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1 <!-- vim: set filetype=docbkxml shiftwidth=2 autoindent expandtab tw=77 : -->
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2
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3 <chapter id="chap.tour-basic">
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4 <?dbhtml filename="a-tour-of-mercurial-the-basics.html"?>
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5 <title>A tour of Mercurial: the basics</title>
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6
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7 <sect1 id="sec.tour.install">
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8 <title>Installing Mercurial on your system</title>
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9
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10 <para>Prebuilt binary packages of Mercurial are available for
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11 every popular operating system. These make it easy to start
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12 using Mercurial on your computer immediately.</para>
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13
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14 <sect2>
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15 <title>Linux</title>
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16
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17 <para>Because each Linux distribution has its own packaging
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18 tools, policies, and rate of development, it's difficult to
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19 give a comprehensive set of instructions on how to install
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20 Mercurial binaries. The version of Mercurial that you will
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21 end up with can vary depending on how active the person is who
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22 maintains the package for your distribution.</para>
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23
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24 <para>To keep things simple, I will focus on installing
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25 Mercurial from the command line under the most popular Linux
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26 distributions. Most of these distributions provide graphical
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27 package managers that will let you install Mercurial with a
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28 single click; the package name to look for is
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29 <literal>mercurial</literal>.</para>
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30
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31 <itemizedlist>
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32 <listitem><para>Debian:</para>
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33 <programlisting>apt-get install
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34 mercurial</programlisting></listitem>
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35 <listitem><para>Fedora Core:</para>
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36 <programlisting>yum install
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37 mercurial</programlisting></listitem>
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38 <listitem><para>Gentoo:</para>
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39 <programlisting>emerge mercurial</programlisting></listitem>
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40 <listitem><para>OpenSUSE:</para>
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41 <programlisting>yum install
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42 mercurial</programlisting></listitem>
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43 <listitem><para>Ubuntu: Ubuntu's Mercurial package is based on
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44 Debian's. To install it, run the following
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45 command.</para>
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46 <programlisting>apt-get install
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47 mercurial</programlisting></listitem>
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48 </itemizedlist>
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49
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50 </sect2>
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51 <sect2>
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52 <title>Solaris</title>
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53
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54 <para>SunFreeWare, at <ulink
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55 url="http://www.sunfreeware.com">http://www.sunfreeware.com</ulink>,
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56 is a good source for a large number of pre-built Solaris
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57 packages for 32 and 64 bit Intel and Sparc architectures,
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58 including current versions of Mercurial.</para>
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59
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60 </sect2>
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61 <sect2>
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62 <title>Mac OS X</title>
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63
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64 <para>Lee Cantey publishes an installer of Mercurial for Mac OS
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65 X at <ulink
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66 url="http://mercurial.berkwood.com">http://mercurial.berkwood.com</ulink>.
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67 This package works on both Intel- and Power-based Macs. Before
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68 you can use it, you must install a compatible version of
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69 Universal MacPython <citation>web:macpython</citation>. This
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70 is easy to do; simply follow the instructions on Lee's
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71 site.</para>
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72
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73 <para>It's also possible to install Mercurial using Fink or
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74 MacPorts, two popular free package managers for Mac OS X. If
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75 you have Fink, use <command>sudo apt-get install
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76 mercurial-py25</command>. If MacPorts, <command>sudo port
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77 install mercurial</command>.</para>
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78
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79 </sect2>
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80 <sect2>
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81 <title>Windows</title>
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82
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83 <para>Lee Cantey publishes an installer of Mercurial for Windows
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84 at <ulink
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85 url="http://mercurial.berkwood.com">http://mercurial.berkwood.com</ulink>.
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86 This package has no external dependencies; it <quote>just
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87 works</quote>.</para>
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88
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89 <note>
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90 <para> The Windows version of Mercurial does not
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91 automatically convert line endings between Windows and Unix
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92 styles. If you want to share work with Unix users, you must
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93 do a little additional configuration work. XXX Flesh this
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94 out.</para>
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95 </note>
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96
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97 </sect2>
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98 </sect1>
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99 <sect1>
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100 <title>Getting started</title>
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101
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102 <para>To begin, we'll use the <command role="hg-cmd">hg
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103 version</command> command to find out whether Mercurial is
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104 actually installed properly. The actual version information
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105 that it prints isn't so important; it's whether it prints
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106 anything at all that we care about.</para>
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107
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108 &interaction.tour.version;
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109
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110 <sect2>
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111 <title>Built-in help</title>
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112
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113 <para>Mercurial provides a built-in help system. This is
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114 invaluable for those times when you find yourself stuck
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115 trying to remember how to run a command. If you are
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116 completely stuck, simply run <command role="hg-cmd">hg
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117 help</command>; it will print a brief list of commands,
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118 along with a description of what each does. If you ask for
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119 help on a specific command (as below), it prints more
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120 detailed information.</para>
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121
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122 &interaction.tour.help;
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123
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124 <para>For a more impressive level of detail (which you won't
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125 usually need) run <command role="hg-cmd">hg help <option
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126 role="hg-opt-global">-v</option></command>. The <option
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127 role="hg-opt-global">-v</option> option is short for
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128 <option role="hg-opt-global">--verbose</option>, and tells
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129 Mercurial to print more information than it usually
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130 would.</para>
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131
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132 </sect2>
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133 </sect1>
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134 <sect1>
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135 <title>Working with a repository</title>
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136
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137 <para>In Mercurial, everything happens inside a
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138 <emphasis>repository</emphasis>. The repository for a project
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139 contains all of the files that <quote>belong to</quote> that
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140 project, along with a historical record of the project's
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141 files.</para>
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142
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143 <para>There's nothing particularly magical about a repository; it
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144 is simply a directory tree in your filesystem that Mercurial
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145 treats as special. You can rename or delete a repository any
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146 time you like, using either the command line or your file
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147 browser.</para>
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148
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149 <sect2>
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150 <title>Making a local copy of a repository</title>
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151
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152 <para><emphasis>Copying</emphasis> a repository is just a little
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153 bit special. While you could use a normal file copying
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154 command to make a copy of a repository, it's best to use a
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155 built-in command that Mercurial provides. This command is
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156 called <command role="hg-cmd">hg clone</command>, because it
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157 creates an identical copy of an existing repository.</para>
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158
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159 &interaction.tour.clone;
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160
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161 <para>If our clone succeeded, we should now have a local
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162 directory called <filename class="directory">hello</filename>.
