Creating A View in Clearcase

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Chapter 4.

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Chapter 4. Setting Up a View


This chapter describes how to set up a new ClearCase view for a development project.

Note: Your organization may have policies or restrictions as to where you can create a view. For example, you might be required to use a particular disk that is part of a strictly-observed data-backup scheme. And in some organizations, individual users are not permitted to create their own views. Consult with your system administrator before actually creating any views.

Planning the View


Before creating a view, consider how, and by whom, it will be used:

Should other users be able to read data in your view (perhaps the contents of a source file that you have checked out and edited)? Should other users be able to write data in your view (perhaps you will occasionally share the view with another user)? Will the view be used principally, or exclusively with a particular VOB or a small, localized set of VOBs? Will the view be used to export one or more VOBs to non-ClearCase hosts?

Keep in mind that others users working on the same project do not necessarily need to explicitly access your view in order to share your work. When you build software with clearmake, the resulting derived objects are automatically sharable. On the source level, a typical strategy is to have each project member use a separate, personal view; but all these views are configured with the same config spec. With this strategy, each user's changes to checked-out source files and directories will be visible only to that user. When the user checks in a version, the changes become visible to all other group members all those using like-configured views.

Adjust Your `umask'

Your umask(1) setting at the time you create a view affects how accessible it will be to others. For example:

A umask of 002 is appropriate for a view that you will share with other users in the same group. Members of your group will be able to create and modify view-private data; those outside your group will be able to read view-private data, but won't be able to modify it. To completely exclude non-group members, set your umask to 007. A umask of 022 will produce a view in which only you can write data, but anyone can read data. A umask of 077 is appropriate for a completely private view. No other user will be able to read or write view-private data.

Change your umask in the standard way. For example:


% umask 022

Choose a Location
A view is implemented as a view storage directory, with an associated view_server process. Accordingly, ClearCase imposes these requirements on view creation:

You can create a view storage directory only in locations where you have permission to create a standard directory. The view_server process runs on the host where the view storage directory physically resides; ClearCase must be installed on that host.

A typical location for a view is your home directory. At some sites, however, a user's home directory may fail to meet the second requirement it may be located on a file-server host where ClearCase is not installed. If the view will be used to access a particular VOB, placing the view on the same host as the VOB may provide a significant reduction in network traffic. In general, we don't advise placing additional loads on a VOB server host; so save this technique for special cases for example, a shared view used for a final-integration-and-test task. Non-ClearCase access is a special case in which you should create a view on the same host as a VOB see Setting Up an Export View for Non-ClearCase Access, in the CASEVision/ClearCase Administrator's Manual. If you will be using the view on several hosts, make sure that the location at which you create the view can be accessed by all those hosts. For example, you use a view on several hosts at the same time when performing a distributed build. See Chapter 13, Setting Up a Distributed Build.

Choose a Name

In selecting new view's view-tag, take into account the fact that it will be a unique, network-wide identifier for the view.[1] Thus, names like myview, work, or tmpvu are to be discouraged. You, and perhaps other users, may often need to type the view-tag in view-extended pathnames for example, /view/view-tag/vobs/proj. Thus, try not to select a name that is too long or too hard to type correctly. Following are some suggested names:
josef akp_home akp_neptune RLS1.2_fix monet_exp

personal view personal view, located in your home directory personal view, located on remote host neptune shared view for use in a particular bugfixing task view to be used to export a VOB named monet

In any case, keep in mind the restriction that a view-tag must take the form of a simple directory name.

Creating the View


Having adjusted your umask (if necessary), selected a location for the view storage directory, and selected a view-tag, you are ready to create the view.

GUI: Use the View Browser to Create a New View


In xclearcase, bring up the View Browser, which displays information on all existing views. Then, select the Create menu choice.

