Within a pre-commit script, is it possible (and if so, how) to identify commits stemming from an svn merge
?
svnlook changed ...
shows files that have changed, but does not differentiate between merges and manual edits.
Ideally, I would also like to differentiate between a standard merge
and a merge --reintegrate
.
Background:
I'm exploring the possibility of using pre-commit hooks to enforce SVN usage policies for our project.
One of the policies state that some directories (such as /trunk
) should not be modified directly, and changed only through the reintegration of feature branches. The pre-commit script would therefore reject all changes made to these directories apart from branch reintegrations.
Any ideas?
Update:
I've explored the svnlook
command, and the closest I've got is to detect and parse changes to the svn:mergeinfo
property of the directory. This approach has some drawback:
svnlook
can flag up a change in properties, but not which property was changed. (a diff with theproplist
of the previous revision is required)- By inspecting changes in
svn:mergeinfo
, it is possible to detect thatsvn merge
was run. However, there is no way to determine if the commits are purely a result of the merge. Changes manually made after the merge will go undetected. (related post: Diff transaction tree against another path/revision)
unfortunately subversion does not enforce merge only commits
if i have access to a branch, i can do whatever after merge and before commit
also subversion merge happens on client side
lot of code repository tools will merge on server. i.e. enforce that you are only moving patches from one stream to another
I've eventually resorted to a non-ideal solution, i.e. detecting changes in the
svn:mergeinfo
property in the top directory of the changes tree (implemented inSVNTransaction.is_merge_operation()
).We cannot differentiate between merge-only commits and commits that also include additional changes. This means all changes that occur under that tree will go undetected if committed along with a merge. A possible solution might be to diff the transaction tree against the merge source but I have not figured out how to achieve that yet (this will also need to take into account changes as a result of conflict resolutions).
It also cannot differentiate between a
merge
and amerge --reintegrate
.Other limitations include the reliance on
svn:mergeinfo
which is user-modifiable and not used in older version of subversion.The commit scripts in question is meant as a gentle reminder to flag commits that go against project guidelines rather than an access control mechanism, so the limitations listed above is not a show-stopper. However, I'm still on a lookout for improvements. Comments and further suggestions welcome.