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1 \chapter{Handling repository events with hooks}
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2 \label{chap:hook}
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3
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4 Mercurial offers a powerful mechanism to let you perform automated
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5 actions in response to events that occur in a repository. In some
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6 cases, you can even control Mercurial's response to those events.
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7
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8 The name Mercurial uses for one of these actions is a \emph{hook}.
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9 Hooks are called ``triggers'' in some revision control systems, but
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10 the two names refer to the same idea.
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11
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12 \section{An overview of hooks in Mercurial}
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13
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14 Here is a brief list of the hooks that Mercurial supports. We will
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15 revisit each of these hooks in more detail later, in
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16 section~\ref{sec:hook:ref}.
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17
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18 \begin{itemize}
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19 \item[\small\hook{changegroup}] This is run after a group of
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20 changesets has been brought into the repository from elsewhere.
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21 \item[\small\hook{commit}] This is run after a new changeset has been
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22 created in the local repository.
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23 \item[\small\hook{incoming}] This is run once for each new changeset
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24 that is brought into the repository from elsewhere. Notice the
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25 difference from \hook{changegroup}, which is run once per
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26 \emph{group} of changesets brought in.
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27 \item[\small\hook{outgoing}] This is run after a group of changesets
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28 has been transmitted from this repository.
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29 \item[\small\hook{prechangegroup}] This is run before starting to
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30 bring a group of changesets into the repository.
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31 \item[\small\hook{precommit}] Controlling. This is run before starting
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32 a commit.
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33 \item[\small\hook{preoutgoing}] Controlling. This is run before
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34 starting to transmit a group of changesets from this repository.
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35 \item[\small\hook{pretag}] Controlling. This is run before creating a tag.
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36 \item[\small\hook{pretxnchangegroup}] Controlling. This is run after a
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37 group of changesets has been brought into the local repository from
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38 another, but before the transaction completes that will make the
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39 changes permanent in the repository.
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40 \item[\small\hook{pretxncommit}] Controlling. This is run after a new
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41 changeset has been created in the local repository, but before the
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42 transaction completes that will make it permanent.
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43 \item[\small\hook{preupdate}] Controlling. This is run before starting
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44 an update or merge of the working directory.
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45 \item[\small\hook{tag}] This is run after a tag is created.
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46 \item[\small\hook{update}] This is run after an update or merge of the
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47 working directory has finished.
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48 \end{itemize}
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49 Each of the hooks whose description begins with the word
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50 ``Controlling'' has the ability to determine whether an activity can
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51 proceed. If the hook succeeds, the activity may proceed; if it fails,
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52 the activity is either not permitted or undone, depending on the hook.
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53
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54 \section{Hooks and security}
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55
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56 \subsection{Hooks are run with your privileges}
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57
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58 When you run a Mercurial command in a repository, and the command
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59 causes a hook to run, that hook runs on \emph{your} system, under
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60 \emph{your} user account, with \emph{your} privilege level. Since
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61 hooks are arbitrary pieces of executable code, you should treat them
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62 with an appropriate level of suspicion. Do not install a hook unless
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63 you are confident that you know who created it and what it does.
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64
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65 In some cases, you may be exposed to hooks that you did not install
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66 yourself. If you work with Mercurial on an unfamiliar system,
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67 Mercurial will run hooks defined in that system's global \hgrc\ file.
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68
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69 If you are working with a repository owned by another user, Mercurial
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70 can run hooks defined in that user's repository, but it will still run
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71 them as ``you''. For example, if you \hgcmd{pull} from that
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72 repository, and its \sfilename{.hg/hgrc} defines a local
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73 \hook{outgoing} hook, that hook will run under your user account, even
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74 though you don't own that repository.
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75
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76 \begin{note}
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77 This only applies if you are pulling from a repository on a local or
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78 network filesystem. If you're pulling over http or ssh, any
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79 \hook{outgoing} hook will run under whatever account is executing
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80 the server process, on the server.
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81 \end{note}
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82
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83 XXX To see what hooks are defined in a repository, use the
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84 \hgcmdargs{config}{hooks} command. If you are working in one
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85 repository, but talking to another that you do not own (e.g.~using
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86 \hgcmd{pull} or \hgcmd{incoming}), remember that it is the other
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87 repository's hooks you should be checking, not your own.
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88
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89 \subsection{Hooks do not propagate}
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90
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91 In Mercurial, hooks are not revision controlled, and do not propagate
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92 when you clone, or pull from, a repository. The reason for this is
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93 simple: a hook is a completely arbitrary piece of executable code. It
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94 runs under your user identity, with your privilege level, on your
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95 machine.
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96
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97 It would be extremely reckless for any distributed revision control
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98 system to implement revision-controlled hooks, as this would offer an
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99 easily exploitable way to subvert the accounts of users of the
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100 revision control system.
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101
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102 Since Mercurial does not propagate hooks, if you are collaborating
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103 with other people on a common project, you should not assume that they
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104 are using the same Mercurial hooks as you are, or that theirs are
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105 correctly configured. You should document the hooks you expect people
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106 to use.
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107
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108 In a corporate intranet, this is somewhat easier to control, as you
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109 can for example provide a ``standard'' installation of Mercurial on an
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110 NFS filesystem, and use a site-wide \hgrc\ file to define hooks that
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111 all users will see. However, this too has its limits; see below.
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112
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113 \subsection{Hooks can be overridden}
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114
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115 Mercurial allows you to override a hook definition by redefining the
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116 hook. You can disable it by setting its value to the empty string, or
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117 change its behaviour as you wish.
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118
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119 If you deploy a system-~or site-wide \hgrc\ file that defines some
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120 hooks, you should thus understand that your users can disable or
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121 override those hooks.
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122
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123 \subsection{Ensuring that critical hooks are run}
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124
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125 Sometimes you may want to enforce a policy that you do not want others
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126 to be able to work around. For example, you may have a requirement
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127 that every changeset must pass a rigorous set of tests. Defining this
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128 requirement via a hook in a site-wide \hgrc\ won't work for remote
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129 users on laptops, and of course local users can subvert it at will by
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130 overriding the hook.
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131
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132 Instead, you can set up your policies for use of Mercurial so that
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133 people are expected to propagate changes through a well-known
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134 ``canonical'' server that you have locked down and configured
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135 appropriately.
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136
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137 One way to do this is via a combination of social engineering and
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138 technology. Set up a restricted-access account; users can push
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139 changes over the network to repositories managed by this account, but
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140 they cannot log into the account and run normal shell commands. In
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141 this scenario, a user can commit a changeset that contains any old
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142 garbage they want.
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143
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144 When someone pushes a changeset to the server that everyone pulls
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145 from, the server will test the changeset before it accepts it as
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146 permanent, and reject it if it fails to pass the test suite. If
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147 people only pull changes from this filtering server, it will serve to
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148 ensure that all changes that people pull have been automatically
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149 vetted.
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150
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151 \section{Using hooks with shared access to a repository}
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152
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153 If you want to use hooks to so some automated work in a repository
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154 that a number of people have shared access to, you need to be careful
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155 in how you do this.
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156
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157 Mercurial only locks a repository when it is writing to the
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158 repository, and only the parts of Mercurial that write to the
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159 repository pay attention to locks. Write locks are necessary to
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160 prevent multiple simultaneous writers from scribbling on each other's
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161 work, corrupting the repository.
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162
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163 Because Mercurial is careful with the order in which it reads and
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164 writes data, it does not need to acquire a lock when it wants to read
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165 data from the repository. The parts of Mercurial that read from the
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166 repository never pay attention to locks. This lockless reading scheme
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167 greatly increases performance and concurrency.
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168
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169 With great performance comes a trade-off, though, one which has the
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170 potential to cause you trouble unless you're aware of it. To describe
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171 this requires a little detail about how Mercurial adds changesets to a
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172 repository and reads those changes.
