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1 \chapter{Una gira de Mercurial: lo básico}
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2 \label{chap:tour-basic}
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3
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4 \section{Instalar Mercurial en su sistema}
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5 \label{sec:tour:install}
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6 Hay paquetes binarios precompilados de Mercurial disponibles para cada
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7 sistema operativo popular. Esto hace fácil empezar a usar Mercurial
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8 en su computador inmediatamente.
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9
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10 \subsection{Linux}
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11
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12 Dado que cada distribución de Linux tiene sus propias herramientas de
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13 manejo de paquetes, políticas, y ritmos de desarrollo, es difícil dar
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14 un conjunto exhaustivo de instrucciones sobre cómo instalar el paquete
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15 de Mercurial. La versión de Mercurial que usted tenga a disposición
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16 puede variar dependiendo de qué tan activa sea la persona que mantiene
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17 el paquete para su distribución.
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18
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19 Para mantener las cosas simples, me enfocaré en instalar Mercurial
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20 desde la línea de comandos en las distribuciones de Linux más
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21 populares. La mayoría de estas distribuciones proveen administradores
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22 de paquetes gráficos que le permitirán instalar Mercurial con un solo
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23 clic; el nombre de paquete a buscar es \texttt{mercurial}.
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24
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25 \begin{itemize}
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26 \item[Debian]
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27 \begin{codesample4}
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28 apt-get install mercurial
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29 \end{codesample4}
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30
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31 \item[Fedora Core]
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32 \begin{codesample4}
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33 yum install mercurial
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34 \end{codesample4}
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35
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36 \item[Gentoo]
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37 \begin{codesample4}
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38 emerge mercurial
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39 \end{codesample4}
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40
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41 \item[OpenSUSE]
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42 \begin{codesample4}
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43 yum install mercurial
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44 \end{codesample4}
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45
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46 \item[Ubuntu] El paquete de Mercurial de Ubuntu está basado en el de
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47 Debian. Para instalarlo, ejecute el siguiente comando.
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48 \begin{codesample4}
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49 apt-get install mercurial
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50 \end{codesample4}
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51 El paquete de Mercurial para Ubuntu tiende a atrasarse con respecto
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52 a la versión de Debian por un margen de tiempo considerable
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53 (al momento de escribir esto, 7 meses), lo que en algunos casos
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54 significará que usted puede encontrarse con problemas que ya habrán
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55 sido resueltos en el paquete de Debian.
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56 \end{itemize}
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57
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58 \subsection{Solaris}
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59
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60 SunFreeWare, en \url{http://www.sunfreeware.com}, es una buena fuente
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61 para un gran número de paquetes compilados para Solaris para las
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62 arquitecturas Intel y Sparc de 32 y 64 bits, incluyendo versiones
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63 actuales de Mercurial.
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64
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65 \subsection{Mac OS X}
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66
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67 Lee Cantey publica un instalador de Mercurial para Mac OS~X en
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68 \url{http://mercurial.berkwood.com}. Este paquete funciona en tanto
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69 en Macs basados en Intel como basados en PowerPC. Antes de que pueda
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70 usarlo, usted debe instalar una versión compatible de Universal
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71 MacPython~\cite{web:macpython}. Esto es fácil de hacer; simplemente
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72 siga las instrucciones de el sitio de Lee.
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73
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74 También es posible instalar Mercurial usando Fink o MacPorts, dos
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75 administradores de paquetes gratuitos y populares para Mac OS X. Si
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76 usted tiene Fink, use \command{sudo apt-get install mercurial-py25}.
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77 Si usa MacPorts, \command{sudo port install mercurial}.
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78
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79 \subsection{Windows}
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80
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81 Lee Cantey publica un instalador de Mercurial para Windows en
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82 \url{http://mercurial.berkwood.com}. Este paquete no tiene
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83 % TODO traducción de it just works. Agreed?
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84 dependencias externas; ``simplemente funciona''.
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85
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86 \begin{note}
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87 La versión de Windows de Mercurial no convierte automáticamente
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88 los fines de línea entre estilos Windows y Unix. Si usted desea
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89 compartir trabajo con usuarios de Unix, deberá hacer un trabajo
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90 adicional de configuración. XXX Terminar esto.
