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* Very mature -- in use for 14 years, many large projects, etc.
7
* "Essential process can be learned in a day" -- which is still kind
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of a long time; i'd like it to be well under an hour.
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* Good process integration; show who is supposed to be working on what
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and how far through they are.
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* Very poor Windows support.
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* Distributed repositories. (??)
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* Very focussed on security -- can reproduce any previous revision;
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availability/integrity/confidentiality; uses Unix permissions and
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seteuid() to prevent users changing the database.
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* Does not itself track history -- assumes this will be done by some
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other tool such as RCS operating on the baseline.
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* I think every individual project needs a single baseline. (??)
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* The baseline is always working and always releasable -- to the
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extent that you have scripts which can enforce this.
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* Integration step is somewhat similar to that used by distributed
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systems. It seems that you could build some features of aegis as
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policy macros on top of Bazaar-NG.
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* The baseline also contains object files built from current source,
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which can be used to pre-populate working directories. Also people
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only need a copy of the source files they're changing. I think the
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economics of this have changed a bit. Also tends to assume all
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developers are on the same Unix host, which is no longer generally
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* Only one review/integration can be in process at a time.
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* One process difference is that developers produce all changes;
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reviewers/integrators can only accept or reject them. This is
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different from the integrator-makes-right model of many distributed
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tools. (Though the integrator still has the choice to reject, but
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they have the option of fixing it too.)
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* Can automatically append Signed-off-by field. Interesting idea. I
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wonder if we should have a metadata facility to include licence
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* Much of the functionality of Aegis is to prevent people doing things
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they could otherwise do. That can be useful in enforcing a healthy
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process but bazaar-ng is not the place for it.
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* Can serialize an (in-progress) changeset to text, and then mail from
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* Branches are an extension of the 'change' concept; they can be
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merged into the parent in the same way that a change can be.
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Merging branches onto the mainline seems to hit a similar problem to
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that of centralized branches. If someone else has committed, you
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need to make a new changeset reconciling all their changes, commit
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that to the child branch, then commit everything to the parent.
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This suggests a different way to do shared branches in Bazaar-NG:
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You can push to the parent if you incorporate either directly or
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by merger all changes on the parent. That means that everything
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someone has committed to the parent is present in some way in your
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branch. By extension, it is safe to transform the parent text
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into your branch without losing anything. We can therefore
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remotely record that changeset to the parent. This is more or
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The problem with this in the Bazaar-NG model is that then the new
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commit will be only in the parent, and not on the child. So if
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you run ``bzr log`` on the child, you won't see what you just
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committed. We can't apply it to both because the predecessor is
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different. (darcs could do that, but it has a looser patch
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Overall, the process model is good for a particular type of
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organization. It would be good to build this on top of Bazaar-NG. To
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- patches are submitted, rather than being directly written in
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- arbitrary levels of branching/review
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- users can submit changes to branches they are not directly allowed
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- branches can be cleanly removed when they're no longer necessary
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Interestingly, the BitKeeper model which is criticized__ by Greg
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Hudson is similar to that of Aegis: a single integrator (or small
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team?) who ultimately decide what gets into the main tree.
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__ http://web.mit.edu/ghudson/thoughts/bitkeeper.whynot
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The Aegis workflow can probably be `emulated in bzr <workflow.html>`_.