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173
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174 When Mercurial \emph{writes} metadata, it writes it straight into the
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175 destination file. It writes file data first, then manifest data
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176 (which contains pointers to the new file data), then changelog data
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177 (which contains pointers to the new manifest data). Before the first
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178 write to each file, it stores a record of where the end of the file
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179 was in its transaction log. If the transaction must be rolled back,
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180 Mercurial simply truncates each file back to the size it was before the
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181 transaction began.
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182
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183 When Mercurial \emph{reads} metadata, it reads the changelog first,
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184 then everything else. Since a reader will only access parts of the
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185 manifest or file metadata that it can see in the changelog, it can
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186 never see partially written data.
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187
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188 Some controlling hooks (\hook{pretxncommit} and
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189 \hook{pretxnchangegroup}) run when a transaction is almost complete.
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190 All of the metadata has been written, but Mercurial can still roll the
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191 transaction back and cause the newly-written data to disappear.
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192
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193 If one of these hooks runs for long, it opens a window in which a
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194 reader can see the metadata for changesets that are, strictly
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195 speaking, not yet permanent. The longer the hook runs, the bigger the
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196 window.
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197
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198 A good use for the \hook{pretxnchangegroup} hook would be to
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199 automatically build and test incoming changes before they are accepted
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200 into the repository, so that you can guarantee that nobody can push
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201 changes to this repository that ``break the build''. But if a client
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202 can pull changes while they're being tested, the usefulness of the
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203 test is zero; someone can pull untested changes.
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204
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205 The safest answer to this challenge is to set up such a ``gatekeeper''
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206 repository as \emph{unidirectional}. It can take changes pushed in
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207 from the outside, but nobody can pull changes from it. Use the
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208 \hook{preoutgoing} hook to lock it down. Configure a
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209 \hook{changegroup} hook so that if a build or test succeeds, the hook
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210 will push the new changes out to another repository that people
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211 \emph{can} pull from.
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212
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213 \section{A short tutorial on using hooks}
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214 \label{sec:hook:simple}
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215
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216 It is easy to write a Mercurial hook. Let's start with a hook that
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217 runs when you finish a \hgcmd{commit}, and simply prints the hash of
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218 the changeset you just created. The hook is called \hook{commit}.
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219
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220 \begin{figure}[ht]
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221 \interaction{hook.simple.init}
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222 \caption{A simple hook that runs when a changeset is committed}
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223 \label{ex:hook:init}
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224 \end{figure}
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225
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226 All hooks follow the pattern in example~\ref{ex:hook:init}. You add
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227 an entry to the \rcsection{hooks} section of your \hgrc\. On the left
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228 is the name of the event to trigger on; on the right is the action to
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229 take. As you can see, you can run an arbitrary shell command in a
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230 hook. Mercurial passes extra information to the hook using
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231 environment variables (look for \envar{HG\_NODE} in the example).
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232
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233 \subsection{Performing multiple actions per event}
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234
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235 Quite often, you will want to define more than one hook for a
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236 particular kind of event, as shown in example~\ref{ex:hook:ext}.
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237 Mercurial lets you do this by adding an \emph{extension} to the end of
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238 a hook's name. You extend a hook's name by giving the name of the
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239 hook, followed by a full stop (the ``\texttt{.}'' character), followed
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240 by some more text of your choosing. For example, Mercurial will run
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241 both \texttt{commit.foo} and \texttt{commit.bar} when the
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242 \texttt{commit} event occurs.
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243
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244 \begin{figure}[ht]
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245 \interaction{hook.simple.ext}
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246 \caption{Defining a second \hook{commit} hook}
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247 \label{ex:hook:ext}
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248 \end{figure}
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249
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250 To give a well-defined order of execution when there are multiple
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251 hooks defined for an event, Mercurial sorts hooks by extension, and
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252 executes the hook commands in this sorted order. In the above
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253 example, it will execute \texttt{commit.bar} before
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254 \texttt{commit.foo}, and \texttt{commit} before both.
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255
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256 It is a good idea to use a somewhat descriptive extension when you
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257 define a new hook. This will help you to remember what the hook was
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258 for. If the hook fails, you'll get an error message that contains the
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259 hook name and extension, so using a descriptive extension could give
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260 you an immediate hint as to why the hook failed (see
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261 section~\ref{sec:hook:perm} for an example).
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262
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263 \subsection{Controlling whether an activity can proceed}
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264 \label{sec:hook:perm}
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265
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266 In our earlier examples, we used the \hook{commit} hook, which is
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267 run after a commit has completed. This is one of several Mercurial
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268 hooks that run after an activity finishes. Such hooks have no way of
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269 influencing the activity itself.
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270
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271 Mercurial defines a number of events that occur before an activity
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272 starts; or after it starts, but before it finishes. Hooks that
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273 trigger on these events have the added ability to choose whether the
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274 activity can continue, or will abort.
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275
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276 The \hook{pretxncommit} hook runs after a commit has all but
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277 completed. In other words, the metadata representing the changeset
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278 has been written out to disk, but the transaction has not yet been
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279 allowed to complete. The \hook{pretxncommit} hook has the ability to
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280 decide whether the transaction can complete, or must be rolled back.
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281
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282 If the \hook{pretxncommit} hook exits with a status code of zero, the
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283 transaction is allowed to complete; the commit finishes; and the
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284 \hook{commit} hook is run. If the \hook{pretxncommit} hook exits with
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285 a non-zero status code, the transaction is rolled back; the metadata
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286 representing the changeset is erased; and the \hook{commit} hook is
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287 not run.
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288
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289 \begin{figure}[ht]
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290 \interaction{hook.simple.pretxncommit}
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291 \caption{Using the \hook{pretxncommit} hook to control commits}
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292 \label{ex:hook:pretxncommit}
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293 \end{figure}
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294
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295 The hook in example~\ref{ex:hook:pretxncommit} checks that a commit
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296 comment contains a bug ID. If it does, the commit can complete. If
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297 not, the commit is rolled back.
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298
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299 \section{Writing your own hooks}
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300
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301 When you are writing a hook, you might find it useful to run Mercurial
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302 either with the \hggopt{-v} option, or the \rcitem{ui}{verbose} config
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303 item set to ``true''. When you do so, Mercurial will print a message
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304 before it calls each hook.
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305
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306 \subsection{Choosing how your hook should run}
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307 \label{sec:hook:lang}
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308
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309 You can write a hook either as a normal program---typically a shell
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310 script---or as a Python function that is executed within the Mercurial
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311 process.
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312
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313 Writing a hook as an external program has the advantage that it
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314 requires no knowledge of Mercurial's internals. You can call normal
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315 Mercurial commands to get any added information you need. The
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316 trade-off is that external hooks are slower than in-process hooks.
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317
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318 An in-process Python hook has complete access to the Mercurial API,
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319 and does not ``shell out'' to another process, so it is inherently
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320 faster than an external hook. It is also easier to obtain much of the
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321 information that a hook requires by using the Mercurial API than by
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322 running Mercurial commands.
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323
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324 If you are comfortable with Python, or require high performance,
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325 writing your hooks in Python may be a good choice. However, when you
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326 have a straightforward hook to write and you don't need to care about
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327 performance (probably the majority of hooks), a shell script is
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328 perfectly fine.
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329
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330 \subsection{Hook parameters}
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331 \label{sec:hook:param}
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332
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333 Mercurial calls each hook with a set of well-defined parameters. In
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334 Python, a parameter is passed as a keyword argument to your hook
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335 function. For an external program, a parameter is passed as an
|
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336 environment variable.
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337
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338 Whether your hook is written in Python or as a shell script, the
|
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339 hook-specific parameter names and values will be the same. A boolean
|
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340 parameter will be represented as a boolean value in Python, but as the
|
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341 number 1 (for ``true'') or 0 (for ``false'') as an environment
|
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342 variable for an external hook. If a hook parameter is named
|
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343 \texttt{foo}, the keyword argument for a Python hook will also be
|
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344 named \texttt{foo}, while the environment variable for an external
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345 hook will be named \texttt{HG\_FOO}.