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91 \end{note}
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92
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93 \section{Arrancando}
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94
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95 Para empezar, usaremos el comando \hgcmd{version} para revisar si
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96 Mercurial está instalado adecuadamente. La información de la versión
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97 que es impresa no es tan importante; lo que nos importa es si imprime
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98 algo en absoluto.
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99
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100 \interaction{tour.version}
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101
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102 % TODO builtin-> integrado?
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103 \subsection{Ayuda integrada}
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104
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105 Mercurial provee un sistema de ayuda integrada. Esto es invaluable
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106 para ésas ocasiones en la que usted está atorado tratando de recordar
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107 cómo ejecutar un comando. Si está completamente atorado, simplemente
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108 ejecute \hgcmd{help}; esto imprimirá una breve lista de comandos,
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109 junto con una descripción de qué hace cada uno. Si usted solicita
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110 ayuda sobre un comando específico (como abajo), se imprime información
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111 más detallada.
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112 \interaction{tour.help}
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113 Para un nivel más impresionante de detalle (que usted no va a
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114 necesitar usualmente) ejecute \hgcmdargs{help}{\hggopt{-v}}. La opción
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115 \hggopt{-v} es la abreviación para \hggopt{--verbose}, y le indica a
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116 Mercurial que imprima más información de lo que haría usualmente.
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117
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118 \section{Working with a repository}
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119
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120 In Mercurial, everything happens inside a \emph{repository}. The
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121 repository for a project contains all of the files that ``belong to''
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122 that project, along with a historical record of the project's files.
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123
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124 There's nothing particularly magical about a repository; it is simply
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125 a directory tree in your filesystem that Mercurial treats as special.
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126 You can rename or delete a repository any time you like, using either the
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127 command line or your file browser.
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128
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129 \subsection{Making a local copy of a repository}
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130
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131 \emph{Copying} a repository is just a little bit special. While you
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132 could use a normal file copying command to make a copy of a
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133 repository, it's best to use a built-in command that Mercurial
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134 provides. This command is called \hgcmd{clone}, because it creates an
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135 identical copy of an existing repository.
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136 \interaction{tour.clone}
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137 If our clone succeeded, we should now have a local directory called
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138 \dirname{hello}. This directory will contain some files.
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139 \interaction{tour.ls}
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140 These files have the same contents and history in our repository as
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141 they do in the repository we cloned.
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142
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143 Every Mercurial repository is complete, self-contained, and
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144 independent. It contains its own private copy of a project's files
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145 and history. A cloned repository remembers the location of the
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146 repository it was cloned from, but it does not communicate with that
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147 repository, or any other, unless you tell it to.
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148
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149 What this means for now is that we're free to experiment with our
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150 repository, safe in the knowledge that it's a private ``sandbox'' that
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151 won't affect anyone else.
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152
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153 \subsection{What's in a repository?}
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154
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155 When we take a more detailed look inside a repository, we can see that
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156 it contains a directory named \dirname{.hg}. This is where Mercurial
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157 keeps all of its metadata for the repository.
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158 \interaction{tour.ls-a}
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159
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160 The contents of the \dirname{.hg} directory and its subdirectories are
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161 private to Mercurial. Every other file and directory in the
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162 repository is yours to do with as you please.
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163
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164 To introduce a little terminology, the \dirname{.hg} directory is the
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165 ``real'' repository, and all of the files and directories that coexist
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166 with it are said to live in the \emph{working directory}. An easy way
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167 to remember the distinction is that the \emph{repository} contains the
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168 \emph{history} of your project, while the \emph{working directory}
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169 contains a \emph{snapshot} of your project at a particular point in
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170 history.
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171
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172 \section{A tour through history}
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173
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174 One of the first things we might want to do with a new, unfamiliar
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175 repository is understand its history. The \hgcmd{log} command gives
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176 us a view of history.
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177 \interaction{tour.log}
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178 By default, this command prints a brief paragraph of output for each
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179 change to the project that was recorded. In Mercurial terminology, we
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180 call each of these recorded events a \emph{changeset}, because it can
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181 contain a record of changes to several files.
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182
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183 The fields in a record of output from \hgcmd{log} are as follows.
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184 \begin{itemize}
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185 \item[\texttt{changeset}] This field has the format of a number,
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186 followed by a colon, followed by a hexadecimal string. These are
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187 \emph{identifiers} for the changeset. There are two identifiers
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188 because the number is shorter and easier to type than the hex
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189 string.