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163 This directory will contain some files.</para>
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164
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165 &interaction.tour.ls;
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166
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167 <para>These files have the same contents and history in our
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168 repository as they do in the repository we cloned.</para>
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169
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170 <para>Every Mercurial repository is complete, self-contained,
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171 and independent. It contains its own private copy of a
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172 project's files and history. A cloned repository remembers
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173 the location of the repository it was cloned from, but it does
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174 not communicate with that repository, or any other, unless you
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175 tell it to.</para>
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176
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177 <para>What this means for now is that we're free to experiment
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178 with our repository, safe in the knowledge that it's a private
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179 <quote>sandbox</quote> that won't affect anyone else.</para>
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180
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181 </sect2>
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182 <sect2>
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183 <title>What's in a repository?</title>
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184
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185 <para>When we take a more detailed look inside a repository, we
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186 can see that it contains a directory named <filename
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187 class="directory">.hg</filename>. This is where Mercurial
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188 keeps all of its metadata for the repository.</para>
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189
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190 &interaction.tour.ls-a;
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191
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192 <para>The contents of the <filename
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193 class="directory">.hg</filename> directory and its
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194 subdirectories are private to Mercurial. Every other file and
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195 directory in the repository is yours to do with as you
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196 please.</para>
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197
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198 <para>To introduce a little terminology, the <filename
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199 class="directory">.hg</filename> directory is the
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200 <quote>real</quote> repository, and all of the files and
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201 directories that coexist with it are said to live in the
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202 <emphasis>working directory</emphasis>. An easy way to
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203 remember the distinction is that the
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204 <emphasis>repository</emphasis> contains the
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205 <emphasis>history</emphasis> of your project, while the
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206 <emphasis>working directory</emphasis> contains a
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207 <emphasis>snapshot</emphasis> of your project at a particular
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208 point in history.</para>
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209
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210 </sect2>
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211 </sect1>
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212 <sect1>
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213 <title>A tour through history</title>
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214
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215 <para>One of the first things we might want to do with a new,
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216 unfamiliar repository is understand its history. The <command
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217 role="hg-cmd">hg log</command> command gives us a view of
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218 history.</para>
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219
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220 &interaction.tour.log;
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221
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222 <para>By default, this command prints a brief paragraph of output
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223 for each change to the project that was recorded. In Mercurial
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224 terminology, we call each of these recorded events a
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225 <emphasis>changeset</emphasis>, because it can contain a record
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226 of changes to several files.</para>
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227
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228 <para>The fields in a record of output from <command
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229 role="hg-cmd">hg log</command> are as follows.</para>
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230 <itemizedlist>
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231 <listitem><para><literal>changeset</literal>: This field has the
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232 format of a number, followed by a colon, followed by a
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233 hexadecimal string. These are
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234 <emphasis>identifiers</emphasis> for the changeset. There
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235 are two identifiers because the number is shorter and easier
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236 to type than the hex string.</para></listitem>
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237 <listitem><para><literal>user</literal>: The identity of the
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238 person who created the changeset. This is a free-form
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239 field, but it most often contains a person's name and email
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240 address.</para></listitem>
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241 <listitem><para><literal>date</literal>: The date and time on
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242 which the changeset was created, and the timezone in which
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243 it was created. (The date and time are local to that
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244 timezone; they display what time and date it was for the
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245 person who created the changeset.)</para></listitem>