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346
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347 \subsection{Hook return values and activity control}
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348
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349 A hook that executes successfully must exit with a status of zero if
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350 external, or return boolean ``false'' if in-process. Failure is
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351 indicated with a non-zero exit status from an external hook, or an
|
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352 in-process hook returning boolean ``true''. If an in-process hook
|
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353 raises an exception, the hook is considered to have failed.
|
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354
|
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355 For a hook that controls whether an activity can proceed, zero/false
|
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356 means ``allow'', while non-zero/true/exception means ``deny''.
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357
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358 \subsection{Writing an external hook}
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359
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360 When you define an external hook in your \hgrc\ and the hook is run,
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361 its value is passed to your shell, which interprets it. This means
|
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362 that you can use normal shell constructs in the body of the hook.
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363
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364 An executable hook is always run with its current directory set to a
|
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365 repository's root directory.
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366
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367 Each hook parameter is passed in as an environment variable; the name
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368 is upper-cased, and prefixed with the string ``\texttt{HG\_}''.
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369
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370 With the exception of hook parameters, Mercurial does not set or
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371 modify any environment variables when running a hook. This is useful
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372 to remember if you are writing a site-wide hook that may be run by a
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373 number of different users with differing environment variables set.
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374 In multi-user situations, you should not rely on environment variables
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375 being set to the values you have in your environment when testing the
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376 hook.
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377
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378 \subsection{Telling Mercurial to use an in-process hook}
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379
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380 The \hgrc\ syntax for defining an in-process hook is slightly
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381 different than for an executable hook. The value of the hook must
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382 start with the text ``\texttt{python:}'', and continue with the
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383 fully-qualified name of a callable object to use as the hook's value.
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384
|
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385 The module in which a hook lives is automatically imported when a hook
|
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386 is run. So long as you have the module name and \envar{PYTHONPATH}
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387 right, it should ``just work''.
|
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388
|
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389 The following \hgrc\ example snippet illustrates the syntax and
|
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390 meaning of the notions we just described.
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391 \begin{codesample2}
|
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392 [hooks]
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393 commit.example = python:mymodule.submodule.myhook
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394 \end{codesample2}
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395 When Mercurial runs the \texttt{commit.example} hook, it imports
|
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396 \texttt{mymodule.submodule}, looks for the callable object named
|
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397 \texttt{myhook}, and calls it.
|
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398
|
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399 \subsection{Writing an in-process hook}
|
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400
|
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401 The simplest in-process hook does nothing, but illustrates the basic
|
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402 shape of the hook API:
|
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403 \begin{codesample2}
|
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404 def myhook(ui, repo, **kwargs):
|
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405 pass
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406 \end{codesample2}
|
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407 The first argument to a Python hook is always a
|
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408 \pymodclass{mercurial.ui}{ui} object. The second is a repository object;
|
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|
409 at the moment, it is always an instance of
|
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410 \pymodclass{mercurial.localrepo}{localrepository}. Following these two
|
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|
411 arguments are other keyword arguments. Which ones are passed in
|
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412 depends on the hook being called, but a hook can ignore arguments it
|
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|
413 doesn't care about by dropping them into a keyword argument dict, as
|
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414 with \texttt{**kwargs} above.
|
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415
|
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416 \section{Some hook examples}
|
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|
417
|
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418 \subsection{Writing meaningful commit messages}
|
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|
419
|
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420 It's hard to imagine a useful commit message being very short. The
|
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|
421 simple \hook{pretxncommit} hook of figure~\ref{ex:hook:msglen.run}
|
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422 will prevent you from committing a changeset with a message that is
|
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423 less than ten bytes long.
|
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|
424
|
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|
425 \begin{figure}[ht]
|
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|
426 \interaction{hook.msglen.run}
|
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|
427 \caption{A hook that forbids overly short commit messages}
|
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|
428 \label{ex:hook:msglen.run}
|
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|
429 \end{figure}
|
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|
430
|
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|
431 \subsection{Checking for trailing whitespace}
|
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|
432
|
bos@44
|
433 An interesting use of a commit-related hook is to help you to write
|
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|
434 cleaner code. A simple example of ``cleaner code'' is the dictum that
|
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|
435 a change should not add any new lines of text that contain ``trailing
|
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|
436 whitespace''. Trailing whitespace is a series of space and tab
|
bos@44
|
437 characters at the end of a line of text. In most cases, trailing
|
bos@44
|
438 whitespace is unnecessary, invisible noise, but it is occasionally
|
bos@49
|
439 problematic, and people often prefer to get rid of it.
|
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|
440
|
bos@44
|
441 You can use either the \hook{precommit} or \hook{pretxncommit} hook to
|
bos@44
|
442 tell whether you have a trailing whitespace problem. If you use the
|
bos@44
|
443 \hook{precommit} hook, the hook will not know which files you are
|
bos@44
|
444 committing, so it will have to check every modified file in the
|
bos@44
|
445 repository for trailing white space. If you want to commit a change
|
bos@44
|
446 to just the file \filename{foo}, but the file \filename{bar} contains
|
bos@44
|
447 trailing whitespace, doing a check in the \hook{precommit} hook will
|
bos@44
|
448 prevent you from committing \filename{foo} due to the problem with
|
bos@44
|
449 \filename{bar}. This doesn't seem right.
|
bos@44
|
450
|
bos@44
|
451 Should you choose the \hook{pretxncommit} hook, the check won't occur
|
bos@44
|
452 until just before the transaction for the commit completes. This will
|
bos@44
|
453 allow you to check for problems only the exact files that are being
|
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|
454 committed. However, if you entered the commit message interactively
|
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|
455 and the hook fails, the transaction will roll back; you'll have to
|
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|
456 re-enter the commit message after you fix the trailing whitespace and
|
bos@44
|
457 run \hgcmd{commit} again.
|
bos@44
|
458
|
bos@44
|
459 \begin{figure}[ht]
|
bos@44
|
460 \interaction{hook.ws.simple}
|
bos@44
|
461 \caption{A simple hook that checks for trailing whitespace}
|
bos@44
|
462 \label{ex:hook:ws.simple}
|
bos@44
|
463 \end{figure}
|
bos@44
|
464
|
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|
465 Figure~\ref{ex:hook:ws.simple} introduces a simple \hook{pretxncommit}
|
bos@44
|
466 hook that checks for trailing whitespace. This hook is short, but not
|
bos@44
|
467 very helpful. It exits with an error status if a change adds a line
|
bos@44
|
468 with trailing whitespace to any file, but does not print any
|
bos@49
|
469 information that might help us to identify the offending file or
|
bos@49
|
470 line. It also has the nice property of not paying attention to
|
bos@49
|
471 unmodified lines; only lines that introduce new trailing whitespace
|
bos@49
|
472 cause problems.
|
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|
473
|
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|
474 \begin{figure}[ht]
|
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|
475 \interaction{hook.ws.better}
|
bos@49
|
476 \caption{A better trailing whitespace hook}
|
bos@49
|
477 \label{ex:hook:ws.better}
|
bos@49
|
478 \end{figure}
|
bos@49
|
479
|
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|
480 The example of figure~\ref{ex:hook:ws.better} is much more complex,
|
bos@49
|
481 but also more useful. It parses a unified diff to see if any lines
|
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|
482 add trailing whitespace, and prints the name of the file and the line
|
bos@49
|
483 number of each such occurrence. Even better, if the change adds
|
bos@49
|
484 trailing whitespace, this hook saves the commit comment and prints the
|
bos@49
|
485 name of the save file before exiting and telling Mercurial to roll the
|
bos@49
|
486 transaction back, so you can use
|
bos@49
|
487 \hgcmdargs{commit}{\hgopt{commit}{-l}~\emph{filename}} to reuse the
|
bos@49
|
488 saved commit message once you've corrected the problem.