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190 \item[\texttt{user}] The identity of the person who created the
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191 changeset. This is a free-form field, but it most often contains a
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192 person's name and email address.
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193 \item[\texttt{date}] The date and time on which the changeset was
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194 created, and the timezone in which it was created. (The date and
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195 time are local to that timezone; they display what time and date it
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196 was for the person who created the changeset.)
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197 \item[\texttt{summary}] The first line of the text message that the
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198 creator of the changeset entered to describe the changeset.
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199 \end{itemize}
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200 The default output printed by \hgcmd{log} is purely a summary; it is
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201 missing a lot of detail.
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202
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203 Figure~\ref{fig:tour-basic:history} provides a graphical representation of
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204 the history of the \dirname{hello} repository, to make it a little
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205 easier to see which direction history is ``flowing'' in. We'll be
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206 returning to this figure several times in this chapter and the chapter
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207 that follows.
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208
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209 \begin{figure}[ht]
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210 \centering
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211 \grafix{tour-history}
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212 \caption{Graphical history of the \dirname{hello} repository}
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213 \label{fig:tour-basic:history}
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214 \end{figure}
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215
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216 \subsection{Changesets, revisions, and talking to other
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217 people}
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218
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219 As English is a notoriously sloppy language, and computer science has
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220 a hallowed history of terminological confusion (why use one term when
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221 four will do?), revision control has a variety of words and phrases
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222 that mean the same thing. If you are talking about Mercurial history
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223 with other people, you will find that the word ``changeset'' is often
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224 compressed to ``change'' or (when written) ``cset'', and sometimes a
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225 changeset is referred to as a ``revision'' or a ``rev''.
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226
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227 While it doesn't matter what \emph{word} you use to refer to the
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228 concept of ``a~changeset'', the \emph{identifier} that you use to
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229 refer to ``a~\emph{specific} changeset'' is of great importance.
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230 Recall that the \texttt{changeset} field in the output from
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231 \hgcmd{log} identifies a changeset using both a number and a
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232 hexadecimal string.
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233 \begin{itemize}
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234 \item The revision number is \emph{only valid in that repository},
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235 \item while the hex string is the \emph{permanent, unchanging
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236 identifier} that will always identify that exact changeset in
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237 \emph{every} copy of the repository.
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238 \end{itemize}
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239 This distinction is important. If you send someone an email talking
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240 about ``revision~33'', there's a high likelihood that their
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241 revision~33 will \emph{not be the same} as yours. The reason for this
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242 is that a revision number depends on the order in which changes
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243 arrived in a repository, and there is no guarantee that the same
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244 changes will happen in the same order in different repositories.
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245 Three changes $a,b,c$ can easily appear in one repository as $0,1,2$,
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246 while in another as $1,0,2$.
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247
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248 Mercurial uses revision numbers purely as a convenient shorthand. If
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249 you need to discuss a changeset with someone, or make a record of a
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250 changeset for some other reason (for example, in a bug report), use
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251 the hexadecimal identifier.
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252
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253 \subsection{Viewing specific revisions}
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254
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255 To narrow the output of \hgcmd{log} down to a single revision, use the
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256 \hgopt{log}{-r} (or \hgopt{log}{--rev}) option. You can use either a
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257 revision number or a long-form changeset identifier, and you can
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258 provide as many revisions as you want. \interaction{tour.log-r}
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259
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260 If you want to see the history of several revisions without having to
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261 list each one, you can use \emph{range notation}; this lets you
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262 express the idea ``I want all revisions between $a$ and $b$,
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263 inclusive''.
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264 \interaction{tour.log.range}
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265 Mercurial also honours the order in which you specify revisions, so
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266 \hgcmdargs{log}{-r 2:4} prints $2,3,4$ while \hgcmdargs{log}{-r 4:2}
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267 prints $4,3,2$.
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268
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269 \subsection{More detailed information}
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270
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271 While the summary information printed by \hgcmd{log} is useful if you
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272 already know what you're looking for, you may need to see a complete
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273 description of the change, or a list of the files changed, if you're
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274 trying to decide whether a changeset is the one you're looking for.
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275 The \hgcmd{log} command's \hggopt{-v} (or \hggopt{--verbose})
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276 option gives you this extra detail.
