Open GoogleCodeExporter opened 9 years ago
It would also be nice to have a rev-list endpoint. There are a lot of services
that will only be interested in the ordering of commits.
Original comment by szager@chromium.org
on 26 Sep 2013 at 5:43
I'd be willing to patch in the json support. Which fields were you interested
in having in the output? Are you looking at KeySet.SHORTLOG just like in the
html output?
Original comment by aval...@chromium.org
on 22 Oct 2013 at 2:35
from https://skia.googlesource.com/skia/+log/HEAD
I'd like to get the full git hash and associated commit time in unix seconds
for each row. Thanks.
Original comment by bens...@google.com
on 22 Oct 2013 at 2:39
Are CL descriptions and authors too much to add? If not, we might need them in
the future. Thank you.
Original comment by bens...@google.com
on 22 Oct 2013 at 2:41
FWIW, gwt-team is interested in at least commit hash id, subject, author name,
and author email.
Original comment by mdemp...@google.com
on 31 Oct 2013 at 5:41
First pass at:
https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/51324
Only supports the limit revision syntax already supported by +log; will
eventually be extended to have more git-rev-list-y options.
Original comment by dborowitz@google.com
on 1 Nov 2013 at 7:17
dborowitz: That looks great! Will log entries still be listed newest to oldest
like in the current view?
Tangentially, does +log have anything similar to git log's --reverse and/or
--max-count options? (In my use case, I'd ideally be able to query the
equivalent of "git log -5 --reverse $COMMIT..HEAD", but generally $COMMIT is
only a couple revisions behind HEAD anyway, so in practice it's fine that I
reverse and truncate the results myself.)
Original comment by mdemp...@google.com
on 1 Nov 2013 at 7:38
Ordering is the same as the HTML view of +log. No --reverse yet, that's in the
category of "more git-rev-list-y options".
The following change adds "n" as a limit parameter:
https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/51325
Original comment by dborowitz@google.com
on 1 Nov 2013 at 7:44
So "time" is not in Unix seconds, which means we still need to parse for
calculations.
Original comment by bens...@google.com
on 2 Nov 2013 at 12:46
Sure, but the string should be parseable by strptime(3), right? I stuck with
the form produced by git log, and also I prefer my JSON to be human-readable.
But if this is an impediment to scripts working I am open to alternatives.
Original comment by dborowitz@google.com
on 4 Nov 2013 at 7:01
I'll then parse the string in Java and Python to get unix time - thanks for the
explanation. It is nice to make it human-readable and let machines do the hard
work.
Original comment by bens...@google.com
on 4 Nov 2013 at 8:13
Doesn't matter to me, but why not provide both the human readable output and a
seconds-since-the-epoch count?
Original comment by mdemp...@google.com
on 4 Nov 2013 at 8:14
UNIX time in JSON is ugly. I much prefer a human readable time that is parsed
by machine using a known format. Gerrit's JSON feeds use ISO format "yyyy-mm-dd
hh:mm:ss.mmm" in UTC and demands clients to parse and reformat in their desired
timezone.
I also don't like the idea of presenting the same data twice in different
formats, it leaves room for errors like one field being filled in and the other
not, etc. Much better to have just one field in a well defined format. A human
readable time is easy for a human to write a parser around, they can see what
the format is, configure their time parsing library function to read it, and
move on.
Original comment by sop@google.com
on 4 Nov 2013 at 8:28
+1 to more filtering options, like --before/after.
Original comment by mmoss@chromium.org
on 9 Jun 2015 at 9:27
Original issue reported on code.google.com by
dborowitz@google.com
on 11 Apr 2013 at 7:29