|
bos@49
|
489
|
bos@49
|
490 As a final aside, note in figure~\ref{ex:hook:ws.better} the use of
|
bos@49
|
491 \command{perl}'s in-place editing feature to get rid of trailing
|
bos@49
|
492 whitespace from a file. This is concise and useful enough that I will
|
bos@49
|
493 reproduce it here.
|
bos@49
|
494 \begin{codesample2}
|
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|
495 perl -pi -e 's,\\s+\$,,' filename
|
bos@49
|
496 \end{codesample2}
|
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|
497
|
bos@49
|
498 \section{Bundled hooks}
|
bos@49
|
499
|
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|
500 Mercurial ships with several bundled hooks. You can find them in the
|
bos@49
|
501 \dirname{hgext} directory of a Mercurial source tree. If you are
|
bos@49
|
502 using a Mercurial binary package, the hooks will be located in the
|
bos@49
|
503 \dirname{hgext} directory of wherever your package installer put
|
bos@49
|
504 Mercurial.
|
bos@49
|
505
|
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|
506 \subsection{\hgext{acl}---access control for parts of a repository}
|
bos@49
|
507
|
bos@49
|
508 The \hgext{acl} extension lets you control which remote users are
|
bos@49
|
509 allowed to push changesets to a networked server. You can protect any
|
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|
510 portion of a repository (including the entire repo), so that a
|
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|
511 specific remote user can push changes that do not affect the protected
|
bos@49
|
512 portion.
|
bos@49
|
513
|
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|
514 This extension implements access control based on the identity of the
|
bos@49
|
515 user performing a push, \emph{not} on who committed the changesets
|
bos@62
|
516 they're pushing. It makes sense to use this hook only if you have a
|
bos@62
|
517 locked-down server environment that authenticates remote users, and
|
bos@62
|
518 you want to be sure that only specific users are allowed to push
|
bos@62
|
519 changes to that server.
|
bos@62
|
520
|
bos@62
|
521 \subsubsection{Configuring the \hook{acl} hook}
|
bos@62
|
522
|
bos@62
|
523 In order to manage incoming changesets, the \hgext{acl} hook must be
|
bos@62
|
524 used as a \hook{pretxnchangegroup} hook. This lets it see which files
|
bos@62
|
525 are modified by each incoming changeset, and roll back a group of
|
bos@62
|
526 changesets if they modify ``forbidden'' files. Example:
|
bos@62
|
527 \begin{codesample2}
|
bos@62
|
528 [hooks]
|
bos@62
|
529 pretxnchangegroup.acl = python:hgext.acl.hook
|
bos@62
|
530 \end{codesample2}
|
bos@62
|
531
|
bos@62
|
532 The \hgext{acl} extension is configured using three sections.
|
bos@62
|
533
|
bos@62
|
534 The \rcsection{acl} section has only one entry, \rcitem{acl}{sources},
|
bos@62
|
535 which lists the sources of incoming changesets that the hook should
|
bos@62
|
536 pay attention to. You don't normally need to configure this section.
|
bos@62
|
537 \begin{itemize}
|
bos@64
|
538 \item[\rcitem{acl}{serve}] Control incoming changesets that are arriving
|
bos@62
|
539 from a remote repository over http or ssh. This is the default
|
bos@62
|
540 value of \rcitem{acl}{sources}, and usually the only setting you'll
|
bos@62
|
541 need for this configuration item.
|
bos@64
|
542 \item[\rcitem{acl}{pull}] Control incoming changesets that are
|
bos@64
|
543 arriving via a pull from a local repository.
|
bos@64
|
544 \item[\rcitem{acl}{push}] Control incoming changesets that are
|
bos@64
|
545 arriving via a push from a local repository.
|
bos@64
|
546 \item[\rcitem{acl}{bundle}] Control incoming changesets that are
|
bos@64
|
547 arriving from another repository via a bundle.
|
bos@62
|
548 \end{itemize}
|
bos@62
|
549
|
bos@62
|
550 The \rcsection{acl.allow} section controls the users that are allowed to
|
bos@62
|
551 add changesets to the repository. If this section is not present, all
|
bos@62
|
552 users that are not explicitly denied are allowed. If this section is
|
bos@62
|
553 present, all users that are not explicitly allowed are denied (so an
|
bos@62
|
554 empty section means that all users are denied).
|
bos@62
|
555
|
bos@62
|
556 The \rcsection{acl.deny} section determines which users are denied
|
bos@62
|
557 from adding changesets to the repository. If this section is not
|
bos@62
|
558 present or is empty, no users are denied.
|
bos@62
|
559
|
bos@62
|
560 The syntaxes for the \rcsection{acl.allow} and \rcsection{acl.deny}
|
bos@62
|
561 sections are identical. On the left of each entry is a glob pattern
|
bos@62
|
562 that matches files or directories, relative to the root of the
|
bos@62
|
563 repository; on the right, a user name.
|
bos@62
|
564
|
bos@62
|
565 In the following example, the user \texttt{docwriter} can only push
|
bos@62
|
566 changes to the \dirname{docs} subtree of the repository, while
|
bos@62
|
567 \texttt{intern} can push changes to any file or directory except
|
bos@62
|
568 \dirname{source/sensitive}.
|
bos@62
|
569 \begin{codesample2}
|
bos@62
|
570 [acl.allow]
|
bos@62
|
571 docs/** = docwriter
|
bos@62
|
572
|
bos@62
|
573 [acl.deny]
|
bos@62
|
574 source/sensitive/** = intern
|
bos@62
|
575 \end{codesample2}
|
bos@62
|
576
|
bos@62
|
577 \subsubsection{Testing and troubleshooting}
|
bos@62
|
578
|
bos@62
|
579 If you want to test the \hgext{acl} hook, run it with Mercurial's
|
bos@62
|
580 debugging output enabled. Since you'll probably be running it on a
|
bos@62
|
581 server where it's not convenient (or sometimes possible) to pass in
|
bos@62
|
582 the \hggopt{--debug} option, don't forget that you can enable
|
bos@62
|
583 debugging output in your \hgrc:
|
bos@62
|
584 \begin{codesample2}
|
bos@62
|
585 [ui]
|
bos@62
|
586 debug = true
|
bos@62
|
587 \end{codesample2}
|
bos@62
|
588 With this enabled, the \hgext{acl} hook will print enough information
|
bos@62
|
589 to let you figure out why it is allowing or forbidding pushes from
|
bos@62
|
590 specific users.
|
bos@62
|
591
|
bos@62
|
592 \subsection{\hgext{bugzilla}---integration with Bugzilla}
|
bos@62
|
593
|
bos@62
|
594 The \hgext{bugzilla} extension adds a comment to a Bugzilla bug
|
bos@62
|
595 whenever it finds a reference to that bug ID in a commit comment. You
|
bos@62
|
596 can install this hook on a shared server, so that any time a remote
|
bos@62
|
597 user pushes changes to this server, the hook gets run.
|
bos@62
|
598
|
bos@62
|
599 It adds a comment to the bug that looks like this (you can configure
|
bos@62
|
600 the contents of the comment---see below):
|
bos@62
|
601 \begin{codesample2}
|
bos@62
|
602 Changeset aad8b264143a, made by Joe User <joe.user@domain.com> in
|
bos@62
|
603 the frobnitz repository, refers to this bug.
