update N repos where N > 6
Chris Hegarty
chris.hegarty at oracle.com
Wed Aug 21 00:30:01 PDT 2013
hg clone -r <tag_id>
-Chris
On 21 Aug 2013, at 05:25, Ivan Krylov <ivan at azulsystems.com> wrote:
> Turned out that "hg clone source dest -u <tag>" is the same as "hg clone <source> <dest>"+"hg update <tag>".
> See attached log.
> I guess that even after clone -u tag the cloned repo still contains ALL tags and changesets and any accidental "hg update" will bring it to tip
> Thanks,
> Ivan
>
>
>
>
>
> On Aug 21, 2013, at 4:35 AM, David Holmes <david.holmes at oracle.com> wrote:
>
>> On 21/08/2013 2:38 AM, Ivan Krylov wrote:
>>> Hi David,
>>>
>>> I also expected it to work out of the box.
>>> I am attaching a log of what I did.
>>> After "hg up jdk7u25-b34" on master and "clone master to dev" and "get_source.sh" on dev repo I expected to set HSX 23 but I got HSX24.
>>> And this led me to my question.
>>
>> There is a difference between cloning another repo as-of a specific tag, and simply updating your working files to that tag. In the latter case your repo still has all changesets, hence a clone will also have all changesets.
>>
>> I think you need to use "hg clone -u <tag>" but then you would not be able to use get_source.sh to clone the rest of the forest.
>>
>> David
>>
>>> Thanks,
>>> Ivan
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> On Aug 20, 2013, at 2:43 PM, David Holmes <david.holmes at oracle.com> wrote:
>>>
>>>> On 20/08/2013 7:59 PM, Ivan Krylov wrote:
>>>>> This worked.
>>>>> I was trying to update to revision instead of updating to tag and this didn't work for subrepos.
>>>>>
>>>>> Another related question (i hope this isn't far off topic): suppose I have my own master repository that I synced to a given tag.
>>>>> I want all future clones made from my master to be also synced to the same tag without doing hg up <tag> in every child.
>>>>> How to do so?
>>>>
>>>> Doesn't it "just work" like that. If your repo is the master and only pulled down the changesets up to a certain tag then I would expect any clones of that repo would be limited by the same tag.
>>>>
>>>> Easy enough for you to test.. :)
>>>>
>>>> David
>>>>
>>>>> Thanks,
>>>>> Ivan
>>>>>
>>>>> On Aug 20, 2013, at 10:20 AM, Alexander Zuev <alexander.zuev at oracle.com> wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>> Ivan,
>>>>>>
>>>>>> instead of the separate repositories there are tags.
>>>>>> List of tags can be seen at http://hg.openjdk.java.net/jdk7u/jdk7u-dev/tags
>>>>>> So just clone the 7u-dev workspace and update it and all of the subrepositories to the desired tag
>>>>>> (latest build number of the needed update release). For example for jdk7u8 tag is jdk7u8-b05.
>>>>>> Just perform hg up jdk7u8-b05 in all the repos and you'll get it.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> The online archives for all the openjdk mailing lists can be found at
>>>>>> http://mail.openjdk.java.net/pipermail/<list_name>/
>>>>>> For this list it's http://mail.openjdk.java.net/pipermail/jdk7u-dev/
>>>>>> The full list of all the openjdk mailing lists can be found at
>>>>>> http://mail.openjdk.java.net/mailman/listinfo
>>>>>>
>>>>>> With best regards,
>>>>>> /Alex
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> On 8/20/13 24:46, Ivan Krylov wrote:
>>>>>>> Hello,
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> How to get an 7updateN repository where 6 < N < 40?
>>>>>>> There is no hg.openjdk.java.net/jdk7u/jdk7u25 repository as far as I see.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> This must have been discussed here many times before but I ma behind the times and searching online archives is painful )
>>>>>>> BTW, what would be a good place to browse/search openjdk mail aliases archives?
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Thanks,
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Ivan
>
> <cloning_not_from_a_tip.utf-8.2.txt>
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