CLI: Enter a `mkview' Command


Here's how to use cleartool to create the same view as in the preceding section:
% cleartool mkview -tag gomez ~/views/gomez.vws Created view. Host-local path: einstein:/home/gomez/views/gomez.vws Global path: /net/einstein/home/gomez/views/gomez.vws It has the following rights: User : gomez : rwx Group: dvt : rwx Other: : r-x

Verify the View's Registry-Level Information


When you create a view, ClearCase stores information regarding its location in the network-wide view storage registry. It derives this information heuristically; in some networks, you must update this information to guarantee global accessibility of your new view.

As the example above shows, mkview displays its guess as to a globally-valid pathname to the view storage directory:
... Global path: ...

/net/einstein/home/gomez/views/gomez.vws

If this pathname is not valid on all hosts in the network, you may be able to use the register command to substitute a globally-valid pathname in the storage registry entry. This topic is discussed in Chapter 3, Using the ClearCase Graphical User Interface, and Chapter 7, Setting Up ClearCase Views, , in the CASEVision/ClearCase Administrator's Manual.

Configuring the View


Before you start using your new view, you may need to revise its config spec, in order to select a particular configuration of source versions. Every view is created with the default config spec:
element * CHECKEDOUT element * /main/LATEST

In many organizations, new development takes place on the main branch, while special projects take place on subbranches. The default config spec is appropriate for new development work in such a situation. There are several ways to reconfigure a view with a non-default config spec:

Copy a project-specific file Your ClearCase administrator may publish the pathname of a file containing the correct config spec for your project. Use the setcs command to reconfigure your view; then use catcs to confirm the change. For example:
% % % . . . cleartool setview gomez cleartool setcs /usr/local/lib/munchkin_proj cleartool catcs <new config spec displayed>

If the administrator subsequently revises the contents of that file, you'll need to enter the same setcs command again to update your view's configuration.

Include a project-specific file Instead a copying a file, you can incorporate its contents with an include statement:
% cleartool setview gomez % cleartool edc . . use text editor to remove all existing lines, and then add this one: include /usr/local/lib/munchkin_proj

If the administrator subsequently revises the contents of that file, you can update your view's configuration by having the view_server reinterpret its current config spec:
% cleartool setcs -current

Compose your own config spec There is no single method for composing a set of rules that go into a config spec. The language described in the config_spec manual page has many features, and can be used to create many special effects. Having stated that proviso, we present below a step-by-step procedure for writing a config spec that uses the standard ClearCase baselevel-plus-changes model. Be sure also to consult: o Chapter 5, Defining View Configurations, which presents and explains a collection of config specs. o Chapter 6, Working in a Parallel Development Environment,, which examines in more detail the creation of the standard config spec for a project that is to work on a branch.

Composing Your Own Config Spec


A few simple questions are presented below, based on the assumption that your development proceeds according to a baselevel-plus-changes model. In a well-managed environment, the answers to the questions will be simple, too, and writing the correct config spec will be easy. What versions should the project start with? Describe the set of versions that make up the baselevel that constitutes the project's starting point. Typical answers are:

all the versions that went into Release 1.3 the versions of source files that went into Release 1.3, but use the Release 1.2 version of the libsort library all the versions that went into last night's build of the sortmerge executable

If the answer is the most recent versions on the main branch, then you should probably just use the default config spec. We'll assume that you wish to work with a more interesting set of versions. How can this set of versions be described in terms of ClearCase meta-data? Often, the translation from English-language description to ClearCase meta-data is very simple: the versions that went into Release 1.3 are all labeled RLS1.3 corresponds to this config spec rule:
element * RLS1.3

Similarly, the versions that went into last night's sortmerge build are listed in its config spec might correspond to:
element * -config sortmerge@@11-Mar.09:07.1559

Sometimes, the description is a bit more involved. It may help to think of simple sets of versions as being layers in a more complex configuration (See Figure 4-1). Figure 4-1. Layers in a Source Configuration

In this example, the RLS1.2 rule should precede the RLS1.3 rule, because the Release 1.2 versions of the libsort sources are to be selected in preference to (that is, are to be layered on top of) the Release 1.3 versions.

