<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<commit>
  <added type="array">
    <added>
      <filename>common.py</filename>
    </added>
    <added>
      <filename>jira-apply</filename>
    </added>
  </added>
  <modified type="array"/>
  <removed type="array"/>
  <parents type="array">
    <parent>
      <id>acdc607da35409c9dfd3c0e263b6c13766d2038e</id>
    </parent>
  </parents>
  <author>
    <name>Eric Evans</name>
    <email>eevans@racklabs.com</email>
  </author>
  <url>http://github.com/eevans/git-jira-attacher/commit/b002ab0a0cd4d7c9f3801df4e8664e9fc3711053</url>
  <id>b002ab0a0cd4d7c9f3801df4e8664e9fc3711053</id>
  <committed-date>2009-05-07T14:03:29-07:00</committed-date>
  <authored-date>2009-05-07T13:57:16-07:00</authored-date>
  <message>initial commit of jira-apply (read on)

This basically the inverse of git-jira-attacher, it reads attached patches
from Jira (the ASF instance by default), and allows you to apply them to
the tree in your working directory. For example:

eevans@achilles:~$ jira-apply -u urandom -p2 cassandra-151
Password:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ID No.    : 1
Filename  : 151.patch (text/x-patch)
Author    : jbellis
Created   : 2009-05-07 20:06:04
Size      : 4307 bytes
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Attachment ID(s) to apply?  1
patching file src/java/org/apache/cassandra/service/CassandraServer.java
patching file test/system/test_server.py

This is likely still pretty rough so consider it an alpha.</message>
  <tree>e79e8e038be1d666278c341c3375b5c423c6272b</tree>
  <committer>
    <name>Eric Evans</name>
    <email>eevans@racklabs.com</email>
  </committer>
</commit>