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246 <listitem><para><literal>summary</literal>: The first line of
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247 the text message that the creator of the changeset entered
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248 to describe the changeset.</para></listitem></itemizedlist>
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249 <para>The default output printed by <command role="hg-cmd">hg
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250 log</command> is purely a summary; it is missing a lot of
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251 detail.</para>
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252
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253 <para>Figure <xref linkend="fig.tour-basic.history"/> provides a
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254 graphical representation of the history of the <filename
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255 class="directory">hello</filename> repository, to make it a
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256 little easier to see which direction history is
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257 <quote>flowing</quote> in. We'll be returning to this figure
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258 several times in this chapter and the chapter that
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259 follows.</para>
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260
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261 <informalfigure id="fig.tour-basic.history">
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262 <mediaobject>
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263 <imageobject><imagedata fileref="images/tour-history.png"/></imageobject>
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264 <textobject><phrase>XXX add text</phrase></textobject>
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265 <caption><para>Graphical history of the <filename
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266 class="directory">hello</filename>
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267 repository</para></caption>
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268 </mediaobject>
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269 </informalfigure>
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270
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271 <sect2>
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272 <title>Changesets, revisions, and talking to other
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273 people</title>
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274
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275 <para>As English is a notoriously sloppy language, and computer
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276 science has a hallowed history of terminological confusion
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277 (why use one term when four will do?), revision control has a
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278 variety of words and phrases that mean the same thing. If you
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279 are talking about Mercurial history with other people, you
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280 will find that the word <quote>changeset</quote> is often
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281 compressed to <quote>change</quote> or (when written)
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282 <quote>cset</quote>, and sometimes a changeset is referred to
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283 as a <quote>revision</quote> or a <quote>rev</quote>.</para>
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284
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285 <para>While it doesn't matter what <emphasis>word</emphasis> you
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286 use to refer to the concept of <quote>a changeset</quote>, the
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287 <emphasis>identifier</emphasis> that you use to refer to
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288 <quote>a <emphasis>specific</emphasis> changeset</quote> is of
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289 great importance. Recall that the <literal>changeset</literal>
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290 field in the output from <command role="hg-cmd">hg
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291 log</command> identifies a changeset using both a number and
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292 a hexadecimal string.</para>
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293 <itemizedlist>
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294 <listitem><para>The revision number is <emphasis>only valid in
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295 that repository</emphasis>,</para></listitem>
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296 <listitem><para>while the hex string is the
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297 <emphasis>permanent, unchanging identifier</emphasis> that
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298 will always identify that exact changeset in
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299 <emphasis>every</emphasis> copy of the
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300 repository.</para></listitem></itemizedlist>
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301 <para>This distinction is important. If you send someone an
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302 email talking about <quote>revision 33</quote>, there's a high
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303 likelihood that their revision 33 will <emphasis>not be the
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304 same</emphasis> as yours. The reason for this is that a
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305 revision number depends on the order in which changes arrived
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306 in a repository, and there is no guarantee that the same
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307 changes will happen in the same order in different
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308 repositories. Three changes $a,b,c$ can easily appear in one
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309 repository as $0,1,2$, while in another as $1,0,2$.</para>
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310
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311 <para>Mercurial uses revision numbers purely as a convenient
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312 shorthand. If you need to discuss a changeset with someone,
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313 or make a record of a changeset for some other reason (for
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314 example, in a bug report), use the hexadecimal
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315 identifier.</para>
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316
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317 </sect2>
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318 <sect2>
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319 <title>Viewing specific revisions</title>
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320
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321 <para>To narrow the output of <command role="hg-cmd">hg
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322 log</command> down to a single revision, use the <option
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323 role="hg-opt-log">-r</option> (or <option
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324 role="hg-opt-log">--rev</option>) option. You can use
