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jerojasro@382
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1 \chapter{A tour of Mercurial: merging work}
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2 \label{chap:tour-merge}
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3
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4 We've now covered cloning a repository, making changes in a
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5 repository, and pulling or pushing changes from one repository into
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6 another. Our next step is \emph{merging} changes from separate
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7 repositories.
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8
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9 \section{Merging streams of work}
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10
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11 Merging is a fundamental part of working with a distributed revision
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12 control tool.
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13 \begin{itemize}
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14 \item Alice and Bob each have a personal copy of a repository for a
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15 project they're collaborating on. Alice fixes a bug in her
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16 repository; Bob adds a new feature in his. They want the shared
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17 repository to contain both the bug fix and the new feature.
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18 \item I frequently work on several different tasks for a single
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19 project at once, each safely isolated in its own repository.
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20 Working this way means that I often need to merge one piece of my
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21 own work with another.
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22 \end{itemize}
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23
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24 Because merging is such a common thing to need to do, Mercurial makes
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25 it easy. Let's walk through the process. We'll begin by cloning yet
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26 another repository (see how often they spring up?) and making a change
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27 in it.
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28 \interaction{tour.merge.clone}
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29 We should now have two copies of \filename{hello.c} with different
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30 contents. The histories of the two repositories have also diverged,
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31 as illustrated in figure~\ref{fig:tour-merge:sep-repos}.
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32 \interaction{tour.merge.cat}
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33
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34 \begin{figure}[ht]
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35 \centering
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36 \grafix{tour-merge-sep-repos}
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37 \caption{Divergent recent histories of the \dirname{my-hello} and
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38 \dirname{my-new-hello} repositories}
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39 \label{fig:tour-merge:sep-repos}
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40 \end{figure}
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41
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42 We already know that pulling changes from our \dirname{my-hello}
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43 repository will have no effect on the working directory.
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44 \interaction{tour.merge.pull}
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45 However, the \hgcmd{pull} command says something about ``heads''.
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46
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47 \subsection{Head changesets}
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48
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49 A head is a change that has no descendants, or children, as they're
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50 also known. The tip revision is thus a head, because the newest
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51 revision in a repository doesn't have any children, but a repository
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52 can contain more than one head.
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53
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54 \begin{figure}[ht]
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55 \centering
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56 \grafix{tour-merge-pull}
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57 \caption{Repository contents after pulling from \dirname{my-hello} into
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58 \dirname{my-new-hello}}
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59 \label{fig:tour-merge:pull}
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60 \end{figure}
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61
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62 In figure~\ref{fig:tour-merge:pull}, you can see the effect of the
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63 pull from \dirname{my-hello} into \dirname{my-new-hello}. The history
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64 that was already present in \dirname{my-new-hello} is untouched, but a
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65 new revision has been added. By referring to
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66 figure~\ref{fig:tour-merge:sep-repos}, we can see that the
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67 \emph{changeset ID} remains the same in the new repository, but the
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68 \emph{revision number} has changed. (This, incidentally, is a fine
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69 example of why it's not safe to use revision numbers when discussing
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70 changesets.) We can view the heads in a repository using the
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71 \hgcmd{heads} command.
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72 \interaction{tour.merge.heads}
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73
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74 \subsection{Performing the merge}
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75
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76 What happens if we try to use the normal \hgcmd{update} command to
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77 update to the new tip?
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78 \interaction{tour.merge.update}
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79 Mercurial is telling us that the \hgcmd{update} command won't do a
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80 merge; it won't update the working directory when it thinks we might
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81 be wanting to do a merge, unless we force it to do so. Instead, we
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82 use the \hgcmd{merge} command to merge the two heads.
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83 \interaction{tour.merge.merge}
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84
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85 \begin{figure}[ht]
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86 \centering
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87 \grafix{tour-merge-merge}
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88 \caption{Working directory and repository during merge, and
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89 following commit}
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90 \label{fig:tour-merge:merge}
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91 \end{figure}
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92
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93 This updates the working directory so that it contains changes from
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94 \emph{both} heads, which is reflected in both the output of
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95 \hgcmd{parents} and the contents of \filename{hello.c}.
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96 \interaction{tour.merge.parents}
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97
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98 \subsection{Committing the results of the merge}
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99
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100 Whenever we've done a merge, \hgcmd{parents} will display two parents
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101 until we \hgcmd{commit} the results of the merge.
