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NAMEaegis integrate pass - pass a change integration SYNOPSISaegis -Integrate_Pass [ option... ]
DESCRIPTIONThe aegis -Integrate_Pass command is used to notify aegis that a change has passed integration. The change is advanced from the being integrated state to the completed state. boxwid = 1 down box "being" "integrated" arrow " integrate" ljust " pass" ljust box "completed" This command updates the file histories, so that future aecp(1) commands may extract previous file versions from history, and so that future aed(1) commands may merge out‐of‐date files. The history is updated using the history_create_command and history_put_command fields of the project configuration file (see aepconf(5) for more information). The integrate pass will abort with an error if one of these history commands should fail, e.g. by running out of disk space. If this should happen, the change will remain in the being integrated state, and the integration directory is unaltered. Once the history has been updated, the integration directory is renamed as the baseline directory, and the old baseline directory is deleted. Once integrate pass is complete the change is no longer assigned to the current user. History Tools Modify FilesMany history tools (e.g. RCS and SCCS) can modify the contents of the file when it is committed. This usually requires the use of specific “keyword” strings, and there are usually options to turn this behavior off, but users familiar with version control tools (as opposed to configuration management systems) will often use these features. The problem is that if the commit changes the file, the source file in the repository now no longer matches the object file in the repository. I.e. the history tool has compromised the referential integrity of the repository. By default, a fatal error is emitted if the file is changed by the check‐in, however this can be modified to a be warning or even ignored completely; see the history_put_trashes_file field of aepconf(5) for more information. File Modification TimesThe modification times of all files modified since the beginning of integration (see aeib(1) for more information) are updated to be since the beginning of integrate pass. The order of modification times will be preserved, however the time range will be compressed to the greatest extent possible. This ensures that subsequent development builds will notice that baseline files have changed. Note that if there are many new files with all different timestamps in the integration directory, and if the number of files with different timestamps exceeds the number of seconds since the start of the integrate‐pass command, Aegis may have to set file modification times into the future. The build_time_adjust field of the project config file controls Aegis' behavior in this case. (See aepconf(5) for more information.) There are three settings:
If you use cook(1), see the time‐adjust‐back flag for how to compress the time range even further. This usually makes the sleep (or the warning period) significantly shorter. NotificationOn successful completion of this command, after the directory rename has ocurred and after the database has been updated, the integration_pass_notify_command field of the project attributes is run, if set. See aepattr(5) and aepa(1) for more information. This command is run as the project owner. Some compilers bury absolute path names into object files and executables. The renaming of the integration directory to become the new baseline breaks these paths. The above command is passed an environment variable called AEGIS_INTEGRATION_DIRECTORY so that the appropriate symlink may be placed, if desired. Other commands run by this command include the history_create_command, history_put_command and history_query_command fields of the project config file. See aepconf(5) for more information. THE BASELINE LOCKThe baseline lock is used to ensure that the baseline remains in a consistent state for the duration of commands which need to read the contents of files in the baseline. The commands which require the baseline to be consistent (these include the aeb(1), aecp(1) and aed(1) commands) take a baseline read lock. This is a non‐exclusive lock, so the concurrent development of changes is not hindered. The command which modifies the baseline, aeipass(1), takes a baseline write lock. This is an exclusive lock, forcing aeipass(1) to block until there are no active baseline read locks. It is possible that one of the above development commands will block until an in‐progress aegis -Integrate_PASS completes. This is usually of short duration while the project history is updated. The delay is essential so that these commands receive a consistent view of the baseline. No other integration command will cause the above development commands to block. When aegis' branch functionality is in use, a read (non‐exclusive) lock is taken on the branch baseline and also each of the "parent" baselines. However, a baseline write (exclusive) lock is only taken on the branch baseline; the "parent" baselines are only read (non‐exclusive) locked. The History LockWhere a project has a number of branches active simultaneously, it is possible for independent integrate pass commands for different branches to be issued very close together. The is an exclusive history lock taken by integrate pass to ensure that only one branch is updating the file history at a time, thus preventing history file corruption. TEST CORRELATIONSThe “aegis -Test -SUGgest” command may be used to have aegis suggest suitable regression tests for your change, based on the source files in your change. This automatically focuses testing effort to relevant tests, reducing the number of regression tests necessary to be confident that you have not introduced a bug. The test correlations are generated by the “aegis -Integrate_Pass” command, which associates each test in the change with each source file in the change. Thus, each source file accumulates a list of tests which have been associated with it in the past. This is not as exact as code coverage analysis, but is a reasonable approximation in practice. The aecp(1) and aenf(1) commands are used to associate files with a change. While they do not actively perform the association, these are the files used by aeipass(1) and aet(1) to determine which source files are associated with which tests. Test Correlation AccuracyAssuming that the testing correlations are accurate and that the tests are evenly distributed across the function space, there will be a less than 1/number chance that a relevant test has not been run by the “aegis -Test -SUGgest number” command. A small amount of noise is added to the test weighting, so that unexpected things are sometimes tested, and the same tests are not run every time. Test correlation accuracy can be improved by ensuring that:
The best way for tests to correlate accurately with source files is when a change contains a test and exactly those files relating to the functionality under test. Too many spurious files will weaken the usefulness of the testing correlations. METRICSAegis is capable of recording metrics as part of the file attributes of a change. This allows various properties of files to be recorded for later trend analysis, or other uses. The specific metrics are not dictated by Aegis. It is expected that the integration build will create a metrics file for each of the source files the change. These metrics files must be in the format specified by aemetrics(5). The name of the metrics file defaults to “filename,S”, however it may be varied, by setting the metrics_filename_pattern field of the project config file. See aepconf(5) for more information. If such a metrics file exists, for each source file in a change, it will be read and remembered at integrate pass time. If it does not exist, Aegis assumes there are no relevant metrics for that file, and proceeds silently; it is not an error. OPTIONSThe following options are understood:
See also aegis(1) for options common to all aegis commands. All options may be abbreviated; the abbreviation is documented as the upper case letters, all lower case letters and underscores (_) are optional. You must use consecutive sequences of optional letters. All options are case insensitive, you may type them in upper case or lower case or a combination of both, case is not important. For example: the arguments “-project”, “-PROJ” and “-p” are all interpreted to mean the -Project option. The argument “-prj” will not be understood, because consecutive optional characters were not supplied. Options and other command line arguments may be mixed arbitrarily
on the command line, after the function selectors.
The GNU long option names are understood. Since all option names for aegis are long, this means ignoring the extra leading '-'. The “--option=value” convention is also understood. RECOMMENDED ALIASThe recommended alias for this command is csh% alias aeipass 'aegis -ipass \!* -v' sh$ aeipass(){aegis -ipass "$@" -v} ERRORSIt is an error if the change is not assigned to the current user.
EXIT STATUSThe aegis command will exit with a status of 1 on any error. The aegis command will only exit with a status of 0 if there are no errors. ENVIRONMENT VARIABLESSee aegis(1) for a list of environment variables which may affect this command. See aepconf(5) for the project configuration file's project_specific field for how to set environment variables for all commands executed by Aegis. SEE ALSO
COPYRIGHTaegis version 4.25.D510
The aegis program comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY; for details
use the 'aegis -VERSion License' command. This is free software and
you are welcome to redistribute it under certain conditions; for details use
the 'aegis -VERSion License' command.
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