# although slightly cut down.
[DEFAULT]
-# Teach mr how to run svn cleanup.
-cleanup = if [ -d "$MR_REPO"/.svn ]; then svn cleanup ; fi
-# And how to run git gc and push.
-gc = if [ -d "$MR_REPO"/.git ]; then git gc; fi
-push = if [ -d "$MR_REPO"/.git ]; then git push; fi
-# And how to list tags for git and svn.
+# Include all available libs.
+include = cat /usr/share/mr/* 2>/dev/null || true
+# Teach mr to run a few git and svn specific commands.
+svn_cleanup = svn cleanup "$@"
+git_gc = git gc "$@"
git_tag = git tag -l
-svn_tag =
- svn ls "$(LANG=C svn info . | grep -i ^URL: | cut -d ' ' -f 2 | sed -e 's/trunk/tags/')"
-# This hack is here because git-pull stupidly outputs tag info to stderr.
-# Shut it up but let real errors through, for use in cron.
-quietupdate = mr -s -n update 3>&1 1>/dev/null 2>&3 | egrep -v '(storing tag|tag: )' || true
-# Tests used in the skips below.
-# - wantsrc checks whether I probably want a full source checkout (quite
-# large)
-# - wantmedia checks whether I probably want various large media files
-# here.
-# - private are hosts I trust private data to
+svn_tag = svn ls "$(LC_ALL=C svn info . | grep -i ^URL: | cut -d ' ' -f 2 | sed -e 's/trunk/tags/')"
+# I prefer to git-svn rebase to fetch
+git_svn_update = git svn rebase
+# Tests used below.
+# - anon checks whether this is an anonymous checkout, by testing what url
+# $HOME uses
+# - full checks whether I probably want a full checkout (quite large),
+# if not, the checkout is minimal
+# - on checks whether the given host basename is one of the listed
+# values. A value can also have a username in it, ie "joey@dodo".
# - mylaptop only succeeds if it's on my main development laptop, which
# gets lots of extra cruft
-# - kite only succeeds on kite
-lib =
- wantsrc() {
- test "$(whoami)" = joey
+lib =
+ hostname="$(hostname)"
+ whoami="$(whoami)"
+ anon() {
+ ( GIT_CONFIG=$HOME/.git/config git config remote.origin.url || cat .git/remotes/origin ) | grep -q 'git://'
}
- wantmedia() {
- if [ "$(whoami)" = joey ]; then
- case "$(hostname)" in
- kodama|dragon|dodo)
- return 0
- ;;
- esac
- fi
- return 1
+ full() {
+ test "$whoami" = joey && ! anon
}
- private() {
- if [ "$(whoami)" = joey ]; then
- case "$(hostname)" in
- wren|kodama|dragon|dodo|bluebird)
+ on() {
+ for host in $@; do
+ if [ "${host%@*}" != "${host#*@}" ]; then
+ if [ "$whoami" != "${host%@*}" ]; then
+ continue
+ fi
+ host="${host#*@}"
+ fi
+ if [ "$hostname" = "$host" ]; then
return 0
- ;;
- esac
- fi
+ fi
+ done
return 1
}
mylaptop() {
- test "$(hostname)" = kodama
- }
- kite() {
- test "$(hostname)" = wren
+ on joey@gnu
}
-[src/mr]
-checkout = git clone ssh://git.kitenet.net/srv/git/kitenet.net/mr
-skip = ! wantsrc
+# The root of my home directory.
+[.]
+order = 1
+checkout =
+ if anon; then
+ git clone git://git.kitenet.net/joey/home joey
+ else
+ git clone ssh://git.kitenet.net/srv/git/kitenet.net/joey/home joey
+ fi
+
+[Maildir]
+# Dummy target to create Maildir. Doesn't run offlineimap since I have that
+# cronned on machines where I want it.
+update = :
+skip = ! full
+checkout = mkdir Maildir Maildir/cur Maildir/new Maildir/tmp; chmod 700 Maildir
+status = :
+
+[mail]
+checkout = git clone ssh://joey@git.kitenet.net/srv/git/joey/private/mail
+# I use mairix to index my mail archive; keep its index up-to-date.
