These are the release notes for FCM release 1.1. You can use this release
of FCM freely under the terms of the FCM LICENSE, which you should receive
with the distribution of this release. Release 1.1 is the first external
release of FCM. (Release 1.0, 30 November 2005, was an internal Met Office
release which marked the start of the main migration of systems into FCM.)
FCM is maintained by the FCM team at the Met Office. Please feedback any
bug reports or feature requests to us by e-mail.
What's New?
Build system:
- Support building of Fortran
BLOCKDATA
program units.
- Option to generate Fortran interface files in lower case names after
their program units.
- Allow renaming of main program targets using the build configuration
file.
- The fcm_env.ksh file now provides an environment variable
for the etc/ sub-directory of the build which can be used if
you are building data files.
- The build root directory is now locked while a build is running. This
prevents multiple instances of build running in the same directory.
However, you can bypass the lock if you specify the new
--ignore-lock
option with fcm build
.
Extract system:
- The destination root directory is now locked while an extract is
running. This prevents multiple instances of extract running in the same
directory. However, you can bypass the lock if you specify the new
--ignore-lock
option with fcm extract
.
Code management commands:
fcm merge
now supports custom and reverse modes.
fcm merge
now allows automatic merges in sub-trees if it
is safe.
fcm merge
now handles automatic merges from sibling
branches that are created at different revisions of the parent.
fcm branch, fcm diff --branch
and fcm merge
can now handle creation, diff and automatic merge of a branch of a
branch.
fcm switch
is improved to allow safer switches of your
working copy to point to different branches in your project.
fcm commit
now displays your location in the branch, and
extra warning when you are committing to the trunk of a project.
- New
fcm mkpatch
command.
General:
- Error handling is improved.
- The User Guide is now complete, with a much improved tutorial.
- New document: Fortran coding standard for FCM.
Minor Enhancements & Bug Fixes
Build system:
- Ignore empty Fortran source files, so that alternate sections can be
handled correctly.
- Handle recursive header file dependency correctly in pre-processing
stage.
- Identify changes in pre-processed source file, the pre-processor
options and keys correctly in incremental builds.
- Improve speed of pre-processing in incremental builds by not performing
any unnecessary null-action pre-processing.
- Load archiver no longer includes main program objects.
- It is now possible for a sub-package to exclude particular types of
dependencies.
Extract system:
- Sub-directories are now extracted with the non-recursive mode of
svn export
.
- Peg revisions should now be handled correctly in INC extract
declarations.
- The command should now fail if a declared source directory does not
exist or if the update of an extract destination fails.
Code management commands:
fcm branch --info
and fcm diff
can now take a
PATH
as an argument.
- The
--ticket
option of fcm branch --create
can now accept multiple tickets.
fcm branch --info
and fcm diff --branch
should now work correctly in a sub-tree of a branch.
fcm branch --create
no longer offers to checkout the
branch.
fcm commit
no longer fails when adding a new symbolic
link.
- The
--password
option is now supported by the fcm
branch --create
, fcm branch --delete
, fcm
commit
and fcm delete
commands.
- Empty arguments to code management commands are now parsed
correctly.
- The
fcm diff --graphical
option no longer fails with
binary files.
- FCM will always set the environment variable LANG=en_GB
before running Subversion commands. This prevents failure of FCM when it
attempts to parse output from Subversion commands when a different
LANG setting is used.
General:
- Various other very minor enhancements and bug fixes.
System Requirements
Perl
The core part of FCM is a set of Perl scripts and modules. For the build
system to work, you need the following modules installed:
- Carp
- Cwd
- File::Basename
- File::Compare
- File::Find
- File::Path
- File::Spec::Functions
- File::Spec
- FindBin
- Getopt::Long
- POSIX
The code management commands and extract system need the following
additional modules installed:
- File::Temp
- Getopt::Long
- HTTP::Date
- XML::DOM
To use the simple GUI for some of the code management commands, you also
need the following modules:
At the Met Office we are currently using the complete FCM system with Perl
5.8.x. In addition the build system is being used with Perl 5.6.x.
Subversion
To use the code management commands (and relevant parts of the extract
system) you need to have Subversion installed.
- FCM makes extensive use of peg revisions in both the code management
and extract systems. This requires Subversion 1.2.0.
- At the Met Office we are currently using Subversion 1.3.2 (although
1.2.3 was used until very recently).
Note that the extract system can mirror extracted code to a remote
platform for building. Therefore it is only necessary to have Subversion
installed on the platform where you do your code development. If you use
other platforms purely for building and running then you do not need to have
Subversion installed on these platforms.
Trac
The use of Trac is entirely
optional (although highly recommended if you are using Subversion). At the
Met Office we are currently using version 0.9.6.
Other Requirements
The fcm diff --graphical
and fcm conflicts
commands require xxdiff. At the Met
Office we are currently using version 3.1.