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277 \interaction{tour.log-v}
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278
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279 If you want to see both the description and content of a change, add
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280 the \hgopt{log}{-p} (or \hgopt{log}{--patch}) option. This displays
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281 the content of a change as a \emph{unified diff} (if you've never seen
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282 a unified diff before, see section~\ref{sec:mq:patch} for an overview).
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283 \interaction{tour.log-vp}
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284
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285 \section{All about command options}
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286
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287 Let's take a brief break from exploring Mercurial commands to discuss
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288 a pattern in the way that they work; you may find this useful to keep
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289 in mind as we continue our tour.
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290
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291 Mercurial has a consistent and straightforward approach to dealing
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292 with the options that you can pass to commands. It follows the
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293 conventions for options that are common to modern Linux and Unix
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294 systems.
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295 \begin{itemize}
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296 \item Every option has a long name. For example, as we've already
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297 seen, the \hgcmd{log} command accepts a \hgopt{log}{--rev} option.
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298 \item Most options have short names, too. Instead of
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299 \hgopt{log}{--rev}, we can use \hgopt{log}{-r}. (The reason that
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300 some options don't have short names is that the options in question
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301 are rarely used.)
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302 \item Long options start with two dashes (e.g.~\hgopt{log}{--rev}),
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303 while short options start with one (e.g.~\hgopt{log}{-r}).
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304 \item Option naming and usage is consistent across commands. For
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305 example, every command that lets you specify a changeset~ID or
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306 revision number accepts both \hgopt{log}{-r} and \hgopt{log}{--rev}
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307 arguments.
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308 \end{itemize}
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309 In the examples throughout this book, I use short options instead of
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310 long. This just reflects my own preference, so don't read anything
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311 significant into it.
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312
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313 Most commands that print output of some kind will print more output
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314 when passed a \hggopt{-v} (or \hggopt{--verbose}) option, and less
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315 when passed \hggopt{-q} (or \hggopt{--quiet}).
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316
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317 \section{Making and reviewing changes}
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318
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319 Now that we have a grasp of viewing history in Mercurial, let's take a
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320 look at making some changes and examining them.
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321
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322 The first thing we'll do is isolate our experiment in a repository of
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323 its own. We use the \hgcmd{clone} command, but we don't need to
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324 clone a copy of the remote repository. Since we already have a copy
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325 of it locally, we can just clone that instead. This is much faster
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326 than cloning over the network, and cloning a local repository uses
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327 less disk space in most cases, too.
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328 \interaction{tour.reclone}
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329 As an aside, it's often good practice to keep a ``pristine'' copy of a
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330 remote repository around, which you can then make temporary clones of
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331 to create sandboxes for each task you want to work on. This lets you
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332 work on multiple tasks in parallel, each isolated from the others
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333 until it's complete and you're ready to integrate it back. Because
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334 local clones are so cheap, there's almost no overhead to cloning and
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335 destroying repositories whenever you want.
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336
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337 In our \dirname{my-hello} repository, we have a file
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338 \filename{hello.c} that contains the classic ``hello, world'' program.
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339 Let's use the ancient and venerable \command{sed} command to edit this
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340 file so that it prints a second line of output. (I'm only using
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341 \command{sed} to do this because it's easy to write a scripted example
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342 this way. Since you're not under the same constraint, you probably
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343 won't want to use \command{sed}; simply use your preferred text editor to
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344 do the same thing.)
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345 \interaction{tour.sed}
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346
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347 Mercurial's \hgcmd{status} command will tell us what Mercurial knows
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348 about the files in the repository.
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349 \interaction{tour.status}
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350 The \hgcmd{status} command prints no output for some files, but a line
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351 starting with ``\texttt{M}'' for \filename{hello.c}. Unless you tell
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352 it to, \hgcmd{status} will not print any output for files that have
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353 not been modified.
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354
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355 The ``\texttt{M}'' indicates that Mercurial has noticed that we
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356 modified \filename{hello.c}. We didn't need to \emph{inform}
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357 Mercurial that we were going to modify the file before we started, or
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358 that we had modified the file after we were done; it was able to
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359 figure this out itself.
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360
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361 It's a little bit helpful to know that we've modified
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362 \filename{hello.c}, but we might prefer to know exactly \emph{what}
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363 changes we've made to it. To do this, we use the \hgcmd{diff}
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364 command.