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325 either a revision number or a long-form changeset identifier,
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326 and you can provide as many revisions as you want.</para>
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327
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328 &interaction.tour.log-r;
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329
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330 <para>If you want to see the history of several revisions
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331 without having to list each one, you can use <emphasis>range
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332 notation</emphasis>; this lets you express the idea <quote>I
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333 want all revisions between <literal>abc</literal> and
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334 <literal>def</literal>, inclusive</quote>.</para>
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335
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336 &interaction.tour.log.range;
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337
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338 <para>Mercurial also honours the order in which you specify
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339 revisions, so <command role="hg-cmd">hg log -r 2:4</command>
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340 prints 2, 3, and 4. while <command role="hg-cmd">hg log -r
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341 4:2</command> prints 4, 3, and 2.</para>
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342
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343 </sect2>
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344 <sect2>
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345 <title>More detailed information</title>
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346
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347 <para>While the summary information printed by <command
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|
348 role="hg-cmd">hg log</command> is useful if you already know
|
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|
349 what you're looking for, you may need to see a complete
|
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|
350 description of the change, or a list of the files changed, if
|
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|
351 you're trying to decide whether a changeset is the one you're
|
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|
352 looking for. The <command role="hg-cmd">hg log</command>
|
bos@553
|
353 command's <option role="hg-opt-global">-v</option> (or <option
|
bos@553
|
354 role="hg-opt-global">--verbose</option>) option gives you
|
bos@559
|
355 this extra detail.</para>
|
bos@559
|
356
|
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|
357 &interaction.tour.log-v;
|
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|
358
|
bos@553
|
359 <para>If you want to see both the description and content of a
|
bos@553
|
360 change, add the <option role="hg-opt-log">-p</option> (or
|
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|
361 <option role="hg-opt-log">--patch</option>) option. This
|
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|
362 displays the content of a change as a <emphasis>unified
|
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|
363 diff</emphasis> (if you've never seen a unified diff before,
|
dongsheng@625
|
364 see section <xref linkend="sec.mq.patch"/> for an
|
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|
365 overview).</para>
|
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|
366
|
bos@566
|
367 &interaction.tour.log-vp;
|
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|
368
|
bos@553
|
369 </sect2>
|
bos@553
|
370 </sect1>
|
bos@553
|
371 <sect1>
|
bos@553
|
372 <title>All about command options</title>
|
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|
373
|
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|
374 <para>Let's take a brief break from exploring Mercurial commands
|
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|
375 to discuss a pattern in the way that they work; you may find
|
bos@553
|
376 this useful to keep in mind as we continue our tour.</para>
|
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|
377
|
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|
378 <para>Mercurial has a consistent and straightforward approach to
|
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|
379 dealing with the options that you can pass to commands. It
|
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|
380 follows the conventions for options that are common to modern
|
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|
381 Linux and Unix systems.</para>
|
bos@553
|
382 <itemizedlist>
|
bos@553
|
383 <listitem><para>Every option has a long name. For example, as
|
bos@553
|
384 we've already seen, the <command role="hg-cmd">hg
|
bos@553
|
385 log</command> command accepts a <option
|
bos@553
|
386 role="hg-opt-log">--rev</option> option.</para></listitem>
|
bos@553
|
387 <listitem><para>Most options have short names, too. Instead of
|
bos@553
|
388 <option role="hg-opt-log">--rev</option>, we can use <option
|
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|
389 role="hg-opt-log">-r</option>. (The reason that some
|
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|
390 options don't have short names is that the options in
|
bos@553
|
391 question are rarely used.)</para></listitem>
|
bos@553
|
392 <listitem><para>Long options start with two dashes (e.g. <option
|
bos@553
|
393 role="hg-opt-log">--rev</option>), while short options
|
bos@553
|
394 start with one (e.g. <option
|
bos@553
|
395 role="hg-opt-log">-r</option>).</para></listitem>
|
bos@553
|
396 <listitem><para>Option naming and usage is consistent across
|
bos@553
|
397 commands. For example, every command that lets you specify
|
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|
398 a changeset ID or revision number accepts both <option
|
bos@553
|
399 role="hg-opt-log">-r</option> and <option
|
bos@553
|
400 role="hg-opt-log">--rev</option>
|
bos@553
|
401 arguments.</para></listitem></itemizedlist>
|
bos@553
|
402 <para>In the examples throughout this book, I use short options
|
bos@553
|
403 instead of long. This just reflects my own preference, so don't
|
bos@553
|
404 read anything significant into it.</para>
|
bos@553
|
405
|
bos@553
|
406 <para>Most commands that print output of some kind will print more
|
bos@553
|
407 output when passed a <option role="hg-opt-global">-v</option>
|
bos@553
|
408 (or <option role="hg-opt-global">--verbose</option>) option, and
|
bos@553
|
409 less when passed <option role="hg-opt-global">-q</option> (or
|
bos@553
|
410 <option role="hg-opt-global">--quiet</option>).</para>
|
bos@553
|
411
|
bos@553
|
412 </sect1>
|
bos@553
|
413 <sect1>
|
bos@553
|
414 <title>Making and reviewing changes</title>
|
bos@553
|
415
|
bos@553
|
416 <para>Now that we have a grasp of viewing history in Mercurial,
|
bos@553
|
417 let's take a look at making some changes and examining
|
bos@553
|
418 them.</para>
|
bos@553
|
419
|
bos@553
|
420 <para>The first thing we'll do is isolate our experiment in a
|
bos@553
|
421 repository of its own. We use the <command role="hg-cmd">hg
|
bos@553
|
422 clone</command> command, but we don't need to clone a copy of
|
bos@553
|
423 the remote repository. Since we already have a copy of it
|
bos@553
|
424 locally, we can just clone that instead. This is much faster
|
bos@553
|
425 than cloning over the network, and cloning a local repository
|
bos@559
|
426 uses less disk space in most cases, too.</para>
|
bos@559
|
427
|
bos@566
|
428 &interaction.tour.reclone;
|
bos@559
|
429
|
bos@559
|
430 <para>As an aside, it's often good practice to keep a
|
bos@559
|