|
bos@62
|
604
|
bos@62
|
605 For complete details, see
|
bos@62
|
606 http://hg.domain.com/frobnitz?cmd=changeset;node=aad8b264143a
|
bos@62
|
607
|
bos@62
|
608 Changeset description:
|
bos@62
|
609 Fix bug 10483 by guarding against some NULL pointers
|
bos@62
|
610 \end{codesample2}
|
bos@62
|
611 The value of this hook is that it automates the process of updating a
|
bos@62
|
612 bug any time a changeset refers to it. If you configure the hook
|
bos@62
|
613 properly, it makes it easy for people to browse straight from a
|
bos@62
|
614 Bugzilla bug to a changeset that refers to that bug.
|
bos@62
|
615
|
bos@62
|
616 You can use the code in this hook as a starting point for some more
|
bos@62
|
617 exotic Bugzilla integration recipes. Here are a few possibilities:
|
bos@62
|
618 \begin{itemize}
|
bos@62
|
619 \item Require that every changeset pushed to the server have a valid
|
bos@62
|
620 bug~ID in its commit comment. In this case, you'd want to configure
|
bos@62
|
621 the hook as a \hook{pretxncommit} hook. This would allow the hook
|
bos@62
|
622 to reject changes that didn't contain bug IDs.
|
bos@62
|
623 \item Allow incoming changesets to automatically modify the
|
bos@62
|
624 \emph{state} of a bug, as well as simply adding a comment. For
|
bos@62
|
625 example, the hook could recognise the string ``fixed bug 31337'' as
|
bos@62
|
626 indicating that it should update the state of bug 31337 to
|
bos@62
|
627 ``requires testing''.
|
bos@62
|
628 \end{itemize}
|
bos@62
|
629
|
bos@62
|
630 \subsubsection{Configuring the \hook{bugzilla} hook}
|
bos@62
|
631 \label{sec:hook:bugzilla:config}
|
bos@62
|
632
|
bos@62
|
633 You should configure this hook in your server's \hgrc\ as an
|
bos@62
|
634 \hook{incoming} hook, for example as follows:
|
bos@62
|
635 \begin{codesample2}
|
bos@62
|
636 [hooks]
|
bos@62
|
637 incoming.bugzilla = python:hgext.bugzilla.hook
|
bos@62
|
638 \end{codesample2}
|
bos@62
|
639
|
bos@62
|
640 Because of the specialised nature of this hook, and because Bugzilla
|
bos@62
|
641 was not written with this kind of integration in mind, configuring
|
bos@62
|
642 this hook is a somewhat involved process.
|
bos@62
|
643
|
bos@62
|
644 Before you begin, you must install the MySQL bindings for Python on
|
bos@62
|
645 the host(s) where you'll be running the hook. If this is not
|
bos@62
|
646 available as a binary package for your system, you can download it
|
bos@62
|
647 from~\cite{web:mysql-python}.
|
bos@62
|
648
|
bos@62
|
649 Configuration information for this hook lives in the
|
bos@62
|
650 \rcsection{bugzilla} section of your \hgrc.
|
bos@62
|
651 \begin{itemize}
|
bos@64
|
652 \item[\rcitem{bugzilla}{version}] The version of Bugzilla installed on
|
bos@64
|
653 the server. The database schema that Bugzilla uses changes
|
bos@62
|
654 occasionally, so this hook has to know exactly which schema to use.
|
bos@62
|
655 At the moment, the only version supported is \texttt{2.16}.
|
bos@64
|
656 \item[\rcitem{bugzilla}{host}] The hostname of the MySQL server that
|
bos@64
|
657 stores your Bugzilla data. The database must be configured to allow
|
bos@64
|
658 connections from whatever host you are running the \hook{bugzilla}
|
bos@64
|
659 hook on.
|
bos@64
|
660 \item[\rcitem{bugzilla}{user}] The username with which to connect to
|
bos@64
|
661 the MySQL server. The database must be configured to allow this
|
bos@64
|
662 user to connect from whatever host you are running the
|
bos@64
|
663 \hook{bugzilla} hook on. This user must be able to access and
|
bos@64
|
664 modify Bugzilla tables. The default value of this item is
|
bos@64
|
665 \texttt{bugs}, which is the standard name of the Bugzilla user in a
|
bos@64
|
666 MySQL database.
|
bos@64
|
667 \item[\rcitem{bugzilla}{password}] The MySQL password for the user you
|
bos@62
|
668 configured above. This is stored as plain text, so you should make
|
bos@62
|
669 sure that unauthorised users cannot read the \hgrc\ file where you
|
bos@62
|
670 store this information.
|
bos@64
|
671 \item[\rcitem{bugzilla}{db}] The name of the Bugzilla database on the
|
bos@64
|
672 MySQL server. The default value of this item is \texttt{bugs},
|
bos@64
|
673 which is the standard name of the MySQL database where Bugzilla
|
bos@64
|
674 stores its data.
|
bos@64
|
675 \item[\rcitem{bugzilla}{notify}] If you want Bugzilla to send out a
|
bos@64
|
676 notification email to subscribers after this hook has added a
|
bos@64
|
677 comment to a bug, you will need this hook to run a command whenever
|
bos@64
|
678 it updates the database. The command to run depends on where you
|
bos@64
|
679 have installed Bugzilla, but it will typically look something like
|
bos@64
|
680 this, if you have Bugzilla installed in
|
bos@64
|
681 \dirname{/var/www/html/bugzilla}:
|
bos@62
|
682 \begin{codesample4}
|
bos@62
|
683 cd /var/www/html/bugzilla && ./processmail %s nobody@nowhere.com
|
bos@62
|
684 \end{codesample4}
|
bos@62
|
685 The Bugzilla \texttt{processmail} program expects to be given a
|
bos@62
|
686 bug~ID (the hook replaces ``\texttt{\%s}'' with the bug~ID) and an
|
bos@62
|
687 email address. It also expects to be able to write to some files in
|
bos@62
|
688 the directory that it runs in. If Bugzilla and this hook are not
|
bos@62
|
689 installed on the same machine, you will need to find a way to run
|
bos@62
|
690 \texttt{processmail} on the server where Bugzilla is installed.
|
bos@62
|
691 \end{itemize}
|
bos@62
|
692
|
bos@62
|
693 \subsubsection{Mapping committer names to Bugzilla user names}
|
bos@62
|
694
|
bos@62
|
695 By default, the \hgext{bugzilla} hook tries to use the email address
|
bos@62
|
696 of a changeset's committer as the Bugzilla user name with which to
|
bos@62
|
697 update a bug. If this does not suit your needs, you can map committer
|
bos@62
|
698 email addresses to Bugzilla user names using a \rcsection{usermap}
|
bos@62
|
699 section.
|
bos@62
|
700
|
bos@62
|
701 Each item in the \rcsection{usermap} section contains an email address
|
bos@62
|
702 on the left, and a Bugzilla user name on the right.
|
bos@62
|
703 \begin{codesample2}
|
bos@62
|
704 [usermap]
|
bos@62
|
705 jane.user@example.com = jane
|
bos@62
|
706 \end{codesample2}
|
bos@62
|
707 You can either keep the \rcsection{usermap} data in a normal \hgrc, or
|
bos@62
|
708 tell the \hgext{bugzilla} hook to read the information from an
|
bos@62
|
709 external \filename{usermap} file. In the latter case, you can store
|
bos@62
|
710 \filename{usermap} data by itself in (for example) a user-modifiable
|
bos@62
|
711 repository. This makes it possible to let your users maintain their
|
bos@64
|
712 own \rcitem{bugzilla}{usermap} entries. The main \hgrc\ file might
|
bos@64
|
713 look like this:
|
bos@62
|
714 \begin{codesample2}
|
bos@62
|
715 # regular hgrc file refers to external usermap file
|
bos@62
|
716 [bugzilla]
|
bos@62
|
717 usermap = /home/hg/repos/userdata/bugzilla-usermap.conf
|
bos@62
|
718 \end{codesample2}
|
bos@62
|
719 While the \filename{usermap} file that it refers to might look like
|
bos@62
|
720 this:
|
bos@62
|
721 \begin{codesample2}
|
bos@62
|
722 # bugzilla-usermap.conf - inside a hg repository
|
bos@62
|
723 [usermap]
|
bos@62
|
724 stephanie@example.com = steph
|
bos@62
|
725 \end{codesample2}
|
bos@62
|
726
|
bos@62
|
727 \subsubsection{Configuring the text that gets added to a bug}
|
bos@62
|
728
|
bos@62
|
729 You can configure the text that this hook adds as a comment; you
|
bos@62
|
730 specify it in the form of a Mercurial template. Several \hgrc\
|
bos@62
|
731 entries (still in the \rcsection{bugzilla} section) control this
|
bos@62
|
732 behaviour.