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365 \interaction{tour.diff}
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366
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367 \section{Recording changes in a new changeset}
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368
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369 We can modify files, build and test our changes, and use
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370 \hgcmd{status} and \hgcmd{diff} to review our changes, until we're
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371 satisfied with what we've done and arrive at a natural stopping point
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372 where we want to record our work in a new changeset.
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373
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374 The \hgcmd{commit} command lets us create a new changeset; we'll
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375 usually refer to this as ``making a commit'' or ``committing''.
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376
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377 \subsection{Setting up a username}
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378
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379 When you try to run \hgcmd{commit} for the first time, it is not
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380 guaranteed to succeed. Mercurial records your name and address with
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381 each change that you commit, so that you and others will later be able
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382 to tell who made each change. Mercurial tries to automatically figure
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383 out a sensible username to commit the change with. It will attempt
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384 each of the following methods, in order:
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385 \begin{enumerate}
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386 \item If you specify a \hgopt{commit}{-u} option to the \hgcmd{commit}
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387 command on the command line, followed by a username, this is always
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388 given the highest precedence.
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389 \item If you have set the \envar{HGUSER} environment variable, this is
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390 checked next.
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391 \item If you create a file in your home directory called
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392 \sfilename{.hgrc}, with a \rcitem{ui}{username} entry, that will be
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393 used next. To see what the contents of this file should look like,
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394 refer to section~\ref{sec:tour-basic:username} below.
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395 \item If you have set the \envar{EMAIL} environment variable, this
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396 will be used next.
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397 \item Mercurial will query your system to find out your local user
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398 name and host name, and construct a username from these components.
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399 Since this often results in a username that is not very useful, it
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400 will print a warning if it has to do this.
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401 \end{enumerate}
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402 If all of these mechanisms fail, Mercurial will fail, printing an
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403 error message. In this case, it will not let you commit until you set
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404 up a username.
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405
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406 You should think of the \envar{HGUSER} environment variable and the
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407 \hgopt{commit}{-u} option to the \hgcmd{commit} command as ways to
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408 \emph{override} Mercurial's default selection of username. For normal
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409 use, the simplest and most robust way to set a username for yourself
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410 is by creating a \sfilename{.hgrc} file; see below for details.
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411
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412 \subsubsection{Creating a Mercurial configuration file}
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413 \label{sec:tour-basic:username}
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414
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415 To set a user name, use your favourite editor to create a file called
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416 \sfilename{.hgrc} in your home directory. Mercurial will use this
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417 file to look up your personalised configuration settings. The initial
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418 contents of your \sfilename{.hgrc} should look like this.
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419 \begin{codesample2}
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420 # This is a Mercurial configuration file.
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421 [ui]
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422 username = Firstname Lastname <email.address@domain.net>
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423 \end{codesample2}
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424 The ``\texttt{[ui]}'' line begins a \emph{section} of the config file,
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425 so you can read the ``\texttt{username = ...}'' line as meaning ``set
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426 the value of the \texttt{username} item in the \texttt{ui} section''.
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427 A section continues until a new section begins, or the end of the
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428 file. Mercurial ignores empty lines and treats any text from
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429 ``\texttt{\#}'' to the end of a line as a comment.
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430
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431 \subsubsection{Choosing a user name}
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432
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433 You can use any text you like as the value of the \texttt{username}
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434 config item, since this information is for reading by other people,
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435 but for interpreting by Mercurial. The convention that most people
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436 follow is to use their name and email address, as in the example
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437 above.
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438
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439 \begin{note}
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440 Mercurial's built-in web server obfuscates email addresses, to make
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441 it more difficult for the email harvesting tools that spammers use.
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442 This reduces the likelihood that you'll start receiving more junk
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443 email if you publish a Mercurial repository on the web.
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444 \end{note}
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445
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446 \subsection{Writing a commit message}
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447
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448 When we commit a change, Mercurial drops us into a text editor, to
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449 enter a message that will describe the modifications we've made in
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450 this changeset. This is called the \emph{commit message}. It will be
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451 a record for readers of what we did and why, and it will be printed by
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452 \hgcmd{log} after we've finished committing.