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102 \interaction{tour.merge.commit}
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103 We now have a new tip revision; notice that it has \emph{both} of
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104 our former heads as its parents. These are the same revisions that
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105 were previously displayed by \hgcmd{parents}.
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106 \interaction{tour.merge.tip}
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107 In figure~\ref{fig:tour-merge:merge}, you can see a representation of
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108 what happens to the working directory during the merge, and how this
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109 affects the repository when the commit happens. During the merge, the
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110 working directory has two parent changesets, and these become the
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111 parents of the new changeset.
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112
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113 \section{Merging conflicting changes}
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114
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115 Most merges are simple affairs, but sometimes you'll find yourself
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116 merging changes where each modifies the same portions of the same
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117 files. Unless both modifications are identical, this results in a
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118 \emph{conflict}, where you have to decide how to reconcile the
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119 different changes into something coherent.
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120
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121 \begin{figure}[ht]
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122 \centering
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123 \grafix{tour-merge-conflict}
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124 \caption{Conflicting changes to a document}
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125 \label{fig:tour-merge:conflict}
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126 \end{figure}
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127
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128 Figure~\ref{fig:tour-merge:conflict} illustrates an instance of two
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129 conflicting changes to a document. We started with a single version
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130 of the file; then we made some changes; while someone else made
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131 different changes to the same text. Our task in resolving the
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132 conflicting changes is to decide what the file should look like.
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133
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134 Mercurial doesn't have a built-in facility for handling conflicts.
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135 Instead, it runs an external program called \command{hgmerge}. This
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136 is a shell script that is bundled with Mercurial; you can change it to
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137 behave however you please. What it does by default is try to find one
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138 of several different merging tools that are likely to be installed on
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139 your system. It first tries a few fully automatic merging tools; if
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140 these don't succeed (because the resolution process requires human
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141 guidance) or aren't present, the script tries a few different
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142 graphical merging tools.
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143
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144 It's also possible to get Mercurial to run another program or script
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145 instead of \command{hgmerge}, by setting the \envar{HGMERGE}
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146 environment variable to the name of your preferred program.
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147
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148 \subsection{Using a graphical merge tool}
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149
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150 My preferred graphical merge tool is \command{kdiff3}, which I'll use
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151 to describe the features that are common to graphical file merging
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152 tools. You can see a screenshot of \command{kdiff3} in action in
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153 figure~\ref{fig:tour-merge:kdiff3}. The kind of merge it is
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154 performing is called a \emph{three-way merge}, because there are three
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155 different versions of the file of interest to us. The tool thus
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156 splits the upper portion of the window into three panes:
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157 \begin{itemize}
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158 \item At the left is the \emph{base} version of the file, i.e.~the
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159 most recent version from which the two versions we're trying to
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160 merge are descended.
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161 \item In the middle is ``our'' version of the file, with the contents
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162 that we modified.
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163 \item On the right is ``their'' version of the file, the one that
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164 from the changeset that we're trying to merge with.
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165 \end{itemize}
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166 In the pane below these is the current \emph{result} of the merge.
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167 Our task is to replace all of the red text, which indicates unresolved
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168 conflicts, with some sensible merger of the ``ours'' and ``theirs''
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169 versions of the file.
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170
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171 All four of these panes are \emph{locked together}; if we scroll
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172 vertically or horizontally in any of them, the others are updated to
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173 display the corresponding sections of their respective files.
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174
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175 \begin{figure}[ht]
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176 \centering
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177 \grafix{kdiff3}
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178 \caption{Using \command{kdiff3} to merge versions of a file}
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179 \label{fig:tour-merge:kdiff3}
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180 \end{figure}
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181
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182 For each conflicting portion of the file, we can choose to resolve
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183 the conflict using some combination of text from the base version,
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184 ours, or theirs. We can also manually edit the merged file at any
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185 time, in case we need to make further modifications.
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186
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187 There are \emph{many} file merging tools available, too many to cover
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188 here. They vary in which platforms they are available for, and in
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189 their particular strengths and weaknesses. Most are tuned for merging
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190 files containing plain text, while a few are aimed at specialised file
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191 formats (generally XML).
