I have a script that is automating author re-writes on a number of git repositories.
def filter_history(old, new, name, repoPath):
command = """--env-filter '
an="$GIT_AUTHOR_NAME"
am="$GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL"
cn="$GIT_COMMITTER_NAME"
cm="$GIT_COMMITTER_EMAIL"
if [[ "$GIT_COMMITTER_NAME" = "|old|" ]]
then
cn="|name|"
cm="|new|"
fi
if [[ "$GIT_AUTHOR_NAME" = "|old|" ]]
then
an="|name|"
am="|new|"
fi
export GIT_AUTHOR_NAME="$an"
export GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL="$am"
export GIT_COMMITTER_NAME="$cn"
export GIT_COMMITTER_EMAIL="$cm"
'
"""
#DO string replace
command = command.replace("|old|", old)
command = command.replace("|new|", new)
command = command.replace("|name|", name)
print "git filter-branch -f " + command
process = subprocess.Popen(['git filter-branch -f', command],cwd=os.path.dirname(repoPath), shell=True)
process.wait()
The command executes fine, but tells me that nothing changed in the repo history. However, if I take the command that is printed out (which should be what is being executed), drop it in a shell script, and execute it, it changes the history fine. I think that the command is somehow not being executed correctly. Is there any way for be to see exactly what command the subprocess module is executing?