Note: It is very important to describe the set(s) of versions in terms of stable meta-data make sure that no one moves any of the RLS1.3 version labels, and never define a baselevel

in terms of the LATEST label, which automatically moves. Today's LATEST version of a source file may be compatible with the rest of your baselevel versions, but tomorrow's LATEST version of that file may be incompatible!

Will the project be modifying any source versions? For most projects, the answer is yes, in which case the config spec should begin with the standard CHECKEDOUT rule:
element * CHECKEDOUT

Some projects may not modify any sources for example, a performance-testing or QA project. On what branch will the project be working? Devise a new branch name that describes your project. Often, the branch name is related to a version label that defines the baselevel. For example, a rls1.3_fix branch might be used to modify a baselevel defined with RLS1.3 labels. The config spec should include a rule that selects the most recent version on the branch:
element * .../rls1.3_fix/LATEST

Note the use of ellipsis (...), which allows the branch to be located anywhere within an element's version tree, not just as a subbranch of the main branch. This rule should precede the rule(s) that define the project's baselevel versions created during the project are to be preferred to versions in the underlying baselevel. At some point before beginning work on the project, you (or an administrator) must create a branch type with the chosen name. Be sure to enter a meaningful comment:
% cleartool mkbrtype rls1.3_fix Comments for "rls1.3_fix": Branch for project fixing bugs in Release 1.3 (version label RLS1.3) . Created branch type "rls1.3_fix".

Note: Label types and branch types share a single namespace. Observe the convention of spelling names of label types with capital letters, and names of branch types with lowercase

letters.

Should branches be created automatically? We encourage you to answer yes. Using the view to work on a branch is much simpler if you let the view do the branching. When you wish to modify any element, you simply use checkout; if no project-specific branch has been created at the baselevel version yet, a mkbranch (make branch) command is executed automatically. Here's how you would modify the rules in Figure 2-1 that define the baselevel, in order to turn on this auto-make-branch capability:
element libsort/*.[ch] RLS1.2 -mkbranch rls1.3_fix element * RLS1.3 -mkbranch rls1.3_fix

If you've defined your baselevel by referencing one or more derived objects, you cannot use a mkbranch clause; you must create branches explicitly, using mkbranch. Will you be creating new elements? If so, include this rule from the default config spec as the final rule in your config spec:
element * /main/LATEST

We suggest that you include this rule in the auto-make-branch scheme, too:
element * /main/LATEST -mkbranch rls1.3_fix

With this rule, creating a new element will:


create a main branch, along with version 0 on the branch create subbranch rls1.3_fix at version /main/0, along with version /main/rls1.3_fix/0 checkout version /main/rls1.3_fix/0

If you will not be creating any new versions, your view may not need to select main branch versions of any elements. As a convenience, however, you may wish to include the standard /main/LATEST rule, to enable the view to access data belonging to other projects, located in other VOBs.

Modify the View's Config Spec

Having devised your own config spec (on paper), configure your view with it:
% cleartool edcs -tag gomez . . <use text editor to revise default config spec for example,> element * CHECKEDOUT element * .../rls1.3_fix/LATEST element libsort/*.[ch] RLS1.2 -mkbranch rls1.3_fix element * RLS1.3 -mkbranch rls1.3_fix element * /main/LATEST -mkbranch rls1.3_fix

Starting to Use the View


Now that your view is configured, you can start using it. (Actually, you can reconfigure a view at any time before or after you start using it.) This is termed establishing a view context a set view or a working directory view.

Setting a View
Typically, most of your work involves just one view. Moreover, you will probably want to use standard operating system pathnames to access version-controlled objects. For both these reasons, you will probably want to begin your ClearCase work by setting a view. This creates a process in which an element's standard name automatically accesses a particular version of that element the version selected by the view's config spec, as discussed above. This set view capability completes ClearCase's transparency feature the version-control mechanism disappears completely, allowing system software and third-party applications to process versions of elements as if they were ordinary files, using ordinary pathnames. A process with a set view can spawn any number of subprocesses, to any nesting level, using standard UNIX commands and subject to standard UNIX restrictions. All these subprocesses are also set to the view. Transparency also applies to derived objects, in a slightly different manner. The standard name of a DO can reference different files in different views. But a DO appears in a view by virtue of having been built there by clearmake, not through the config spec facility. GUI: Select the View from the View Browser Select View -> Set, which brings up the View Browser. Then, select a view from this browser. CLI: Enter a setview Command The cleartool subcommand setview creates a shell that is set to a specified view:

% cleartool setview gamma %

Tip: Include the view-tag in your shell prompt. See CASEVision/ClearCase Tutorial.

