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This page describes conventions and best practices applicable to the Fedora Git repository.

h2.

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 Line endings

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All text files must be normalized so that lines terminate in the unix style (LF).  Please do not commit files that terminate in CRLF\!

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h4. Configuring git to enforce LF normalization

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There are several way to enforce LF normalization.  Each method carries some consequences, and the consequences & methods differ between versions of Git.

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autocrlf property

Normalization rules for all text files can be addressed by the 'autocrlf' configuration property. There are two useful values for this property, depending on your platform

  • autocrlf = input. Use on unix-like platforms. This will perform no conversion upon checkout, but will normalize any crlf files upon commit.
  • autocrlf = true. Use only on Windows platforms. This will have the effect of converting all text files into dos-style (CRLF) in the working copy upon checkout. Upon commit, all files will be normalized to LF on their way into the repository, but remain in CRLF in the local working copy directory.

This property can be set globally for all local git repositories, or locally for a single git repository.

The autocrlf property can be set globally via the command line. For example:

Code Block


h5. {{autocrlf}} property

Normalization rules for all text files can be addressed by the 'autocrlf' configuration property.  There are two useful values for this property, depending on your platform
* autocrlf = input.  Use on unix-like platforms.  This will perform no conversion upon checkout, but will normalize any crlf files upon commit.
* autocrlf = true.  Use *only* on Windows platforms.  This will have the effect of converting all text files into dos-style (CRLF) in the working copy upon checkout.  Upon commit, all files will be normalized to LF on their way into the repository, but remain in CRLF in the local working copy directory.

This property can be set globally for all local git repositories, or locally for a single git repository.

The {{autocrlf}} property can be set *globally* via the command line.  For example:
{code}
git config --global core.autocrlf input
{code}
Executing this command is identical to editing your \~/.gitconfig file and adding:

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{code
}
[core]
        autocrlf=input

The autocrlf property can also be set locally for a given git repository, such as the local clone of the fcrepo. For example, from within the local working directory:

Code Block

{code}


The {{autocrlf}} property can also be set *locally* for a given git repository, such as the local clone of the fcrepo.  For example, from within the local working directory:
{code}
git config core.autocrlf input
{code}
Executing this command is identical to editing the .git/config file within the git working directory and adding:

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{code
}
[core]
        autocrlf=input
{code}

h5. {{.gitattributes}} file

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The presence of a committed {{.gitattributes}} file within the code can also be used to apply line-ending rules.  This has the benefit of being part of the managed sources (and this part of a given branch, tag, etc), but is not understood by all versions of git.  The fedora master branch has a .gitattributes file containing {\*  text=auto}, which instructs git to detect text files, and normalize to LF at each commit.


h5.

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 Git 1.7.1 and earlier

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Earlier versions of git do not understand the necessary directives in {{.gitattributes}} file, so {{autocrlf}} is the only way to assure compliance with the LF normanlization.

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  • Unix and mac users should set autocrlf = input either globally or locally
  • Windows users should set autocrlf = auto either globally or locally.

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  Thus

* Unix and mac users should set {{autocrlf = input}} either globally or locally
* Windows users should set {{autocrlf = auto}} either globally or locally.

These versions of git may apply/detect autocrlf settings to all files in the working copy immediately.  Thus, if checking out older branches/tags/commits that still have crlf files in the repository, these files will be seen as automatically 'modified' when doing a 'git status'.  This may have confusing side-effects.

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h5. Git 1.7.2\+

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These versions of git heed the {{.gitattributes}} directive, so it is not strictly necessary to set autocrlf, but it is recommended.

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These versions of git will apply the autocrlf setting to *new* files - preventing the introduction of non-normalized crlf files into the repository, but ignoring existing crlf files.

h4.

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 Working with older branches