Skip to content

TerabyteQbt/org.cmyers.examples

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

1 Commit
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

QBT Repository

What is this? This repository is a QBT repository. QBT is an open-source dependency management and repostiory stiching tool. Think of QBT as being similar to the android development tool "repo", or git with submodules, but with many additional features and benefits.

Where is the code?

QBT works by having an external metadata file in a separate metadata repository (usually called "meta") which refers to specific commits by sha1 in each code repository ("sattelites"). If you want to inspect the code, or build it, you need to find the metadata repository and clone it, then run QBT.

Usually, but not always, sattelite repositories are located next to the metadata repository on the server.

Why?

For reproducibility, the version specified in the metadata must be authoritative, but branches can be changed on the server and cannot themselves be versioned, so instead QBT uses a concept called "pins". The code in the sattelite is pushed ("pinned") to refs/qbt-pins/X where X is the sha1 of the commit. Because the branch itself is content-addressed, it can always be found (and should never be deleted, just like git objects).

If you insist upon manually inspecting the code, you can see the branches in the sattelite repositories using ls-remote:

git ls-remote <clone URL>

The best way to view the code is to use QBT. For details, see The Qbt Website.

What License is QBT released under?

QBT is released under the Apache 2.0 license, which you can find here.

The code built by QBT may be released under other licenses, so check the sattelite repositories and packages themselves for license information.

About

No description, website, or topics provided.

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published