|
bos@62
|
733 \begin{itemize}
|
bos@62
|
734 \item[\texttt{strip}] The number of leading path elements to strip
|
bos@62
|
735 from a repository's path name to construct a partial path for a URL.
|
bos@62
|
736 For example, if the repositories on your server live under
|
bos@62
|
737 \dirname{/home/hg/repos}, and you have a repository whose path is
|
bos@62
|
738 \dirname{/home/hg/repos/app/tests}, then setting \texttt{strip} to
|
bos@62
|
739 \texttt{4} will give a partial path of \dirname{app/tests}. The
|
bos@62
|
740 hook will make this partial path available when expanding a
|
bos@62
|
741 template, as \texttt{webroot}.
|
bos@62
|
742 \item[\texttt{template}] The text of the template to use. In addition
|
bos@62
|
743 to the usual changeset-related variables, this template can use
|
bos@62
|
744 \texttt{hgweb} (the value of the \texttt{hgweb} configuration item
|
bos@62
|
745 above) and \texttt{webroot} (the path constructed using
|
bos@62
|
746 \texttt{strip} above).
|
bos@62
|
747 \end{itemize}
|
bos@62
|
748
|
bos@64
|
749 In addition, you can add a \rcitem{web}{baseurl} item to the
|
bos@64
|
750 \rcsection{web} section of your \hgrc. The \hgext{bugzilla} hook will
|
bos@64
|
751 make this available when expanding a template, as the base string to
|
bos@64
|
752 use when constructing a URL that will let users browse from a Bugzilla
|
bos@64
|
753 comment to view a changeset. Example:
|
bos@64
|
754 \begin{codesample2}
|
bos@64
|
755 [web]
|
bos@64
|
756 baseurl = http://hg.domain.com/
|
bos@64
|
757 \end{codesample2}
|
bos@64
|
758
|
bos@62
|
759 Here is an example set of \hgext{bugzilla} hook config information.
|
bos@62
|
760 \begin{codesample2}
|
bos@62
|
761 [bugzilla]
|
bos@62
|
762 host = bugzilla.example.com
|
bos@62
|
763 password = mypassword
|
bos@62
|
764 version = 2.16
|
bos@62
|
765 # server-side repos live in /home/hg/repos, so strip 4 leading
|
bos@62
|
766 # separators
|
bos@62
|
767 strip = 4
|
bos@62
|
768 hgweb = http://hg.example.com/
|
bos@62
|
769 usermap = /home/hg/repos/notify/bugzilla.conf
|
bos@62
|
770 template = Changeset \{node|short\}, made by \{author\} in the \{webroot\}
|
bos@62
|
771 repo, refers to this bug.\\nFor complete details, see
|
bos@62
|
772 \{hgweb\}\{webroot\}?cmd=changeset;node=\{node|short\}\\nChangeset
|
bos@62
|
773 description:\\n\\t\{desc|tabindent\}
|
bos@62
|
774 \end{codesample2}
|
bos@62
|
775
|
bos@62
|
776 \subsubsection{Testing and troubleshooting}
|
bos@62
|
777
|
bos@62
|
778 The most common problems with configuring the \hgext{bugzilla} hook
|
bos@62
|
779 relate to running Bugzilla's \filename{processmail} script and mapping
|
bos@62
|
780 committer names to user names.
|
bos@62
|
781
|
bos@62
|
782 Recall from section~\ref{sec:hook:bugzilla:config} above that the user
|
bos@62
|
783 that runs the Mercurial process on the server is also the one that
|
bos@62
|
784 will run the \filename{processmail} script. The
|
bos@62
|
785 \filename{processmail} script sometimes causes Bugzilla to write to
|
bos@62
|
786 files in its configuration directory, and Bugzilla's configuration
|
bos@62
|
787 files are usually owned by the user that your web server runs under.
|
bos@62
|
788
|
bos@62
|
789 You can cause \filename{processmail} to be run with the suitable
|
bos@62
|
790 user's identity using the \command{sudo} command. Here is an example
|
bos@62
|
791 entry for a \filename{sudoers} file.
|
bos@62
|
792 \begin{codesample2}
|
bos@62
|
793 hg_user = (httpd_user) NOPASSWD: /var/www/html/bugzilla/processmail-wrapper %s
|
bos@62
|
794 \end{codesample2}
|
bos@62
|
795 This allows the \texttt{hg\_user} user to run a
|
bos@62
|
796 \filename{processmail-wrapper} program under the identity of
|
bos@62
|
797 \texttt{httpd\_user}.
|
bos@62
|
798
|
bos@62
|
799 This indirection through a wrapper script is necessary, because
|
bos@62
|
800 \filename{processmail} expects to be run with its current directory
|
bos@62
|
801 set to wherever you installed Bugzilla; you can't specify that kind of
|
bos@62
|
802 constraint in a \filename{sudoers} file. The contents of the wrapper
|
bos@62
|
803 script are simple:
|
bos@62
|
804 \begin{codesample2}
|
bos@62
|
805 #!/bin/sh
|
bos@62
|
806 cd `dirname $0` && ./processmail "$1" nobody@example.com
|
bos@62
|
807 \end{codesample2}
|
bos@62
|
808 It doesn't seem to matter what email address you pass to
|
bos@62
|
809 \filename{processmail}.
|
bos@62
|
810
|
bos@62
|
811 If your \rcsection{usermap} is not set up correctly, users will see an
|
bos@62
|
812 error message from the \hgext{bugzilla} hook when they push changes
|
bos@62
|
813 to the server. The error message will look like this:
|
bos@62
|
814 \begin{codesample2}
|
bos@62
|
815 cannot find bugzilla user id for john.q.public@example.com
|
bos@62
|
816 \end{codesample2}
|
bos@62
|
817 What this means is that the committer's address,
|
bos@62
|
818 \texttt{john.q.public@example.com}, is not a valid Bugzilla user name,
|
bos@62
|
819 nor does it have an entry in your \rcsection{usermap} that maps it to
|
bos@62
|
820 a valid Bugzilla user name.
|
bos@62
|
821
|
bos@62
|
822 \subsection{\hgext{notify}---send email notifications}
|
bos@62
|
823
|
bos@62
|
824 Although Mercurial's built-in web server provides RSS feeds of changes
|
bos@62
|
825 in every repository, many people prefer to receive change
|
bos@62
|
826 notifications via email. The \hgext{notify} hook lets you send out
|
bos@62
|
827 notifications to a set of email addresses whenever changesets arrive
|
bos@62
|
828 that those subscribers are interested in.
|
bos@62
|
829
|
bos@62
|
830 As with the \hgext{bugzilla} hook, the \hgext{notify} hook is
|
bos@62
|
831 template-driven, so you can customise the contents of the notification
|
bos@62
|
832 messages that it sends.
|
bos@62
|
833
|
bos@62
|
834 By default, the \hgext{notify} hook includes a diff of every changeset
|
bos@63
|
835 that it sends out; you can limit the size of the diff, or turn this
|
bos@62
|
836 feature off entirely. It is useful for letting subscribers review
|
bos@62
|
837 changes immediately, rather than clicking to follow a URL.
|
bos@62
|
838
|
bos@62
|
839 \subsubsection{Configuring the \hgext{notify} hook}
|
bos@62
|
840
|
bos@62
|
841 You can set up the \hgext{notify} hook to send one email message per
|
bos@62
|
842 incoming changeset, or one per incoming group of changesets (all those
|
bos@62
|
843 that arrived in a single pull or push).
