# vitis_git Trying to make Vitis more git-friendly. ### Requirements - Tested on Vitis 2020.2 ### How it works Vitis is a little bit less pain in the ass than Vivado to version control decently, so this repository provide: - A good to start with `.gitignore` file. - Git-hook-scripts to eliminate absolute paths in project files. ### Workflow #### Create new project 1. When first starting a project, create the workspace in a new folder. 2. Copy the hardware specification file (.xsa) into the workspace folder. 3. Create a new platform project called `hw_platform` and choose the copied hardware specification file. 4. Create a new application project via `File -> New -> Application Project...`, choose the platform created befor and name the application project as you want. 5. Copy the `.gitignore` file and the `.githooks` folder from this repository into the workspace folder. 6. Execute the following commands in the workspace folder: - `git init` - initialize git repository in the workspace folder. - `git config --local core.hooksPath .githooks` - set path to git-hooks for this repository. - `git add .` - add all relevant files to the repository. - `git commit -m 'initial commit'` - create initial commit. #### Clone existing project 1. After cloning the repository execute the following commands in the cloned folder: - `git config --local core.hooksPath .githooks` - set path to git-hooks for this repository. - `git checkout BRANCH` - checkout the BRANCH you want to work with (e.g. `master`) which create local project files (because the hook script will be executed now ; this could take a while). 2. Open Vitis and select the cloned folder as workspace. 3. Click on `Inport Project`, choose `Import projects from Git` and click `Next >`. 4. Choose `Existing local repository` and click `Next >`. 5. Choose the cloned / workspace folder (should be the only entry) and click `Next >`. 6. Choose `Import existing Eclipse projects` and click `Next >`. 7. Leave everything unchanged and click `Finish`.