Instead of being instance state, it's passed around. This isn't a big
deal internally since most of the users are protected, and the only time
an external change is required is a couple of places in msubprojects,
which is fine because the information is available.
Fixes: #12869
A rebase of the current branch is the wrong thing to do if the
revision (branch) specified in the wrap changed, which is the case in
the majority of cases, such as when switching from one release branch
to another.
Don't leave the subproject tree in a broken / conflicting state. The
user is most likely not a git expert who will know what magic command
to run to fix their source tree.
The method can be overridden by setting the `method` key in the wrap
file and always defaults to 'meson'. cmake.subproject() is still needed
in case specific cmake options need to be passed.
This also makes it easier to extend to other methods in the future e.g.
cargo.
The interpreter takes significant amount of time to initialize
everything in project() function. We only need to extract a string from
AST, just like we do in handle_meson_version_from_ast().
- Do not hardcode terminal width of 100 chars, that breaks rendering on
smaller terminal. It already uses current console width by default.
- Disable progress bar when downloading from msubprojects because it
fetches multiple wraps in parallel.
- Scale unit when downloading e.g. MB/s.
- Do not display rate when it's not a download.
- Do not display time elapsed to simplify the rendering.
In commit 8da060706c we fixed an issue
where stashing would ignore untracked files, potentially conflicting
with what we reset to.
Unfortunately in the process it broke the functionality entirely, by
producing an invalid git command... according to some versions of git.
This is actually a git bug, fixed upstream in git 2.37.0 via commit
b02fdbc80a41f73ceb6c99e8e27b22285243a335. It causes git itself to
re-synthesize the command line for a negation pathspec with a "."
rather than "", as that's what is needed to make it match all files
other than the negation.
For backwards compatibility to older versions of git, we manually pass
the dot pathspec ourselves.
`get_event_loop()` would always implicitly create one on demand, but
Python upstream has decided it's a bad/confusing API. Explicitly
starting our own, then setting it, is exactly equivalent other than not
being scheduled for deprecation.
Save off the hash of the wrap file when first configuring a subproject.
When reconfiguring a subproject, check the hash of the wrap file
against the stored hash. If they don't match then warn the user.
We have a fallback route in `meson subprojects download` and friends,
which tries to retrieve wrapdb urls via http, if Python was not built
with SSL support.
Stop doing this. Replace it with a command line option to specify that
insecure downloads are wanted, and reference it in the error message if
downloading fails due to SSL issues.
In some cases, init variables that accept None as a sentinel and
immediately overwrite with [], are migrated to dataclass field
factories. \o/
Note: dataclasses by default cannot provide eq methods, as they then
become unhashable. In the future we may wish to opt into declaring them
frozen, instead/additionally.
This will re-apply the meson.build patch overlay, ensuring it is up to
date. Also take the opportunity offered by this infrastructure to
repatch when performing `update --reset` since internally this will run
`git stash` and thus cause the (possibly locally modified) meson.build
files to disappear.
This reverts commit 4568482316.
As it turns out, the rationale for this was completely bogus. This
command doesn't re-apply the patch_directory etc. and in fact there is
no command whatsoever that does this. So, this command does not have two
purposes, and we are not making one of them more robust -- instead it
has one purpose, and we are making it lie about whether it failed.
Instead of trying to freeload off of this command, we will just add
another command to properly apply patch overlays.
This command is useful to e.g. update a cloned subproject which does not
have its packagefiles merged, or which has updated packagefiles. This
does not strictly require internet, so if we can satisfy the ref, simply
log a warning and continue.
This enables a workflow where for network-isolated builds, the
subproject is cloned and moved into place and later on the build
orchestrator runs `meson subprojects update` without a network interface
to initialize the subproject.
If the command fails for one subproject we should still continue with
others. Failed subprojects are reported at the end.
This issue became more problematic when doing parallel tasks because the
reason the command fails was completely hidden by other parallel tasks.
Logs are printed only when the task is done to not interleave logs while
running multiple tasks in parallel. That means that nothing is printed
until the task is done and that could take time.
This moves all the code into a class and call its run() method in a
thread. The class queues all logs to print them at the end to avoid
mixing output of multiple actions.
This will help facilitate cache busting in certain situations, and
replaces hand-rolled solutions of writing a length command to remove
various files/folders within the subprojects directory.
When using --reset we should guarantee that next reconfigure will pick
the latest code. For wrap-file we have no way to know if the revision
changed, so we have to delete the source tree and extract again.
It is unlikely that user has local changes in non-git subprojects, and
--reset is known to be dangerous.
Otherwise it's not possible to share git subprojects via worktrees
when creating a worktree of a git repository that uses meson
subprojects.
The downside is that the user needs to be careful while adding commits
to each tree's index.