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453 \interaction{tour.commit}
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454
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455 The editor that the \hgcmd{commit} command drops us into will contain
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456 an empty line, followed by a number of lines starting with
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457 ``\texttt{HG:}''.
|
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458 \begin{codesample2}
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459 \emph{empty line}
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460 HG: changed hello.c
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461 \end{codesample2}
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462 Mercurial ignores the lines that start with ``\texttt{HG:}''; it uses
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463 them only to tell us which files it's recording changes to. Modifying
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464 or deleting these lines has no effect.
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465
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466 \subsection{Writing a good commit message}
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467
|
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468 Since \hgcmd{log} only prints the first line of a commit message by
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469 default, it's best to write a commit message whose first line stands
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470 alone. Here's a real example of a commit message that \emph{doesn't}
|
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471 follow this guideline, and hence has a summary that is not readable.
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472 \begin{codesample2}
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473 changeset: 73:584af0e231be
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474 user: Censored Person <censored.person@example.org>
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475 date: Tue Sep 26 21:37:07 2006 -0700
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476 summary: include buildmeister/commondefs. Add an exports and install
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477 \end{codesample2}
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478
|
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479 As far as the remainder of the contents of the commit message are
|
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480 concerned, there are no hard-and-fast rules. Mercurial itself doesn't
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481 interpret or care about the contents of the commit message, though
|
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482 your project may have policies that dictate a certain kind of
|
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483 formatting.
|
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484
|
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485 My personal preference is for short, but informative, commit messages
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486 that tell me something that I can't figure out with a quick glance at
|
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487 the output of \hgcmdargs{log}{--patch}.
|
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488
|
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489 \subsection{Aborting a commit}
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490
|
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|
491 If you decide that you don't want to commit while in the middle of
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492 editing a commit message, simply exit from your editor without saving
|
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493 the file that it's editing. This will cause nothing to happen to
|
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494 either the repository or the working directory.
|
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|
495
|
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496 If we run the \hgcmd{commit} command without any arguments, it records
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497 all of the changes we've made, as reported by \hgcmd{status} and
|
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498 \hgcmd{diff}.
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499
|
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|
500 \subsection{Admiring our new handiwork}
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501
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502 Once we've finished the commit, we can use the \hgcmd{tip} command to
|
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503 display the changeset we just created. This command produces output
|
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|
504 that is identical to \hgcmd{log}, but it only displays the newest
|
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505 revision in the repository.
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|
506 \interaction{tour.tip}
|
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507 We refer to the newest revision in the repository as the tip revision,
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508 or simply the tip.
|
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|
509
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510 \section{Sharing changes}
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511
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512 We mentioned earlier that repositories in Mercurial are
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513 self-contained. This means that the changeset we just created exists
|
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514 only in our \dirname{my-hello} repository. Let's look at a few ways
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515 that we can propagate this change into other repositories.
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516
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517 \subsection{Pulling changes from another repository}
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518 \label{sec:tour:pull}
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519
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520 To get started, let's clone our original \dirname{hello} repository,
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521 which does not contain the change we just committed. We'll call our
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522 temporary repository \dirname{hello-pull}.
|
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523 \interaction{tour.clone-pull}
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524
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525 We'll use the \hgcmd{pull} command to bring changes from
|
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526 \dirname{my-hello} into \dirname{hello-pull}. However, blindly
|
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|
527 pulling unknown changes into a repository is a somewhat scary
|
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|
528 prospect. Mercurial provides the \hgcmd{incoming} command to tell us
|
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529 what changes the \hgcmd{pull} command \emph{would} pull into the
|
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530 repository, without actually pulling the changes in.
|
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|
531 \interaction{tour.incoming}
|
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532 (Of course, someone could cause more changesets to appear in the
|
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533 repository that we ran \hgcmd{incoming} in, before we get a chance to
|
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534 \hgcmd{pull} the changes, so that we could end up pulling changes that we
|
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|
535 didn't expect.)
