FlightGear Git: splitting FGData: Difference between revisions

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** When pulling fgdata, one won't have to download several gigs of aircraft data. People will have to pull the base package, but any additional aircraft will be optional.
** When pulling fgdata, one won't have to download several gigs of aircraft data. People will have to pull the base package, but any additional aircraft will be optional.
** It will be easier for aircraft authors to check the history of their aircraft.
** It will be easier for aircraft authors to check the history of their aircraft.
** Commiting will go faster, because Git will no longer have to check those thousands of files to see whether they were edited.
* '''Disadvantages'''
* '''Disadvantages'''
** It will be harder to keep a local up to date copy of all aircraft. No more "git pull" to fetch all the latest updates.
** It will be harder to keep a local up to date copy of all aircraft. No more "git pull" to fetch all the latest updates.

Revision as of 15:06, 16 October 2011

Aircraft are split to seperate Git repositories, under the FlightGear Aircraft project at Gitorious.

Reasons to split fgdata

  • Advantages
    • Aircraft authors can get commit access to their own aircraft, without granting them global fgdata access.
    • When pulling fgdata, one won't have to download several gigs of aircraft data. People will have to pull the base package, but any additional aircraft will be optional.
    • It will be easier for aircraft authors to check the history of their aircraft.
    • Commiting will go faster, because Git will no longer have to check those thousands of files to see whether they were edited.
  • Disadvantages
    • It will be harder to keep a local up to date copy of all aircraft. No more "git pull" to fetch all the latest updates.
      • Might be fixed by using Git submodules.[1]
    • How to deal with licences? Until now there was a COPYING file in fgdata. When aircraft are split in seperate repositories, they'll likely need to include a license reference themselves.

Starting new aircraft

New aircraft should not be commited to fgdata. A seperate repository should be created instead. Contact a FlightGear Aircraft admin to get your repository included in the FlightGear Aircraft project. You, as author, will get full admin rights for that repository.

The current fgdata developers will have access to every single aircraft repository. In order to maintain aircraft that no longer have an active author, fix global bugs etc. Other users can create merge requests to get their fixes/improvements commited.

How to split an aircraft

  • You need to have up-to-date fgdata to do this.
  • Expect one aircraft to take 5-30 minutes (depending on the filesizes, number of commits (date of last commit?) etc.).
  • You need access to the FlightGear Aircraft project. However, for testing you can always push to your own repository.

There are two workflows that both do the trick:

Method 1

Note: the split branch (737-300-split in this example) must NOT exist beforehand.

cd $FG_ROOT 
git subtree split -P Aircraft/737-300 -b 737-300-split
mkdir -p ../split-aircraft/737-300
cd ../split-aircraft/737-300
git init
git fetch $FG_ROOT 737-300-split
git checkout -b master FETCH_HEAD
git push git@gitorious.org:flightgear-aircraft/737-300.git master

Method 2

(need to check this one)

cd fgdata
git clone --no-hardlinks /fgdata /737-300
git filter-branch --subdirectory-filter Aircraft/737-300 HEAD -- --all
git reset --hard
rm -rf .git/refs/original/
git reflog expire --expire=now --all
git gc --aggressive --prune=now
References