|
bos@62
|
844 \begin{codesample2}
|
bos@62
|
845 [hooks]
|
bos@62
|
846 # send one email per group of changes
|
bos@62
|
847 changegroup.notify = python:hgext.notify.hook
|
bos@62
|
848 # send one email per change
|
bos@62
|
849 incoming.notify = python:hgext.notify.hook
|
bos@62
|
850 \end{codesample2}
|
bos@62
|
851
|
bos@62
|
852 Configuration information for this hook lives in the
|
bos@62
|
853 \rcsection{notify} section of a \hgrc\ file.
|
bos@62
|
854 \begin{itemize}
|
bos@62
|
855 \item[\rcitem{notify}{test}] By default, this hook does not send out
|
bos@62
|
856 email at all; instead, it prints the message that it \emph{would}
|
bos@62
|
857 send. Set this item to \texttt{false} to allow email to be sent.
|
bos@62
|
858 The reason that sending of email is turned off by default is that it
|
bos@62
|
859 takes several tries to configure this extension exactly as you would
|
bos@62
|
860 like, and it would be bad form to spam subscribers with a number of
|
bos@62
|
861 ``broken'' notifications while you debug your configuration.
|
bos@62
|
862 \item[\rcitem{notify}{config}] The path to a configuration file that
|
bos@63
|
863 contains subscription information. This is kept separate from the
|
bos@62
|
864 main \hgrc\ so that you can maintain it in a repository of its own.
|
bos@62
|
865 People can then clone that repository, update their subscriptions,
|
bos@62
|
866 and push the changes back to your server.
|
bos@62
|
867 \item[\rcitem{notify}{strip}] The number of leading path separator
|
bos@62
|
868 characters to strip from a repository's path, when deciding whether
|
bos@62
|
869 a repository has subscribers. For example, if the repositories on
|
bos@62
|
870 your server live in \dirname{/home/hg/repos}, and \hgext{notify} is
|
bos@62
|
871 considering a repository named \dirname{/home/hg/repos/shared/test},
|
bos@62
|
872 setting \rcitem{notify}{strip} to \texttt{4} will cause
|
bos@62
|
873 \hgext{notify} to trim the path it considers down to
|
bos@62
|
874 \dirname{shared/test}, and it will match subscribers against that.
|
bos@62
|
875 \item[\rcitem{notify}{template}] The template text to use when sending
|
bos@62
|
876 messages. This specifies both the contents of the message header
|
bos@62
|
877 and its body.
|
bos@62
|
878 \item[\rcitem{notify}{maxdiff}] The maximum number of lines of diff
|
bos@62
|
879 data to append to the end of a message. If a diff is longer than
|
bos@62
|
880 this, it is truncated. By default, this is set to 300. Set this to
|
bos@62
|
881 \texttt{0} to omit diffs from notification emails.
|
bos@62
|
882 \item[\rcitem{notify}{sources}] A list of sources of changesets to
|
bos@62
|
883 consider. This lets you limit \hgext{notify} to only sending out
|
bos@62
|
884 email about changes that remote users pushed into this repository
|
bos@62
|
885 via a server, for example. See section~\ref{sec:hook:sources} for
|
bos@62
|
886 the sources you can specify here.
|
bos@62
|
887 \end{itemize}
|
bos@62
|
888
|
bos@62
|
889 If you set the \rcitem{web}{baseurl} item in the \rcsection{web}
|
bos@62
|
890 section, you can use it in a template; it will be available as
|
bos@62
|
891 \texttt{webroot}.
|
bos@62
|
892
|
bos@62
|
893 Here is an example set of \hgext{notify} configuration information.
|
bos@62
|
894 \begin{codesample2}
|
bos@62
|
895 [notify]
|
bos@62
|
896 # really send email
|
bos@62
|
897 test = false
|
bos@62
|
898 # subscriber data lives in the notify repo
|
bos@62
|
899 config = /home/hg/repos/notify/notify.conf
|
bos@62
|
900 # repos live in /home/hg/repos on server, so strip 4 "/" chars
|
bos@62
|
901 strip = 4
|
bos@62
|
902 template = X-Hg-Repo: \{webroot\}\\n\\\\
|
bos@62
|
903 Subject: \{webroot\}: \{desc|firstline|strip\}\\n\\\\
|
bos@62
|
904 From: \{author\}\\n\\\\
|
bos@62
|
905 \\n\\\\
|
bos@62
|
906 changeset \{node|short\} in \{root\}\\n\\\\
|
bos@62
|
907 details: \{baseurl\}\{webroot\}?cmd=changeset;node=\{node|short\}\\n\\\\
|
bos@62
|
908 description:\\n\\\\
|
bos@62
|
909 \\t\{desc|tabindent|strip\}
|
bos@62
|
910
|
bos@62
|
911 [web]
|
bos@62
|
912 baseurl = http://hg.example.com/
|
bos@62
|
913 \end{codesample2}
|
bos@62
|
914
|
bos@62
|
915 This will produce a message that looks like the following:
|
bos@62
|
916 \begin{codesample2}
|
bos@62
|
917 X-Hg-Repo: tests/slave
|
bos@62
|
918 Subject: tests/slave: Handle error case when slave has no buffers
|
bos@62
|
919 Date: Wed, 2 Aug 2006 15:25:46 -0700 (PDT)
|
bos@62
|
920
|
bos@62
|
921 changeset 3cba9bfe74b5 in /home/hg/repos/tests/slave
|
bos@62
|
922 details: http://hg.example.com/tests/slave?cmd=changeset;node=3cba9bfe74b5
|
bos@62
|
923 description:
|
bos@62
|
924 Handle error case when slave has no buffers
|
bos@62
|
925 diffs (54 lines):
|
bos@62
|
926
|
bos@62
|
927 diff -r 9d95df7cf2ad -r 3cba9bfe74b5 include/tests.h
|
bos@62
|
928 --- a/include/tests.h Wed Aug 02 15:19:52 2006 -0700
|
bos@62
|
929 +++ b/include/tests.h Wed Aug 02 15:25:26 2006 -0700
|
bos@62
|
930 @@ -212,6 +212,15 @@ static __inline__ void test_headers(void *h)
|
bos@62
|
931 [...snip...]
|
bos@62
|
932 \end{codesample2}
|
bos@62
|
933
|
bos@62
|
934 \subsubsection{Testing and troubleshooting}
|
bos@62
|
935
|
bos@62
|
936 Do not forget that by default, the \hgext{notify} extension \emph{will
|
bos@62
|
937 not send any mail} until you explicitly configure it to do so, by
|
bos@62
|
938 setting \rcitem{notify}{test} to \texttt{false}. Until you do that,
|
bos@62
|
939 it simply prints the message it \emph{would} send.
|
bos@44
|
940
|
bos@64
|
941 \section{Information for writers of hooks}
|
bos@41
|
942 \label{sec:hook:ref}
|
bos@39
|
943
|
bos@39
|
944 \subsection{In-process hook execution}
|
bos@39
|
945
|
bos@39
|
946 An in-process hook is called with arguments of the following form:
|
bos@39
|
947 \begin{codesample2}
|
bos@39
|
948 def myhook(ui, repo, **kwargs):
|
bos@39
|
949 pass
|
bos@39
|
950 \end{codesample2}
|
bos@39
|
951 The \texttt{ui} parameter is a \pymodclass{mercurial.ui}{ui} object.
|
bos@39
|
952 The \texttt{repo} parameter is a
|
bos@39
|
953 \pymodclass{mercurial.localrepo}{localrepository} object. The
|
bos@39
|
954 names and values of the \texttt{**kwargs} parameters depend on the
|
bos@39
|
955 hook being invoked, with the following common features:
|
bos@39
|
956 \begin{itemize}
|
bos@39
|
957 \item If a parameter is named \texttt{node} or
|
bos@39
|
958 \texttt{parent\emph{N}}, it will contain a hexadecimal changeset ID.