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192
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193 \subsection{A worked example}
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194
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195 In this example, we will reproduce the file modification history of
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196 figure~\ref{fig:tour-merge:conflict} above. Let's begin by creating a
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197 repository with a base version of our document.
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198 \interaction{tour-merge-conflict.wife}
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199 We'll clone the repository and make a change to the file.
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200 \interaction{tour-merge-conflict.cousin}
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201 And another clone, to simulate someone else making a change to the
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202 file. (This hints at the idea that it's not all that unusual to merge
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203 with yourself when you isolate tasks in separate repositories, and
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204 indeed to find and resolve conflicts while doing so.)
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205 \interaction{tour-merge-conflict.son}
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206 Having created two different versions of the file, we'll set up an
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207 environment suitable for running our merge.
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208 \interaction{tour-merge-conflict.pull}
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209
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210 In this example, I won't use Mercurial's normal \command{hgmerge}
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211 program to do the merge, because it would drop my nice automated
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212 example-running tool into a graphical user interface. Instead, I'll
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213 set \envar{HGMERGE} to tell Mercurial to use the non-interactive
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214 \command{merge} command. This is bundled with many Unix-like systems.
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215 If you're following this example on your computer, don't bother
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216 setting \envar{HGMERGE}.
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217 \interaction{tour-merge-conflict.merge}
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218 Because \command{merge} can't resolve the conflicting changes, it
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219 leaves \emph{merge markers} inside the file that has conflicts,
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220 indicating which lines have conflicts, and whether they came from our
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221 version of the file or theirs.
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222
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223 Mercurial can tell from the way \command{merge} exits that it wasn't
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224 able to merge successfully, so it tells us what commands we'll need to
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225 run if we want to redo the merging operation. This could be useful
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226 if, for example, we were running a graphical merge tool and quit
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227 because we were confused or realised we had made a mistake.
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228
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229 If automatic or manual merges fail, there's nothing to prevent us from
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230 ``fixing up'' the affected files ourselves, and committing the results
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231 of our merge:
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232 \interaction{tour-merge-conflict.commit}
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233
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234 \section{Simplifying the pull-merge-commit sequence}
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235 \label{sec:tour-merge:fetch}
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236
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237 The process of merging changes as outlined above is straightforward,
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238 but requires running three commands in sequence.
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239 \begin{codesample2}
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240 hg pull
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241 hg merge
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242 hg commit -m 'Merged remote changes'
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243 \end{codesample2}
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244 In the case of the final commit, you also need to enter a commit
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245 message, which is almost always going to be a piece of uninteresting
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246 ``boilerplate'' text.
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247
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248 It would be nice to reduce the number of steps needed, if this were
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249 possible. Indeed, Mercurial is distributed with an extension called
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250 \hgext{fetch} that does just this.
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251
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252 Mercurial provides a flexible extension mechanism that lets people
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253 extend its functionality, while keeping the core of Mercurial small
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254 and easy to deal with. Some extensions add new commands that you can
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255 use from the command line, while others work ``behind the scenes,''
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256 for example adding capabilities to the server.
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257
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258 The \hgext{fetch} extension adds a new command called, not
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259 surprisingly, \hgcmd{fetch}. This extension acts as a combination of
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260 \hgcmd{pull}, \hgcmd{update} and \hgcmd{merge}. It begins by pulling
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261 changes from another repository into the current repository. If it
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262 finds that the changes added a new head to the repository, it begins a
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263 merge, then commits the result of the merge with an
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264 automatically-generated commit message. If no new heads were added,
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265 it updates the working directory to the new tip changeset.
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266
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267 Enabling the \hgext{fetch} extension is easy. Edit your
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268 \sfilename{.hgrc}, and either go to the \rcsection{extensions} section
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269 or create an \rcsection{extensions} section. Then add a line that
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270 simply reads ``\Verb+fetch +''.
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271 \begin{codesample2}
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272 [extensions]
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273 fetch =
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274 \end{codesample2}
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275 (Normally, on the right-hand side of the ``\texttt{=}'' would appear
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276 the location of the extension, but since the \hgext{fetch} extension
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277 is in the standard distribution, Mercurial knows where to search for
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278 it.)
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279
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280 %%% Local Variables:
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281 %%% mode: latex
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282 %%% TeX-master: "00book"
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283 %%% End:
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