431 <quote>pristine</quote> copy of a remote repository around,
|
bos@559
|
432 which you can then make temporary clones of to create sandboxes
|
bos@559
|
433 for each task you want to work on. This lets you work on
|
bos@559
|
434 multiple tasks in parallel, each isolated from the others until
|
bos@559
|
435 it's complete and you're ready to integrate it back. Because
|
bos@559
|
436 local clones are so cheap, there's almost no overhead to cloning
|
bos@559
|
437 and destroying repositories whenever you want.</para>
|
bos@553
|
438
|
bos@553
|
439 <para>In our <filename class="directory">my-hello</filename>
|
bos@553
|
440 repository, we have a file <filename>hello.c</filename> that
|
bos@553
|
441 contains the classic <quote>hello, world</quote> program. Let's
|
bos@553
|
442 use the ancient and venerable <command>sed</command> command to
|
bos@553
|
443 edit this file so that it prints a second line of output. (I'm
|
bos@553
|
444 only using <command>sed</command> to do this because it's easy
|
bos@553
|
445 to write a scripted example this way. Since you're not under
|
bos@553
|
446 the same constraint, you probably won't want to use
|
bos@553
|
447 <command>sed</command>; simply use your preferred text editor to
|
bos@559
|
448 do the same thing.)</para>
|
bos@559
|
449
|
bos@566
|
450 &interaction.tour.sed;
|
bos@553
|
451
|
bos@553
|
452 <para>Mercurial's <command role="hg-cmd">hg status</command>
|
bos@553
|
453 command will tell us what Mercurial knows about the files in the
|
bos@559
|
454 repository.</para>
|
bos@559
|
455
|
bos@566
|
456 &interaction.tour.status;
|
bos@559
|
457
|
bos@559
|
458 <para>The <command role="hg-cmd">hg status</command> command
|
bos@559
|
459 prints no output for some files, but a line starting with
|
bos@553
|
460 <quote><literal>M</literal></quote> for
|
bos@553
|
461 <filename>hello.c</filename>. Unless you tell it to, <command
|
bos@553
|
462 role="hg-cmd">hg status</command> will not print any output
|
bos@553
|
463 for files that have not been modified.</para>
|
bos@553
|
464
|
bos@553
|
465 <para>The <quote><literal>M</literal></quote> indicates that
|
bos@553
|
466 Mercurial has noticed that we modified
|
bos@553
|
467 <filename>hello.c</filename>. We didn't need to
|
bos@553
|
468 <emphasis>inform</emphasis> Mercurial that we were going to
|
bos@553
|
469 modify the file before we started, or that we had modified the
|
bos@553
|
470 file after we were done; it was able to figure this out
|
bos@553
|
471 itself.</para>
|
bos@553
|
472
|
bos@553
|
473 <para>It's a little bit helpful to know that we've modified
|
bos@553
|
474 <filename>hello.c</filename>, but we might prefer to know
|
bos@553
|
475 exactly <emphasis>what</emphasis> changes we've made to it. To
|
bos@553
|
476 do this, we use the <command role="hg-cmd">hg diff</command>
|
bos@559
|
477 command.</para>
|
bos@559
|
478
|
bos@566
|
479 &interaction.tour.diff;
|
bos@553
|
480
|
bos@553
|
481 </sect1>
|
bos@553
|
482 <sect1>
|
bos@553
|
483 <title>Recording changes in a new changeset</title>
|
bos@553
|
484
|
bos@553
|
485 <para>We can modify files, build and test our changes, and use
|
bos@553
|
486 <command role="hg-cmd">hg status</command> and <command
|
bos@553
|
487 role="hg-cmd">hg diff</command> to review our changes, until
|
bos@553
|
488 we're satisfied with what we've done and arrive at a natural
|
bos@553
|
489 stopping point where we want to record our work in a new
|
bos@553
|
490 changeset.</para>
|
bos@553
|
491
|
bos@553
|
492 <para>The <command role="hg-cmd">hg commit</command> command lets
|
bos@553
|
493 us create a new changeset; we'll usually refer to this as
|
bos@553
|
494 <quote>making a commit</quote> or
|
bos@553
|
495 <quote>committing</quote>.</para>
|
bos@553
|
496
|
bos@553
|
497 <sect2>
|
bos@553
|
498 <title>Setting up a username</title>
|
bos@553
|
499
|
bos@553
|
500 <para>When you try to run <command role="hg-cmd">hg
|
bos@553
|
501 commit</command> for the first time, it is not guaranteed to
|
bos@553
|
502 succeed. Mercurial records your name and address with each
|
bos@553
|
503 change that you commit, so that you and others will later be
|
bos@553
|
504 able to tell who made each change. Mercurial tries to
|
bos@553
|
505 automatically figure out a sensible username to commit the
|
bos@553
|
506 change with. It will attempt each of the following methods,
|
bos@553
|
507 in order:</para>
|
bos@553
|
508 <orderedlist>
|
bos@553
|
509 <listitem><para>If you specify a <option
|
bos@553
|
510 role="hg-opt-commit">-u</option> option to the <command
|
bos@553
|
511 role="hg-cmd">hg commit</command> command on the command
|
bos@553
|
512 line, followed by a username, this is always given the
|
bos@553
|
513 highest precedence.</para></listitem>
|
bos@553
|
514 <listitem><para>If you have set the <envar>HGUSER</envar>
|
bos@553
|
515 environment variable, this is checked
|
bos@553
|
516 next.</para></listitem>
|
bos@553
|
517 <listitem><para>If you create a file in your home directory
|
bos@553
|
518 called <filename role="special">.hgrc</filename>, with a
|
bos@553
|
519 <envar role="rc-item-ui">username</envar> entry, that will
|
bos@553
|
520 be used next. To see what the contents of this file
|
bos@553
|
521 should look like, refer to section <xref
|
dongsheng@625
|
522 linkend="sec.tour-basic.username"/>
|
bos@553
|
523 below.</para></listitem>
|
bos@553
|
524 <listitem><para>If you have set the <envar>EMAIL</envar>
|
bos@553
|
525 environment variable, this will be used
|
bos@553
|
526 next.</para></listitem>
|
bos@553
|
527 <listitem><para>Mercurial will query your system to find out
|
bos@553
|
528 your local user name and host name, and construct a
|
bos@553
|
529 username from these components. Since this often results
|
bos@553
|
530 in a username that is not very useful, it will print a
|
bos@553
|
531 warning if it has to do
|
bos@558
|
532 this.</para></listitem>
|
bos@558
|
533 </orderedlist>
|
bos@558
|
534 <para>If all of these mechanisms fail, Mercurial will
|
bos@553
|
535 fail, printing an error message. In this case, it will not
|
bos@553
|
536 let you commit until you set up a
|
bos@558
|
537 username.</para>
|
bos@558
|
538 <para>You should think of the <envar>HGUSER</envar> environment
|
bos@558
|
539 variable and the <option role="hg-opt-commit">-u</option>
|
bos@558
|
540 option to the <command role="hg-cmd">hg commit</command>
|
bos@558
|
541 command as ways to <emphasis>override</emphasis> Mercurial's
|
bos@558
|
542 default selection of username. For normal use, the simplest
|
bos@558
|
543 and most robust way to set a username for yourself is by
|
bos@558
|
544 creating a <filename role="special">.hgrc</filename> file; see
|
bos@558
|
545 below for details.</para>
|
dongsheng@625
|
546 <sect3 id="sec.tour-basic.username">
|
bos@553
|
547 <title>Creating a Mercurial configuration file</title>
|
bos@558
|
548
|
bos@558
|
549 <para>To set a user name, use your favourite editor
|
bos@553
|
550 to create a file called <filename
|
bos@553
|
551 role="special">.hgrc</filename> in your home directory.
|
bos@553
|
552 Mercurial will use this file to look up your personalised
|
bos@553
|
553 configuration settings. The initial contents of your
|
bos@553
|
554 <filename role="special">.hgrc</filename> should look like
|
bos@558
|
555 this.</para>
|
bos@558
|
556 <programlisting># This is a Mercurial configuration file.
|
bos@558
|
557 [ui] username = Firstname Lastname
|
bos@558
|
558 <email.address@domain.net></programlisting>
|
bos@558
|
559
|
bos@558
|
560 <para>The <quote><literal>[ui]</literal></quote> line begins a
|
bos@558
|
561 <emphasis>section</emphasis> of the config file, so you can
|
bos@558
|
562 read the <quote><literal>username = ...</literal></quote>
|
bos@558
|
563 line as meaning <quote>set the value of the
|
bos@558
|
564 <literal>username</literal> item in the
|
bos@558
|
565 <literal>ui</literal> section</quote>. A section continues
|
bos@558
|
566 until a new section begins, or the end of the file.