Working Directory View


When you are set to a particular view, you may still occasionally wish to access other views. For example, if you are set to view gamma, you can compare your version of util.c with the one selected by view alpha. Following are two ways to accomplish this.

While in a set view, use a view-extended pathname to reach into another view. See Figure 4-2. Figure 4-2. Reach Into Another View from Set View

Temporarily go to another view, then reach back to the set view. See Figure 4-3. Figure 4-3. Reach Back to Set View from Another View

In the second method, you change your current working directory (CWD) to another view that is, to a remote location in ClearCase's view-extended namespace. See Figure 1-6. This is termed changing your working directory view, and is reported by the pwv command like this:
% cleartool pwv Working directory view: alpha Set view: gamma

Using a Working Directory View without a Set View There may be some situations in which you find it necessary (or simply prefer) to use working directory view contexts, dispensing with the set view facility. For example, processes started by init(1M) at system startup time cannot be set to a view. Such a process can process VOB data only by referencing files with view-extended pathnames and/or by setting its current working directory to a view-extended pathname. If you routinely work with several views, you may find it easier to keep yourself organized by explicitly specifying the view context in which each pathname is to be interpreted. The following commands illustrate this mode of usage:
% cd (go to home directory) % cleartool pwv (no view context) Working directory view: ** NONE ** Set view: ** NONE ** (full pathname has no view context,) % ls /usr/hw/src/util.c (and so cannot access VOB data) ls: /usr/hw/src/util.c: No such file or directory % cd /view/akp/usr/hw/src (go to view-extended pathname) % cleartool pwv (you now have a) Working directory view: jj (working directory view context) Set view: ** NONE ** % ls util.c (relative pathname works, because it uses) util.c (your working directory view context)

Note: The standard full pathname is unable to access VOB data in this situation.

View Contexts: Summary


In deciding how to use views, bear in mind this capsule summary of the discussion in the preceding sections. When using ClearCase data, you must use a view without a view context,

a process or pathname cannot see into a VOB. A pathname can acquire a view context in several ways:

A set view endows any pathname with a view context. A working directory view endows a relative pathname with a view context (perhaps overriding a set view context) A view-extended pathname specifies a particular view context, perhaps overriding a working directory view and/or set view context.

dSymbolic links (either UNIX-level links or VOB symbolic links) can cause unexpected behavior if you have not set a view. For example, suppose your file system includes this symbolic link:
% ls -l /vobs/aardvark /vobs/aardvark -> /vobs/all_projects/aardvark

If your shell is not set to a view, you might attempt to visit the aardvark VOB with this command:
% cd /view/gamma/vobs/aardvark/src

But the component-by-component resolution of the pathname by the OS kernel effectively transforms this command to:
% cd /vobs/all_projects/aardvark/src

By specifying a full pathname, the symbolic link pops you out of the gamma working directory view context. And because your shell is not set to a view, the pathname will have no view context at all, and thus will fail. The same analysis applies to view-extended pathname. For example, changing the command from cd to cat or ls in the above scenario would produce the same failure to access ClearCase data. In consideration of this behavior, avoid creating UNIX-level or VOB-level symbolic links whose texts are full pathnames use relative pathnames only. For example:
% ls -l /vobs/aardvark /vobs/aardvark -> ../all_projects/aardvark

For more on this topic, see the pathnames_ccase manual page.

[1]

Actually, a view can have different tags in different network regions; and it can have multiple tags within the same region. Taking advantage of this flexibility increases the likelihood of user confusion, though.

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