+fixups = if [ "$(which mairix)" ]; then ionice -c 3 mairix -Q; fi
+skip = ! mylaptop
+
+[tmp]
+# This is a dummy target, all it does is run fixups at the end of
+# an update.
+fixups = $HOME/bin/fixups
+checkout = mkdir -p $HOME/tmp
+status = :
+order = 25
+
+[.etc]
+order = 2
+checkout =
+ if anon; then
+ git clone git://git.kitenet.net/joey/home-etc .etc
+ else
+ git clone ssh://git.kitenet.net/srv/git/kitenet.net/joey/home-etc .etc
+ fi
+
+[.cron]
+checkout =
+ if anon; then
+ git clone git://git.kitenet.net/joey/cron .cron
+ else
+ git clone ssh://git.kitenet.net/srv/git/kitenet.net/joey/cron .cron
+ fi
-[src/linux-2.6]
+[packages/perl]
+order = 30
+checkout = svn co svn+ssh://joeyh@svn.debian.org/svn/pkg-perl/trunk perl
+skip = ! mylaptop || ([ "$1" = update ] && ! hours_since "$1" 12)
+
+[linux-2.6]
+order = 20
checkout = git clone git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux-2.6.git
-skip = ! mylaptop || ! wantsrc ||
- ([ "$1" = update ] && ! hours_since "$1" 12)
+skip = ! mylaptop || ([ "$1" = update ] && ! hours_since "$1" 12)
+push = error "as if!"
+
+[/etc]
+# I use etckeeper to keep /etc in git. But it only works if I'm root,
+# and if it's not already in etc, skip it.
+skip = ! test -d /etc/.git || ! test "$(whoami)" = root
-[src/dpkg]
+[dpkg]
# A merge of the upstream dpkg git repo and my own personal branch.
-checkout =
+checkout =
git clone git://git.debian.org/git/dpkg/dpkg.git &&
cd dpkg &&
git remote add kite ssh://git.kitenet.net/srv/git/kitenet.net/dpkg &&
git fetch kite &&
git checkout -b sourcev3 kite/sourcev3
update = git pull origin master && git pull kite sourcev3
-commit = git push kite
-skip = ! wantsrc
+commit = git commit -a && git push kite
+push = git push kite
+skip = ! mylaptop
[html/www.debian.org]
# Still in CVS..urk!
-checkout =
- CVSROOT=:ext:joeyh@cvs.debian.org:/cvs/webwml
- cvs co -d www.debian.org webwml
+checkout = cvs -d ':ext:joeyh@cvs.debian.org:/cvs/webwml' co -d www.debian.org webwml
# cvs sucks sufficiently that I prefer to run these commands by hand,
# and only rarely
update = echo "skipping cvs update (too slow)"
status = echo "skipping cvs status (too ugly)"
-skip = ! mylaptop || ! wantsrc
-
-# My home directory, which I keep in svn.
-[]
-checkout = svn co svn+ssh://svn.kitenet.net/srv/svn/joey/trunk/home-$(hostname) joey
-# run svnfix after each update
-update = svn update && svnfix
-
-[mail]
-checkout = git clone ssh://git.kitenet.net/srv/git/kitenet.net/joey/private/mail
-skip = ! private
-
-# I don't keep my music in revision control, but mr can be taught to use
-# unison to synchronise it.
-[sound]
-checkout = unison -batch sound
-update = unison -batch sound
-commit = unison sound
-skip = ! wantmedia
-# Update this last of all.
-order = 100
-
-# Example of how to remember to delete a repo, when one mrconfig file is
-# used on multiple systems. If you're feeling brave, use rm -rf $MR_REPO
-# instead. This approach can also be used for renames.
-[foo]
-update = error "$MR_REPO is no longer used and should be deleted"
-skip = ! test -d "$MR_REPO"
+skip = ! mylaptop || ! full