schhist - Graphical revision history of schematics ================================================== The schhist system walks the git revision history of a KiCad project and produces Web-browseable graphical differences of the schematics. It does so by checking out each revision from git, sanitizing the project to prevent problems what would cause eeschema to stop and display an error dialog, using eeschema to "plot" the project to Postscript, making some small adjustments (position, line width) to the Postscript, converting it to PPM with Ghostscript, making a pixel-wise comparison of revisions, and arranging the resulting images in an HTML page. Further more, sub-pages with magnifications and PDF files are generated. This work is distributed under the terms of the GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE, Version 2: This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. For your convenience, a copy of the complete license has been included in the file COPYING.GPLv2. schhist2web ----------- Web-browseable graphical revision history of schematics ... subschname2file --------------- Translate a subsheet's name to the sheet file's name ... sanitize-profile ---------------- Remove items from a KiCad profile that may cause an upset ... sanitize-schem -------------- Remove items from KiCad schematics that may cause an upset ... gitsch2ps --------- Generate PS files for KiCad schematics in git ... normalizeschps -------------- Normalize eeschema Postscript ... ppmdiff ------- Mark differences in two PPM files ... schps2pdf --------- Generate PDF files from Eeschema Postscript ... schps2ppm --------- Generate PPM files from normalized Eeschema Postscript ... gitenealogy ----------- Trace the ancestry of a file in git across renames ... gitwhoareyounow --------------- gitwhoareyounow is used to find a single identity for files that have been renamed in the history of a project. E.g., if a file foo.c is created in revision 1 (assuming successive revisions numbered 1, 2, etc.) and renamed to bar.c in revision 2, gitwhoareyounow would then return the name bar.c for this file in any revision we consider. gitwhoareyounow has to be given a repository in which the historical commit has been checked out, and the name the file had in that commit. Example: $ git init $ date >foo.c # git add foo.c # git commit -m "foo.c, rev 1" $ git mv foo.c bar.c $ git commit -m "foo.c renamed to bar.c, rev 2" $ git checkout HEAD~1 $ ls foo.c $ gitwhoareyounow . foo.c bar.c Multiple files may use the same identity - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - E.g., if a file foo.c is created in revision 1, deleted in revision 3, and then a new file named foo.c is created in revision 4, gitwhoareyounow would call both of them foo.c Multiple files sharing the same identity can conflict - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - E.g., taking the first example with foo.c renamed to bar.c in revision 3, if a file bar.c existed in revision 1 but was deleted in revision 2, gitwhoareyounow running on revision 1 would identify both the foo.c and the bar.c as bar.c gitwhoareyounow does not try to resolve such conflicts. This is already complex enough as it is :-)