpose I build it for: I had to change laptops when I switched jobs...).
Checkoutmanager works on linux, osx and windows.
Starting to use it
Starting is easy. Just pip install checkoutmanager and run
checkoutmanager.
-
The first time, you'll get a sample configuration you can copy to
.checkoutmanager.cfgin your home directory. -
The second time, you'll get a usage message. (You'll want to do
checkoutmanager coto grab your initial checkouts).
Generic usage
What I normally do every morning when I get to work is checkoutmanager up. This grabs the latest versions of all my checkouts from the server(s).
So an svn up for my subversion checkouts, a hg pull -u for mercurial
and so on.
From time to time, I'll do a checkoutmanager st to show if I've got some
uncommitted files lying around somewhere. Very handy if you've worked in
several directories throughout the day: it prevents you from forgetting to
check in that one bugfix for a whole week.
A new project means I add a single line to my config file and run
checkoutmanager co.
Checkoutmanager allows you to spread your checkouts over multiple
directories. It cannot mix version control systems per directory, however.
As an example, I've got a ~/buildout/ directory with my big svn website
projects checked out there. And a directory with my svn work python
libraries. And a ~/hg/ dir with my mercurial projects. And I've made
checkouts of several config directories in my home dir, such as
~/.emacs.d, ~/.subversion and so on. Works just fine.
Commands
Available commands:
exists Print whether checkouts are present or missing
up Grab latest version from the server.
st Print status of files in the checkouts
co Grab missing checkouts from the server
missing Print directories that are missing from the config file
out Show changesets you haven't pushed to the server yet
in Show incoming changesets that would be pulled in with 'up'. For some version control systems, this depends on the English output of the respective commands and is therefore inherently fragile.
Hidden commands
A few commands are hidden because they are seldom used and are only useful for subversion.
upgrade This upgrades the working copy to the new subversion 1.7 layout of the .svn directory. This should be done once after you have upgraded your subversion to 1.7. Note that when you accidentally run this twice you get an error, but nothing breaks. Since this command is so rarely needed, it is not advertised in the command line help.
info Display the svn info for the remote url. This is useful when your svn program has been updated and the security mechanisms on your OS now require you to explictly allow access to the stored credentials. The other commands either do not access the internet or are non-interactive (like command up). In fact, the reason for adding this command is that a non-interactive 'svn update' will fail when you have not granted access to your credentials yet for this new svn program. This has happened a bit too often for me (Maurits).
Output directory naming
If you don't specify an output directory name for your checkout url, it just takes the last part. To make life easier, we do have some adjustments we make:
-
https://xxx/yyy/product/trunkbecomesproductinstead oftrunk. (Handy for subversion). -
https://xxx/yyy/product/branches/experimentbecomesproduct_experimentinstead ofexperiment(Handy for subversion). -
https://xxx/customername/buildout/trunkbecomescustomernameinstead of "trunk" or "buildout". (Old convention we still support). -
Bzr checkouts that start with "lp:" (special launchpad urls) get their "lp:" stripped.
-
Git checkouts lose the ".git" at the end of the url.
-
If you want to preserve the directory configuration of your version control system, add the
preserve_treeoption to a group. It should contain one or more base checkout urls (one per line). If the checkout url starts with one of thepreserve_treeurls, the folder structure after it is preserved.With a
preserve_treeofhttps://github.com,https://github.com/reinout/checkoutmanagerbecomesreinout/checkoutmanagerinstead ofcheckoutmanager. Also handy for subversion, which often has nested directories.If the
preserve_treebase url isn't found, the standard rules are used, so you won't get an error.
If you want different behaviour from the defaults above, just specify a
directory name (separated by a space) in the configuration file after the
url. So https://github.com/reinout/checkoutmanager bla_bla becomes
bla_bla instead of checkoutmanager
Custom commands
You can write your own custom commands. To do that you need to create a Python
package and register an entry point in your setup.py for the
checkoutmanager.custom_actions target.
A test command is included with checkoutmanager and can serve as an
example. It is registered like this in checkoutmanager's own setup.py:
.. code:: python
entry_points={ 'checkoutmanager.custom_actions': [ 'test = checkoutmanager.tests.custom_actions:test_action' ] }
The entry point function must take one positional argument which will be the
checkoutmanager.dirinfo.DirInfo instance associated with the directroy
for which the command is being executed. The function can also take optional
keyword arguments. See checkoutmanager.tests.custom_actions.test_action for
an example.
Arguments are passed to the custom command using the following syntax:
.. code:: bash
checkoutmanager action:arg1=val1,arg2=val2
Config file
.. Comment: the config file is included into the long description by setup.py, it is in checkoutmanager/sample.cfg!
Sample configuration file::