p4 depot
Create or edit a depot specification.
A branch, depot, label, and workspace may not share the same name.
Syntax
p4 [g-opts] depot [-t type] depotname
p4 [g-opts] depot -d [-f] depotname
p4 [g-opts] depot -o [-t type] depotname
p4 [g-opts] depot -i
This command behaves differently for depots of type
graph
. For details, see the section
Working with depots of type graph.
Description
The
Helix Server
stores files in shared repositories called depots. By default,
there is one local
depot named depot
on every
Helix Server
installation.
To create or edit a depot, use p4 depot
depotname
and edit the fields in the depot spec
form. Depots can be of type local
, stream
,
remote
, archive
, spec
,
unload
, tangent
, or graph
.
Specifying the -t
option creates a depot spec that is
custom-made for the depot type you specify. For example, the following
command:
$ p4 depot -o [-t stream] mystreamdepot
Creates the following depot spec:
Depot: mystreamdepot Owner: user Date: 2015/07/21 15:57:50 Description: Created by user. Type: stream StreamDepth: //mystreamdepot/1 Map: mystreamdepot/...
You can edit this spec or you can pipe the output stream to the
p4 depot
command as follows to create the depot:
$ p4 depot -o [-t stream] mystreamdepot | p4 depot -i
A depot created with p4 depot
is not physically
created on disk until files have been added to it with p4 add
. Users are not able to
access a new depot created with p4 depot
until the
ability to access the depot is granted with p4 protect
.
Form Fields
Field Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
|
Read-Only |
The depot name as provided in Be aware of the Limitations on characters in filenames and entities. |
|
Writable |
The user who owns the depot. By default, this is the user who created the depot. The specified owner does not have to be a Helix Server user. You might want to use an arbitrary name if the user does not yet exist, or if you have deleted the user and need a placeholder until you can assign the spec to a new user. |
|
Writable |
A short description of the depot’s purpose. Optional. |
|
Writable |
local,
|
|
Writable |
If the If the |
|
Writable |
If the The default suffix is If the |
|
Writable |
For stream depots, the optional depth to be used for stream paths in the depot, where depth specifies the number of slashes following the depot name of a stream. See Working with stream depots. This field is used when streams are being created. The default is 1, matching the traditional stream name. You cannot update this value once streams or archive data exist in a depot. |
|
Writable |
If the If the For more information, see Providing map information. |
|
Writable |
For spec depots, an optional description of which specs should be saved, expressed as a view. |
Options
|
Delete the depot depotname. The depot must not contain
any files; the
Helix Server
superuser can remove files with If the depot is The name of a depot may not be the same as the name of a branch, client workspace, or label. |
|
By default, when you delete a depot, the directory specified by
the |
|
Read a depot specification from standard input. |
|
Write a depot specification to standard output. |
|
The type of the depot: |
|
See Global options. |
Usage Notes
Can File Arguments Use Revision Specifier? | Can File Arguments Use Revision Range? | Minimal Access Level Required |
---|---|---|
N/A |
N/A |
|
Providing map information
For a local depot, the Map
field specifies the filesystem
location of the archive contents for files in the depot. This location
can be either relative or absolute. To store a depot’s versioned files on
another volume or drive, specify an absolute path in the Map
field. This path need not be under P4ROOT
.
- If the location is absolute, for example,
/p4/depots/depot/...
, no further interpretation is needed. -
If the location is relative, for example,
Ace/...
, the location is interpreted relative to the value ofP4ROOT
, unless theserver.depot.root
configurable is set, in which case it is interpreted relative to the value of that variable.Take care if you introduce the
server.depot.root
form of addressing in an existing installation. If you want to set it to a value other thanP4ROOT
, you should first update your existing depotMap
values to make sure they are all absolute. You can then set theserver.depot.root
variable without disrupting anything. After that, you can go back and update your existing depot maps if you so desire.
Working with remote depots
If you are using remote
depots, the machine that hosts the
Perforce
service (that is, the machine specified in P4PORT
) is configured to permit
your
Helix Server
application to read files from a different
Perforce
service. Remote depots are restricted to read-only access;
Helix Server
applications cannot add
, edit
,
delete
, or integrate
files in the depots on the
other servers. For more information about remote depots, see the
Helix Core Server Administrator Guide: Fundamentals.