|
bos@558
|
567 Mercurial ignores empty lines and treats any text from
|
bos@558
|
568 <quote><literal>#</literal></quote> to the end of a line as
|
bos@558
|
569 a comment.</para>
|
bos@553
|
570 </sect3>
|
bos@558
|
571
|
bos@553
|
572 <sect3>
|
bos@553
|
573 <title>Choosing a user name</title>
|
bos@553
|
574
|
bos@558
|
575 <para>You can use any text you like as the value of
|
bos@553
|
576 the <literal>username</literal> config item, since this
|
bos@553
|
577 information is for reading by other people, but for
|
bos@553
|
578 interpreting by Mercurial. The convention that most
|
bos@553
|
579 people follow is to use their name and email address, as
|
bos@558
|
580 in the example above.</para>
|
bos@553
|
581 <note>
|
bos@558
|
582 <para>Mercurial's built-in web server obfuscates
|
bos@553
|
583 email addresses, to make it more difficult for the email
|
bos@553
|
584 harvesting tools that spammers use. This reduces the
|
bos@553
|
585 likelihood that you'll start receiving more junk email
|
bos@553
|
586 if you publish a Mercurial repository on the
|
bos@558
|
587 web.</para></note>
|
bos@553
|
588
|
bos@553
|
589 </sect3>
|
bos@553
|
590 </sect2>
|
bos@553
|
591 <sect2>
|
bos@553
|
592 <title>Writing a commit message</title>
|
bos@553
|
593
|
bos@558
|
594 <para>When we commit a change, Mercurial drops us into
|
bos@553
|
595 a text editor, to enter a message that will describe the
|
bos@553
|
596 modifications we've made in this changeset. This is called
|
bos@553
|
597 the <emphasis>commit message</emphasis>. It will be a
|
bos@553
|
598 record for readers of what we did and why, and it will be
|
bos@553
|
599 printed by <command role="hg-cmd">hg log</command> after
|
bos@558
|
600 we've finished committing.</para>
|
bos@558
|
601
|
bos@566
|
602 &interaction.tour.commit;
|
bos@558
|
603
|
bos@558
|
604 <para>The editor that the <command role="hg-cmd">hg
|
bos@553
|
605 commit</command> command drops us into will contain an
|
bos@553
|
606 empty line, followed by a number of lines starting with
|
bos@558
|
607 <quote><literal>HG:</literal></quote>.</para>
|
bos@558
|
608
|
bos@558
|
609 <programlisting>XXX fix this XXX</programlisting>
|
bos@558
|
610
|
bos@558
|
611 <para>Mercurial ignores the lines that start with
|
bos@553
|
612 <quote><literal>HG:</literal></quote>; it uses them only to
|
bos@553
|
613 tell us which files it's recording changes to. Modifying or
|
bos@558
|
614 deleting these lines has no effect.</para>
|
bos@553
|
615 </sect2>
|
bos@553
|
616 <sect2>
|
bos@553
|
617 <title>Writing a good commit message</title>
|
bos@553
|
618
|
bos@558
|
619 <para>Since <command role="hg-cmd">hg log</command>
|
bos@553
|
620 only prints the first line of a commit message by default,
|
bos@553
|
621 it's best to write a commit message whose first line stands
|
bos@553
|
622 alone. Here's a real example of a commit message that
|
bos@553
|
623 <emphasis>doesn't</emphasis> follow this guideline, and
|
bos@553
|
624 hence has a summary that is not
|
bos@558
|
625 readable.</para>
|
bos@558
|
626
|
bos@558
|
627 <programlisting>
|
bos@558
|
628 changeset: 73:584af0e231be
|
bos@558
|
629 user: Censored Person <censored.person@example.org>
|
bos@558
|
630 date: Tue Sep 26 21:37:07 2006 -0700
|
bos@558
|
631 summary: include buildmeister/commondefs. Add exports.</programlisting>
|
bos@558
|
632
|
bos@558
|
633 <para>As far as the remainder of the contents of the
|
bos@553
|
634 commit message are concerned, there are no hard-and-fast
|
bos@553
|
635 rules. Mercurial itself doesn't interpret or care about the
|
bos@553
|
636 contents of the commit message, though your project may have
|
bos@553
|
637 policies that dictate a certain kind of
|
bos@558
|
638 formatting.</para>
|
bos@558
|
639 <para>My personal preference is for short, but
|
bos@553
|
640 informative, commit messages that tell me something that I
|
bos@553
|
641 can't figure out with a quick glance at the output of
|
bos@553
|
642 <command role="hg-cmd">hg log
|
bos@558
|
643 --patch</command>.</para>
|
bos@553
|
644 </sect2>
|
bos@553
|
645 <sect2>
|
bos@553
|
646 <title>Aborting a commit</title>
|
bos@553
|
647
|
bos@558
|
648 <para>If you decide that you don't want to commit
|
bos@553
|
649 while in the middle of editing a commit message, simply exit
|
bos@553
|
650 from your editor without saving the file that it's editing.
