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Preamble
========
Tmux on SourceForge has two git repositories [1] "tmux-code" and "tmux-openbsd".
Here's a description of them:
* "tmux-code" is the portable version, the one which contains code for other
operating systems, and autotools, etc., which isn't found or needed in the
OpenBSD base system.
* "tmux-openbsd" is the version of tmux in OpenBSD base system which provides
the basis of the portable tmux version.
Note: The "tmux-openbsd" repository is actually handled by "git cvsimport"
running at 15 minute intervals, so a commit made to OpenBSD's tmux CVS
repository will take at least that long to appear in this git repository.
(It might take longer, depending on the CVS mirror used to import the
OpenBSD code).
It is assumed that the person doing the sync has read/write access to the
tmux-code repository on SourceForge already.
If you've never used git before, git tracks meta-data about the committer
and the author, as part of a commit, hence:
% git config [--global] user.name "Your name"
% git config [--global] user.email "you@yourdomain.com"
Note that, if you already have this in the global ~/.gitconfig option, then
this will be used. Setting this per-repository would involve not using the
"--global" flag above. If you wish to use the same credentials always,
pass the "--global" option, as shown.
This is a one-off operation once the repository has been cloned, assuming
this information has ever been set before.
Cloning repositories
====================
This involves having both tmux-code and tmux-openbsd cloned, as in:
% cd /some/where/useful
% git clone ssh://${USER}@git.code.sf.net/p/tmux/tmux
% git clone ssh://${USER}@git.code.sf.net/p/tmux/tmux-openbsd
Note that you do not need additional checkouts to manage the sync -- an
existing clone of either repositories will suffice. So if you already have
these checkouts existing, skip that.
Adding in git-remotes
=====================
Because the portable "tmux-code" git repository and the "tmux-openbsd"
repository do not inherently share any history between each other, the
history has been faked between them. This "faking of history" is something
which has to be told to git for the purposes of comparing the "tmux" and
"tmux-openbsd" repositories for syncing. To do this, we must reference the
clone of the "tmux-openbsd" repository from the "tmux-code" repository, as
shown by the following command:
% cd /path/to/tmux-code
% git remote add obsd-tmux file:///path/to/tmux-openbsd
So that now, the remote "obsd-tmux" can be used to reference branches and
commits from the "tmux-openbsd" repository, but from the context of the
portable "tmux-code" repository, which makes sense because it's the "tmux"
repository which will have the updates applied to them.
Fetching updates
================
To ensure the latest commits from "tmux-openbsd" can be found from within
"tmux-code", we have to ensure the "master" branch from "tmux-openbsd" is
up-to-date first, and then reference that update in "tmux-code", as in:
% cd /path/to/tmux-openbsd
% git checkout master
% git pull
Then back in "tmux-code":
% cd /path/to/tmux-code
% git fetch obsd-tmux-code
Creating the necessary branches
===============================
Now that "tmux-code" can see commits and branches from "tmux-openbsd" by way
of the remote name "obsd-tmux", we can now create the master branch from
"tmux-openbsd" in the "tmux-code" repository:
% git checkout -b obsd-master obsd-tmux/master
Adding in the fake history points
=================================
To tie both the "master" branch from "tmux-code" and the "obsd-master"
branch from "tmux-openbsd" together, the fake history points added to the
"tmux-code" repository need to be added. To do this, we must add an
additional refspec line, as in:
% cd /path/to/tmux-code
% git config --add remote.origin.fetch '+refs/replace/*:refs/replace/*'
% git fetch origin
Performing the Sync
===================
Make sure the "master" branch is checked out:
% git checkout master
The following will show commits on OpenBSD not yet synched with "tmux-code":
% git log master..obsd-master
From there, merge the result in, fixing up any conflicts which might arise.
% git merge obsd-master
Then ensure things look correct by BULDING the result of that sync:
% make clean && ./autogen.sh && ./configure && make
Compare the git merge result with what's on origin/master -- that is, check
which commits you're about to push:
% git log origin/master..master
And if happy:
% git push origin master
Release tmux for next version
=============================
1. Comment the "found_debug=yes" line in configure.ac, since releases
don't have debugging enabled, otherwise make(1) aborts when
preparing the distribution.
2. Update and commit NOTES and CHANGES. The former should be checked for
anything outdated and updated with a list of things that might break
upgrades and the latter should mention all the major changes since
the last version.
3. Tag with:
% git tag -a 1.X
Where "1.X" is the next version.
Push the tag out with:
% git push 1.X
4. Build the tarball with make dist. Now that it's using autoconf there
shouldn't be any weird files (such as the original and rejection files
from patch(1)) but it doesn't hurt taking a quick look at it.
5. Split the release changes into a new file. This should be named
tmux-$VERSION-readme to make sourceforge show it automagically in specific
parts of the project page.
6. Upload the tarball and the above file. Make the tarball the default
download by selecting all operating systems under the file details.
7. Run make update-index.html upload-index.html to replace %%VERSION%%.
8. Bump version in configure.ac and uncomment "found_debug=yes" to create
a debug build by default.
9. Update freshmeat.
[1] https://sourceforge.net/p/tmux/_list/git