Remote depots are accessed by a virtual user named remote
(or, if configured, by the service user configured for the service that
originates the request), and by default, all files on any
Helix Server
installation can be accessed remotely. To limit or eliminate remote
access to a particular server, use p4
protect
to set permissions for user
remote
(or the accessing site’s service user) on that
server.
For example, to eliminate remote
access to all files in all
depots on a particular server, set the following permission on that
server:
read user remote * -//...
Because remote depots can only be used for read
access, it
is not necessary to remove write
or super
access.
Neither service users nor the virtual remote
user consume
Helix Server
licenses.
If your server accesses remote depots by means of a service user, your service user must have a valid ticket for the server that is hosting the remote depot.
Working with spec depots
The spec
depot, if present, tracks changes to user-edited
forms such as client workspace specifications, jobs, branch mappings, and
so on. There can be only one spec
depot per server. Files in
the spec depot are automatically generated by
Helix Server, and
are represented in
Helix Server
syntax as follows:
//
specdepotname
/formtype
/objectname
[suffix
]
For instance, if the spec depot is present and named spec
,
and uses the default suffix of .p4s
, you can obtain the
history of changes to job000123
by typing:
p4 filelog //spec/job/job000123.p4s
After you have created the spec depot, use p4 admin
updatespecdepot
to pre-populate it with current set of
client, depot, branch, label, typemap, group, user, and job forms. For
more information about setting up a spec depot, see the
Helix Core Server Administrator Guide: Fundamentals.
For spec depots, the SpecMap:
field can be used to control
which specs are versioned. By default, all specs
(//spec/...
) are versioned. To exclude the protections table
from versioning, configure the spec depot’s SpecMap:
as
follows:
SpecMap: //spec/... -//spec/protect/...
Adding or changing the spec mapping only affects future updates to the spec depot; files already stored in the spec depot are unaffected.
Working with stream depots
You use a stream
depot to store the streams you create and
work with. You need to provide the following information when creating a
stream depot: name, owner, date, type, and stream depth.
By default, the stream depth is 1, which specifies that streams are stored one level below the depot name. For example:
//myStreamDepot/myStream1 //myStreamDepot/myStream2 //myStreamDepot/myStream3
You can specify a different depth when you create the stream depot. This
determines the subdirectory level where you want to root your streams.
For example, if you specify 3 for StreamDepth
, your depot
might look like one of these:
//myStreamDepot/A/B/myStream1 //myStreamDepot/A/B/myStream2 //myStreamDepot/A/C/myStream3
You might want to increase the stream depth to identify the project to which your streams belong or to identify the organizational group that is responsible for those streams. In general, it is best to keep the depth as low as possible.
Observe the following limitations with respect to stream depth:
- All streams in a stream depot must be rooted at the same subdirectory
level, which is given by the value of
StreamDepth
. -
You may not change the name of a stream.
For example if a stream is named as follows:
//myStreamDepot/A/B/myStream1
You cannot rename it either to this (changing the depth of the stream):
//myStreamDepot/A/myStream1
or this:
//myStreamDepot/A/B/myNewStream
Working with depots of type graph
A depot of type graph
is used to store Git repos in the
Helix Server .
To create a depot of type graph
named
graphDepot1
, issue the following command:
p4 depot -t graph graphDepot1
To display a list of depots of type graph
, issue the
following command:
p4 depots -t graph
A default depot of type graph named repo
is automatically
created when the
Helix Server
server is created or upgraded to 2017.1 or later.
After you create a Git repo or a graph depot, p4 depots
lists all
depots, whether or not they are of type graph
.
A depot of type graph
does not use the p4
protect
mechanism at the file level. Instead, a graph depot
supports the Git model with a set of permissions for an entire
repository (repo
) of files. For details, see p4
grant-permission
.
For in-depth information on working with depots of type
graph
, see the
Helix4Git Administrator Guide.
Related Commands
To list all depots known to the Helix Server |
|
To populate a new depot with files |
|
To add mappings from an existing client workspace to the new depot |
|
To remove all traces of a file from a depot |
|
To limit remote access to a depot |
|
To archive files into an archive depot |
|
To restore files from an archive depot |