|
bos@553
|
651 This will cause nothing to happen to either the repository
|
bos@558
|
652 or the working directory.</para>
|
bos@558
|
653 <para>If we run the <command role="hg-cmd">hg
|
bos@553
|
654 commit</command> command without any arguments, it records
|
bos@553
|
655 all of the changes we've made, as reported by <command
|
bos@553
|
656 role="hg-cmd">hg status</command> and <command
|
bos@558
|
657 role="hg-cmd">hg diff</command>.</para>
|
bos@553
|
658 </sect2>
|
bos@553
|
659 <sect2>
|
bos@553
|
660 <title>Admiring our new handiwork</title>
|
bos@553
|
661
|
bos@558
|
662 <para>Once we've finished the commit, we can use the
|
bos@553
|
663 <command role="hg-cmd">hg tip</command> command to display
|
bos@553
|
664 the changeset we just created. This command produces output
|
bos@553
|
665 that is identical to <command role="hg-cmd">hg
|
bos@553
|
666 log</command>, but it only displays the newest revision in
|
bos@558
|
667 the repository.</para>
|
bos@558
|
668
|
bos@566
|
669 &interaction.tour.tip;
|
bos@558
|
670
|
bos@558
|
671 <para>We refer to
|
bos@553
|
672 the newest revision in the repository as the tip revision,
|
bos@558
|
673 or simply the tip.</para>
|
bos@553
|
674 </sect2>
|
bos@553
|
675 </sect1>
|
bos@558
|
676
|
bos@553
|
677 <sect1>
|
bos@553
|
678 <title>Sharing changes</title>
|
bos@553
|
679
|
bos@558
|
680 <para>We mentioned earlier that repositories in
|
bos@553
|
681 Mercurial are self-contained. This means that the changeset
|
bos@553
|
682 we just created exists only in our <filename
|
bos@553
|
683 class="directory">my-hello</filename> repository. Let's
|
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|
684 look at a few ways that we can propagate this change into
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685 other repositories.</para>
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686
|
dongsheng@625
|
687 <sect2 id="sec.tour.pull">
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688 <title>Pulling changes from another repository</title>
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689 <para>To get started, let's clone our original
|
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690 <filename class="directory">hello</filename> repository,
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691 which does not contain the change we just committed. We'll
|
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692 call our temporary repository <filename
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693 class="directory">hello-pull</filename>.</para>
|
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694
|
bos@566
|
695 &interaction.tour.clone-pull;
|
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|
696
|
bos@558
|
697 <para>We'll use the <command role="hg-cmd">hg
|
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698 pull</command> command to bring changes from <filename
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699 class="directory">my-hello</filename> into <filename
|
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700 class="directory">hello-pull</filename>. However, blindly
|
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701 pulling unknown changes into a repository is a somewhat
|
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702 scary prospect. Mercurial provides the <command
|
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703 role="hg-cmd">hg incoming</command> command to tell us
|
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704 what changes the <command role="hg-cmd">hg pull</command>
|
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705 command <emphasis>would</emphasis> pull into the repository,
|
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706 without actually pulling the changes in.</para>
|
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707
|
bos@566
|
708 &interaction.tour.incoming;
|
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|
709
|
bos@558
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710 <para>(Of course, someone could
|
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711 cause more changesets to appear in the repository that we
|
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712 ran <command role="hg-cmd">hg incoming</command> in, before
|
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713 we get a chance to <command role="hg-cmd">hg pull</command>
|
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714 the changes, so that we could end up pulling changes that we
|
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715 didn't expect.)</para>
|
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|
716
|
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717 <para>Bringing changes into a repository is a simple
|
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718 matter of running the <command role="hg-cmd">hg
|
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719 pull</command> command, and telling it which repository to
|
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720 pull from.</para>
|
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721
|
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|
722 &interaction.tour.pull;
|
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|
723
|
bos@558
|
724 <para>As you can see
|
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725 from the before-and-after output of <command
|
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726 role="hg-cmd">hg tip</command>, we have successfully
|
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727 pulled changes into our repository. There remains one step
|
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728 before we can see these changes in the working
|
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|
729 directory.</para>
|
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|
730 </sect2>
|
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|
731 <sect2>
|
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|
732 <title>Updating the working directory</title>
|
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|
733
|
bos@559
|
734 <para>We have so far glossed over the relationship between a
|
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|
735 repository and its working directory. The <command
|
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736 role="hg-cmd">hg pull</command> command that we ran in
|
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737 section <xref linkend="sec.tour.pull"/> brought changes
|
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|
738 into the repository, but if we check, there's no sign of those
|
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|
739 changes in the working directory. This is because <command
|
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|
740 role="hg-cmd">hg pull</command> does not (by default) touch
|
