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author | Martin Langhoff <martin@catalyst.net.nz> | 2006-03-01 20:03:58 +1300 |
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committer | Junio C Hamano <junkio@cox.net> | 2006-03-01 01:10:27 -0800 |
commit | 858cbfbabe4ede5f5eba32041eb7448319e53e2a (patch) | |
tree | e7b1bf1429588afd5f62771d8d874e2e252340d6 /git-cvsserver.perl | |
parent | 7172aabb4b5a6d0345b3c57f2f7ededece81b9b7 (diff) | |
download | git-858cbfbabe4ede5f5eba32041eb7448319e53e2a.tar.gz |
cvsserver: Eclipse compat - browsing 'modules' (heads in our case) works
Eclipse CVS clients have an odd way of perusing the top level of
the repository, by calling update on module "". So reproduce cvs'
odd behaviour in the interest of compatibility.
It makes it much easier to get a checkout when using Eclipse.
Diffstat (limited to 'git-cvsserver.perl')
-rwxr-xr-x | git-cvsserver.perl | 20 |
1 files changed, 20 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/git-cvsserver.perl b/git-cvsserver.perl index 344b2f398b..3c588c9d64 100755 --- a/git-cvsserver.perl +++ b/git-cvsserver.perl @@ -630,6 +630,26 @@ sub req_update argsplit("update"); + # + # It may just be a client exploring the available heads/modukles + # in that case, list them as top level directories and leave it + # at that. Eclipse uses this technique to offer you a list of + # projects (heads in this case) to checkout. + # + if ($state->{module} eq '') { + print "E cvs update: Updating .\n"; + opendir HEADS, $state->{CVSROOT} . '/refs/heads'; + while (my $head = readdir(HEADS)) { + if (-f $state->{CVSROOT} . '/refs/heads/' . $head) { + print "E cvs update: New directory `$head'\n"; + } + } + closedir HEADS; + print "ok\n"; + return 1; + } + + # Grab a handle to the SQLite db and do any necessary updates my $updater = GITCVS::updater->new($state->{CVSROOT}, $state->{module}, $log); |