Closed GoogleCodeExporter closed 8 years ago
I will have a think about how to handle this, its seems like an edge case
though. The
largest real-world log I currently test with is from the Linux Kernel, and
that's
only about 40 megs.
Thanks for the report.
Original comment by acaudw...@gmail.com
on 22 Jan 2010 at 11:42
Just to let you know this is a log from a real-world clear case. I was able to
get it
to display (albeit slowy) in codeswarm, since codeswarm supports a pre-sorted
log file.
Original comment by Dudley....@gmail.com
on 22 Jan 2010 at 4:11
Hi. This should be fixed now hopefully.
If the log file given to Gource is bigger than 100 megs, it will fall back to
just
seeking the file handle rather than loading the file into memory (which makes
the
seekbar feature a bit clunky, but should at least work).
http://gource.googlecode.com/files/gource-0.24-beta2.tar.gz
Original comment by acaudw...@gmail.com
on 31 Jan 2010 at 10:29
Dudley, would you be willing to share your script for creating the custom log
file
format from cleartool lshistory output? Thanks.
Original comment by djpotte...@gmail.com
on 8 May 2010 at 5:12
@djpotter77
Sure. I will need to dig it up, but I should be able to get it this week
sometime.
Original comment by Dudley....@gmail.com
on 9 May 2010 at 3:09
# This is the basic script which actually converts to a codeswarm format, but
you
# can easily modify it to work for gource. I actually wrote a separate script to
# convert from code_swarm to gource.
#!/usr/local/bin/python
"""
Take the output of the clear case history command
ct lshistory -all -fmt "Element: %n| Date: %d| User:%u| Operation: %e| Object:
%[type]p| SimpleType: %m| OperationKind: %o\n"
And turn it into something usable by code_swarm
"""
fileTypesWeCareAbout = [ 'compressed_file', 'compressed_text_file', 'file',
'html', 'text_file', 'xml']
import sys
import time
def processDate(date):
d = date[:-6]
d = time.strptime(d, "%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S")
return int(time.mktime(d))*1000
def processElement(e):
return e.split("@@")[0] # just strip off the version info
def processLineIntoTuple(line):
"""Take the line and split it out into a dictionary"""
d = {}
for i in line.split("|"):
l = i.split(":",1)
if (len(l)) == 2:
d[l[0].strip()] = l[1].strip()
else:
d[l[0].strip()] = ""
return d
def UseThis(d):
try:
if d['OperationKind'] != "checkin":
return 0
if d['Object'] not in fileTypesWeCareAbout:
return 0
except:
return 0
return 1
def XMLize(d):
print '<event date="%d" filename="%s" author="%s" />' % (d['Date'], d['Element'],
d['User'])
for x in sys.stdin.readlines():
d = processLineIntoTuple(x)
if UseThis(d):
d['Date'] = processDate(d['Date'])
d['Element'] = processElement(d['Element'])
XMLize(d)
Original comment by Dudley....@gmail.com
on 11 May 2010 at 7:31
Hi
Getting this error when running the script:
print <event date="%d" filename="%s" author="%s" /> % (d['Date'], d['Element'], d['User'])
^
SyntaxError: invalid syntax
What could be wrong?
thanks
Original comment by blomqvis...@gmail.com
on 24 Jun 2010 at 1:59
It looks like you are missing the single quotes around the first part.
You have:
print <event date="%d" filename="%s" author="%s" /> % (d['Date'], d['Element'], d['User'])
and it should be:
print '<event date="%d" filename="%s" author="%s" />' % (d['Date'], d['Element'], d['User'])
Original comment by Dudley....@gmail.com
on 24 Jun 2010 at 8:26
Original issue reported on code.google.com by
Dudley....@gmail.com
on 21 Jan 2010 at 7:56