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|
741 the working directory. Instead, we use the <command
|
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|
742 role="hg-cmd">hg update</command> command to do this.</para>
|
bos@559
|
743
|
bos@566
|
744 &interaction.tour.update;
|
bos@559
|
745
|
bos@559
|
746 <para>It might seem a bit strange that <command role="hg-cmd">hg
|
bos@559
|
747 pull</command> doesn't update the working directory
|
bos@559
|
748 automatically. There's actually a good reason for this: you
|
bos@559
|
749 can use <command role="hg-cmd">hg update</command> to update
|
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|
750 the working directory to the state it was in at <emphasis>any
|
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|
751 revision</emphasis> in the history of the repository. If
|
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|
752 you had the working directory updated to an old revision---to
|
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|
753 hunt down the origin of a bug, say---and ran a <command
|
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|
754 role="hg-cmd">hg pull</command> which automatically updated
|
bos@559
|
755 the working directory to a new revision, you might not be
|
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|
756 terribly happy.</para>
|
bos@559
|
757 <para>However, since pull-then-update is such a common thing to
|
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|
758 do, Mercurial lets you combine the two by passing the <option
|
bos@559
|
759 role="hg-opt-pull">-u</option> option to <command
|
bos@559
|
760 role="hg-cmd">hg pull</command>.</para>
|
bos@558
|
761
|
bos@558
|
762 <para>If you look back at the output of <command
|
bos@559
|
763 role="hg-cmd">hg pull</command> in section <xref
|
dongsheng@625
|
764 linkend="sec.tour.pull"/> when we ran it without <option
|
bos@559
|
765 role="hg-opt-pull">-u</option>, you can see that it printed
|
bos@559
|
766 a helpful reminder that we'd have to take an explicit step to
|
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|
767 update the working directory:</para>
|
bos@558
|
768
|
bos@558
|
769 <!-- &interaction.xxx.fixme; -->
|
bos@558
|
770
|
bos@559
|
771 <para>To find out what revision the working directory is at, use
|
bos@559
|
772 the <command role="hg-cmd">hg parents</command>
|
bos@559
|
773 command.</para>
|
bos@558
|
774
|
bos@566
|
775 &interaction.tour.parents;
|
bos@558
|
776
|
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|
777 <para>If you look back at figure <xref
|
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|
778 linkend="fig.tour-basic.history"/>,
|
bos@559
|
779 you'll see arrows connecting each changeset. The node that
|
bos@559
|
780 the arrow leads <emphasis>from</emphasis> in each case is a
|
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|
781 parent, and the node that the arrow leads
|
bos@559
|
782 <emphasis>to</emphasis> is its child. The working directory
|
bos@559
|
783 has a parent in just the same way; this is the changeset that
|
bos@559
|
784 the working directory currently contains.</para>
|
bos@559
|
785
|
bos@559
|
786 <para>To update the working directory to a particular revision,
|
bos@559
|
787
|
bos@559
|
788 give a revision number or changeset ID to the <command
|
bos@559
|
789 role="hg-cmd">hg update</command> command.</para>
|
bos@559
|
790
|
bos@566
|
791 &interaction.tour.older;
|
bos@559
|
792
|
bos@559
|
793 <para>If you omit an explicit revision, <command
|
bos@559
|
794 role="hg-cmd">hg update</command> will update to the tip
|
bos@559
|
795 revision, as shown by the second call to <command
|
bos@559
|
796 role="hg-cmd">hg update</command> in the example
|
bos@559
|
797 above.</para>
|
bos@558
|
798 </sect2>
|
bos@558
|
799
|
bos@553
|
800 <sect2>
|
bos@553
|
801 <title>Pushing changes to another repository</title>
|
bos@553
|
802
|
bos@558
|
803 <para>Mercurial lets us push changes to another
|
bos@553
|
804 repository, from the repository we're currently visiting.
|
bos@553
|
805 As with the example of <command role="hg-cmd">hg
|
bos@553
|
806 pull</command> above, we'll create a temporary repository
|
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|
807 to push our changes into.</para>
|
bos@558
|
808
|
bos@566
|
809 &interaction.tour.clone-push;
|
bos@558
|
810
|
bos@558
|
811 <para>The <command role="hg-cmd">hg outgoing</command> command
|
bos@553
|
812 tells us what changes would be pushed into another
|
bos@558
|
813 repository.</para>
|
bos@558
|
814
|
bos@566
|
815 &interaction.tour.outgoing;
|
bos@558
|
816
|
bos@558
|
817 <para>And the
|
bos@553
|
818 <command role="hg-cmd">hg push</command> command does the
|
bos@558
|
819 actual push.</para>
|
bos@558
|
820
|
bos@566
|
821 &interaction.tour.push;
|
bos@558
|
822
|
bos@558
|
823 <para>As with
|
bos@553
|
824 <command role="hg-cmd">hg pull</command>, the <command
|
bos@553
|
825 role="hg-cmd">hg push</command> command does not update
|
bos@553
|
826 the working directory in the repository that it's pushing
|
bos@553
|
827 changes into. (Unlike <command role="hg-cmd">hg
|
bos@553
|
828 pull</command>, <command role="hg-cmd">hg push</command>
|
bos@553
|
829 does not provide a <literal>-u</literal> option that updates
|
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|
830 the other repository's working directory.)</para>
|
bos@558
|
831
|
bos@558
|
832 <para>What happens if we try to pull or push changes
|
bos@553
|
833 and the receiving repository already has those changes?
|
bos@558
|
834 Nothing too exciting.</para>
|
bos@558
|
835
|
bos@566
|
836 &interaction.tour.push.nothing;
|
bos@553
|
837 </sect2>
|
bos@553
|
838 <sect2>
|
bos@553
|
839 <title>Sharing changes over a network</title>
|
bos@553
|
840
|
bos@558
|
841 <para>The commands we have covered in the previous few
|
bos@553
|
842 sections are not limited to working with local repositories.
|
bos@553
|
843 Each works in exactly the same fashion over a network
|
bos@558
|
844 connection; simply pass in a URL instead of a local
|
bos@558
|
845 path.</para>
|
bos@558
|
846
|
bos@566
|
847 &interaction.tour.outgoing.net;
|
bos@558
|
848
|
bos@558
|
849 <para>In this example, we
|
bos@553
|
850 can see what changes we could push to the remote repository,
|
bos@553
|
851 but the repository is understandably not set up to let
|
bos@558
|
852 anonymous users push to it.</para>
|
bos@558
|
853
|
bos@566
|
854 &interaction.tour.push.net;
|
bos@553
|
855 </sect2>
|
bos@553
|
856 </sect1>
|
bos@553
|
857 </chapter>
|
bos@553
|
858
|
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|
859 <!--
|
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|
860 local variables:
|
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|
861 sgml-parent-document: ("00book.xml" "book" "chapter")
|
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|
862 end:
|
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|
863 -->
|