glibc/sync-upstream.sh
Siddhesh Poyarekar 3708995e5f Have the commit log and changelog reflect the nature of upstream sync
Write the commit log and changelog in the spec file in a manner that
reflects the fact that the sync was done by a script.
2014-04-10 17:44:05 +05:30

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#!/bin/sh
# Given a git source repo, generate a tarball from the desired branch, modify
# the spec file and upload it to lookaside cache if the tarball unpacks and
# gets patched cleanly.
#
# Usage:
#
# 1. Invoke the script as follows:
#
# ./sync-upstream.sh upstream-repo
#
# where upstream-repo is the path to the synced upstream git repo.
#
# 2. Watch the script run. If it proceeds to building the package, then
# everything seems good and you just need to test the build after it
# is complete. If it exits before the build (you'll know if you read
# the output of the script) then manual intervention is required to
# complete the sync. This will typically happen when a patch fails
# to apply on the new sources.
set -e
# We want to sync from master by default. Change this if you want to sync from
# another branch.
branch=master
# We can't do anything without an upstream repo
if [ $# -ne 1 ]; then
echo "Usage: $0 <path-to-upstream-repo>" 1>&2
exit 1
fi
upstream=$1
srcdir=$(git --git-dir=$upstream/.git describe $branch)
cursrc=$(sed -ne 's/^%define glibcsrcdir \(.*\)/\1/p' glibc.spec)
# Upstream has not moved forward since the last sync.
# TODO: Some time in the future, we might want to only sync when upstream has
# advanced more than a certain number of commits, say, 42.
if [ "$cursrc" = "$srcdir" ]; then
echo "+ Already in sync with upstream."
exit 0
fi
# Generate and gzip the tarball from the desired branch of the repository.
echo "+ Generating tarball."
git --git-dir="$upstream/.git" archive --prefix="$srcdir/" "$branch" \
> "$srcdir.tar"
gzip -9 "$srcdir.tar"
echo "+ Created $srcdir.tar.gz"
# Our changelog header
cldate=$(date +'%a %b %d %Y')
clname=$(git config --get user.name)
clemail=$(git config --get user.email | sed 's/@/\\@/')
# Getting our version and release number from the spec file.
nv=$(perl -ne 's/^%define glibcversion (.+)/printf("%s-", $1)/e;' \
-e 's/^%define glibcrelease ([0-9]+).*/printf("%d\n", $1 + 1)/e;' \
glibc.spec)
# Our changelog entry.
changelog="* $cldate $clname <$clemail> - $nv\n- Auto-sync with upstream $branch.\n"
# Change the glibcsrcdir variable, bump up the release number and add an extra
# entry to the changelog.
echo "+ Updating spec file."
perl -pi \
-e "s/^(%define glibcsrcdir ).+/\$1$srcdir/;
s/^(%define glibcrelease )(\d+)/print(\$1); print(\$2 + 1);'';/e;
s/^(%changelog)$/\$1\n$changelog/" \
glibc.spec
function prep_failed {
# fedpkg prep failed.
if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then
echo "+ Source prep failed."
echo "+ Check the output in $tmpfile and fix things before committing."
false
fi
}
echo "+ Testing if fedpkg prep works."
tmpfile=$(mktemp fedpkg-prep.out-XXXX)
trap prep_failed EXIT
fedpkg prep > "$tmpfile" 2>&1
# Remove mess created by fedpkg prep
rm -f "$tmpfile"
rm -rf "$srcdir"
echo "+ Source prep is clean, so we're good to go."
fedpkg new-sources "$srcdir.tar.gz"
git commit -a -m "Auto-sync with upstream $branch."
fedpkg push
fedpkg build
echo "+ Done!"