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536
|
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|
537 Bringing changes into a repository is a simple matter of running the
|
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538 \hgcmd{pull} command, and telling it which repository to pull from.
|
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|
539 \interaction{tour.pull}
|
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540 As you can see from the before-and-after output of \hgcmd{tip}, we
|
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|
541 have successfully pulled changes into our repository. There remains
|
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|
542 one step before we can see these changes in the working directory.
|
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|
543
|
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|
544 \subsection{Updating the working directory}
|
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|
545
|
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|
546 We have so far glossed over the relationship between a repository and
|
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547 its working directory. The \hgcmd{pull} command that we ran in
|
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548 section~\ref{sec:tour:pull} brought changes into the repository, but
|
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549 if we check, there's no sign of those changes in the working
|
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550 directory. This is because \hgcmd{pull} does not (by default) touch
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551 the working directory. Instead, we use the \hgcmd{update} command to
|
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552 do this.
|
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|
553 \interaction{tour.update}
|
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554
|
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555 It might seem a bit strange that \hgcmd{pull} doesn't update the
|
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|
556 working directory automatically. There's actually a good reason for
|
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|
557 this: you can use \hgcmd{update} to update the working directory to
|
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|
558 the state it was in at \emph{any revision} in the history of the
|
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|
559 repository. If you had the working directory updated to an old
|
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|
560 revision---to hunt down the origin of a bug, say---and ran a
|
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|
561 \hgcmd{pull} which automatically updated the working directory to a
|
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|
562 new revision, you might not be terribly happy.
|
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|
563
|
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|
564 However, since pull-then-update is such a common thing to do,
|
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|
565 Mercurial lets you combine the two by passing the \hgopt{pull}{-u}
|
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|
566 option to \hgcmd{pull}.
|
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|
567 \begin{codesample2}
|
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|
568 hg pull -u
|
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|
569 \end{codesample2}
|
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|
570 If you look back at the output of \hgcmd{pull} in
|
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|
571 section~\ref{sec:tour:pull} when we ran it without \hgopt{pull}{-u},
|
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|
572 you can see that it printed a helpful reminder that we'd have to take
|
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|
573 an explicit step to update the working directory:
|
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|
574 \begin{codesample2}
|
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|
575 (run 'hg update' to get a working copy)
|
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|
576 \end{codesample2}
|
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|
577
|
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|
578 To find out what revision the working directory is at, use the
|
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|
579 \hgcmd{parents} command.
|
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|
580 \interaction{tour.parents}
|
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|
581 If you look back at figure~\ref{fig:tour-basic:history}, you'll see
|
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|
582 arrows connecting each changeset. The node that the arrow leads
|
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583 \emph{from} in each case is a parent, and the node that the arrow
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584 leads \emph{to} is its child. The working directory has a parent in
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585 just the same way; this is the changeset that the working directory
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586 currently contains.
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587
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588 To update the working directory to a particular revision, give a
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589 revision number or changeset~ID to the \hgcmd{update} command.
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590 \interaction{tour.older}
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591 If you omit an explicit revision, \hgcmd{update} will update to the
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592 tip revision, as shown by the second call to \hgcmd{update} in the
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593 example above.
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594
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595 \subsection{Pushing changes to another repository}
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596
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597 Mercurial lets us push changes to another repository, from the
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598 repository we're currently visiting. As with the example of
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599 \hgcmd{pull} above, we'll create a temporary repository to push our
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600 changes into.
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601 \interaction{tour.clone-push}
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602 The \hgcmd{outgoing} command tells us what changes would be pushed
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603 into another repository.
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604 \interaction{tour.outgoing}
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605 And the \hgcmd{push} command does the actual push.
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606 \interaction{tour.push}
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607 As with \hgcmd{pull}, the \hgcmd{push} command does not update the
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608 working directory in the repository that it's pushing changes into.
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609 (Unlike \hgcmd{pull}, \hgcmd{push} does not provide a \texttt{-u}
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610 option that updates the other repository's working directory.)
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611
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612 What happens if we try to pull or push changes and the receiving
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613 repository already has those changes? Nothing too exciting.
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614 \interaction{tour.push.nothing}
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615
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616 \subsection{Sharing changes over a network}
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617
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618 The commands we have covered in the previous few sections are not
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619 limited to working with local repositories. Each works in exactly the
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620 same fashion over a network connection; simply pass in a URL instead
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621 of a local path.
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622 \interaction{tour.outgoing.net}
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623 In this example, we can see what changes we could push to the remote
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624 repository, but the repository is understandably not set up to let
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625 anonymous users push to it.
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626 \interaction{tour.push.net}
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627
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628 %%% Local Variables:
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629 %%% mode: latex
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630 %%% TeX-master: "00book"
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631 %%% End:
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