The build system requires GNU make. At the Met Office
we are currently using version 3.79.x and 3.80.
Optionally, the build system can use f90aib to generate
interface files. However, there is also a built in Perl based interface file
generator which is quicker and better in most cases so you are unlikely to
need f90aib unless you hit a problem with some particular code.
FCM is intended to run on a Unix/Linux system. It is currently used at the
Met Office on Linux (Red Hat 9 and Red Hat Enterprise 2.1 and 4.4) and HP-UX
11.00.
Installation
FCM is distributed in the form of a compressed tar file. Un-pack the tar
file into an appropriate location on your system. Then add the
bin/ directory into your PATH. Once you have done this
you should now have full access to the FCM system, assuming that you have met
the requirements described in the previous section.
If you wish to define keywords for your systems you will need to create a
file etc/fcm.cfg. An example file, fcm.cfg.eg, is
provided which is a copy of the file currently used at the Met Office. For
further details please refer to the section FCM keywords in the System
Admin chapter of the User Guide.
The doc/ directory contains all the system documentation.
- doc/release_notes/ contains these release notes. It also
contains the release notes for all previous versions which may be useful if
you have skipped any versions.
- doc/user_guide/ contains the FCM User Guide in both
HTML and PDF form.
- doc/design/ contains the FCM Detailed
Design document (currently in draft form).
- doc/standards/ contains the FCM Perl and Fortran coding standards. The Perl
standard describes the standards followed by the FCM code. The Fortran
standard contains some specific advice on the best
way of writing Fortran code for use with FCM as well as more general advice
on good practise.
The tutorial/ directory contains the files necessary to set
up a tutorial repository. This will allow you to follow the tutorial section in the
User Guide.
- The file tutorial/repos/tutorial.dump should be loaded
into an empty repository using the
svnadmin load
command.
- The hook scripts in tutorial/hook/ should then be
installed in this repository in order to prevent any commits to the trunk.
Note that the configuration file svnperms.conf assumes that
the tutorial repository is called tutorial_svn. Please edit
this file if you use a different name.
- The repository should be configured to allow users write access. You
may find it easiest to simply allow anonymous access.
- A Trac system should be configured associated with the Tutorial
repository. You then need to allow users write access. You may find it
easiest to set up a number of guest accounts for this purpose.
The templates/ directory contains various example scripts
which you may find useful. Note that these scripts are all specific to the
Met Office and may contain hard coded paths and email addresses. They are
provided in the hope that you may find them useful as templates for setting
up similar scripts of your own. However, they should only be used after
careful review to adapt them to your environment. The contents are as
follows:
- templates/hook/pre-commit
-
This script restricts write-access to the repository by checking the
following:
- It executes the Subversion utility
svnperms.py
if it
exists. This utility checks whether the author of the current
transaction has enough permission to write to particular paths in the
repository.
- It checks the disk space required by the current transaction. It
fails the commit if it requires more than 5Mb of disk space.
- templates/hook/post-commit
- A simple post-commit hook script which runs the script
post-commit-background
in the background.
- templates/hook/post-commit-background
-
This script runs in the background after each commit.
- It updates a <repos>.latest file with the latest
revision number.
- It creates a dump of the new revision.
- It calls the script
background_updates.pl
if it
exists.
This script is installed as standard in all our repositories.
- templates/hook/background_updates.pl
- An example of how you may want to set up a
background_updates.pl
script to perform post-commit tasks for
a specific repository. This script uses a lock file to prevent multiple
commits in quick succession from causing problems.
- templates/hook/pre-revprop-change
- A simple pre-revprop-change hook script which runs the script
pre-revprop-change.pl
.
- templates/hook/pre-revprop-change.pl
- If a user attempts to modify the log message of a changeset and he/she
is not the original author of the changeset, this script will e-mail the
original author. You can also set up a watch facility to monitor changes of
log messages that affect particular paths in the repository. For further
details please refer to the section Watching changes in log
messages in the System Admin chapter of the User Guide.
- templates/hook/post-revprop-change
- A simple post-revprop-change hook script which runs the script
post-revprop-change.py
.
- templates/hook/post-revprop-change.py
- This hook script updates the Trac SQLite database following a
successful change in the log message.
- templates/utils/cron_template.ksh
- An example of how you might set up a cron job to make use of the
<repos>.latest file.
- templates/utils/daily_cron
- The cron job which we run each night. It verifies and backs up each of
our repositories, housekeeps the revision dumps created by
post-commit-background
and backs up each of our Trac systems.
It also handles the distribution of FCM to various platforms at the Met
Office.
- templates/utils/fcm_add_trac.pl
- This script sets up a new Trac system and applies some configuration
options which we use by default at the Met Office.
- templates/utils/recover_svn.pl
- This script allows us to recover all of our Subversion repositories by
using the nightly backups and the repository dumps.