|
bos@39
|
959 The empty string is used to represent ``null changeset ID'' instead
|
bos@39
|
960 of a string of zeroes.
|
bos@62
|
961 \item If a parameter is named \texttt{url}, it will contain the URL of
|
bos@62
|
962 a remote repository, if that can be determined.
|
bos@39
|
963 \item Boolean-valued parameters are represented as Python
|
bos@39
|
964 \texttt{bool} objects.
|
bos@39
|
965 \end{itemize}
|
bos@39
|
966
|
bos@39
|
967 An in-process hook is called without a change to the process's working
|
bos@39
|
968 directory (unlike external hooks, which are run in the root of the
|
bos@62
|
969 repository). It must not change the process's working directory, or
|
bos@62
|
970 it will cause any calls it makes into the Mercurial API to fail.
|
bos@62
|
971
|
bos@62
|
972 If a hook returns a boolean ``false'' value, it is considered to have
|
bos@62
|
973 succeeded. If it returns a boolean ``true'' value or raises an
|
bos@62
|
974 exception, it is considered to have failed. A useful way to think of
|
bos@62
|
975 the calling convention is ``tell me if you fail''.
|
bos@62
|
976
|
bos@62
|
977 Note that changeset IDs are passed into Python hooks as hexadecimal
|
bos@62
|
978 strings, not the binary hashes that Mercurial's APIs normally use. To
|
bos@62
|
979 convert a hash from hex to binary, use the
|
bos@62
|
980 \pymodfunc{mercurial.node}{bin} function.
|
bos@39
|
981
|
bos@39
|
982 \subsection{External hook execution}
|
bos@39
|
983
|
bos@62
|
984 An external hook is passed to the shell of the user running Mercurial.
|
bos@62
|
985 Features of that shell, such as variable substitution and command
|
bos@39
|
986 redirection, are available. The hook is run in the root directory of
|
bos@62
|
987 the repository (unlike in-process hooks, which are run in the same
|
bos@62
|
988 directory that Mercurial was run in).
|
bos@39
|
989
|
bos@39
|
990 Hook parameters are passed to the hook as environment variables. Each
|
bos@39
|
991 environment variable's name is converted in upper case and prefixed
|
bos@39
|
992 with the string ``\texttt{HG\_}''. For example, if the name of a
|
bos@39
|
993 parameter is ``\texttt{node}'', the name of the environment variable
|
bos@39
|
994 representing that parameter will be ``\texttt{HG\_NODE}''.
|
bos@39
|
995
|
bos@39
|
996 A boolean parameter is represented as the string ``\texttt{1}'' for
|
bos@39
|
997 ``true'', ``\texttt{0}'' for ``false''. If an environment variable is
|
bos@39
|
998 named \envar{HG\_NODE}, \envar{HG\_PARENT1} or \envar{HG\_PARENT2}, it
|
bos@39
|
999 contains a changeset ID represented as a hexadecimal string. The
|
bos@39
|
1000 empty string is used to represent ``null changeset ID'' instead of a
|
bos@62
|
1001 string of zeroes. If an environment variable is named
|
bos@62
|
1002 \envar{HG\_URL}, it will contain the URL of a remote repository, if
|
bos@62
|
1003 that can be determined.
|
bos@39
|
1004
|
bos@39
|
1005 If a hook exits with a status of zero, it is considered to have
|
bos@39
|
1006 succeeded. If it exits with a non-zero status, it is considered to
|
bos@39
|
1007 have failed.
|
bos@39
|
1008
|
bos@62
|
1009 \subsection{Finding out where changesets come from}
|
bos@62
|
1010
|
bos@62
|
1011 A hook that involves the transfer of changesets between a local
|
bos@62
|
1012 repository and another may be able to find out information about the
|
bos@62
|
1013 ``far side''. Mercurial knows \emph{how} changes are being
|
bos@62
|
1014 transferred, and in many cases \emph{where} they are being transferred
|
bos@62
|
1015 to or from.
|
bos@62
|
1016
|
bos@62
|
1017 \subsubsection{Sources of changesets}
|
bos@62
|
1018 \label{sec:hook:sources}
|
bos@62
|
1019
|
bos@62
|
1020 Mercurial will tell a hook what means are, or were, used to transfer
|
bos@62
|
1021 changesets between repositories. This is provided by Mercurial in a
|
bos@62
|
1022 Python parameter named \texttt{source}, or an environment variable named
|
bos@62
|
1023 \envar{HG\_SOURCE}.
|
bos@62
|
1024
|
bos@62
|
1025 \begin{itemize}
|
bos@62
|
1026 \item[\texttt{serve}] Changesets are transferred to or from a remote
|
bos@62
|
1027 repository over http or ssh.
|
bos@62
|
1028 \item[\texttt{pull}] Changesets are being transferred via a pull from
|
bos@62
|
1029 one repository into another.
|
bos@62
|
1030 \item[\texttt{push}] Changesets are being transferred via a push from
|
bos@62
|
1031 one repository into another.
|
bos@62
|
1032 \item[\texttt{bundle}] Changesets are being transferred to or from a
|
bos@62
|
1033 bundle.
|
bos@62
|
1034 \end{itemize}
|
bos@62
|
1035
|
bos@62
|
1036 \subsubsection{Where changes are going---remote repository URLs}
|
bos@62
|
1037 \label{sec:hook:url}
|
bos@62
|
1038
|
bos@62
|
1039 When possible, Mercurial will tell a hook the location of the ``far
|
bos@62
|
1040 side'' of an activity that transfers changeset data between
|
bos@62
|
1041 repositories. This is provided by Mercurial in a Python parameter
|
bos@62
|
1042 named \texttt{url}, or an environment variable named \envar{HG\_URL}.
|
bos@62
|
1043
|
bos@62
|
1044 This information is not always known. If a hook is invoked in a
|
bos@62
|
1045 repository that is being served via http or ssh, Mercurial cannot tell
|
bos@62
|
1046 where the remote repository is, but it may know where the client is
|
bos@62
|
1047 connecting from. In such cases, the URL will take one of the
|
bos@62
|
1048 following forms:
|
bos@62
|
1049 \begin{itemize}
|
bos@62
|
1050 \item \texttt{remote:ssh:\emph{ip-address}}---remote ssh client, at
|
bos@62
|
1051 the given IP address.
|
bos@62
|
1052 \item \texttt{remote:http:\emph{ip-address}}---remote http client, at
|
bos@62
|
1053 the given IP address. If the client is using SSL, this will be of
|
bos@62
|
1054 the form \texttt{remote:https:\emph{ip-address}}.
|
bos@62
|
1055 \item Empty---no information could be discovered about the remote
|
bos@62
|
1056 client.
|
bos@62
|
1057 \end{itemize}
|
bos@62
|
1058
|
bos@64
|
1059 \section{Hook reference}
|
bos@64
|
1060
|
bos@64
|
1061 \subsection{\hook{changegroup}---after remote changesets added}
|
bos@39
|
1062 \label{sec:hook:changegroup}
|
bos@39
|
1063
|
bos@40
|
1064 This hook is run after a group of pre-existing changesets has been
|
bos@40
|
1065 added to the repository, for example via a \hgcmd{pull} or
|
bos@40
|
1066 \hgcmd{unbundle}. This hook is run once per operation that added one
|
bos@41
|
1067 or more changesets. This is in contrast to the \hook{incoming} hook,
|
bos@41
|
1068 which is run once per changeset, regardless of whether the changesets
|
bos@41
|
1069 arrive in a group.
|
bos@41
|
1070
|
bos@41
|
1071 Some possible uses for this hook include kicking off an automated
|
bos@41
|
1072 build or test of the added changesets, updating a bug database, or
|
bos@41
|
1073 notifying subscribers that a repository contains new changes.
|
bos@40
|
1074
|
bos@40
|
1075 Parameters to this hook:
|
bos@40
|
1076 \begin{itemize}
|
bos@40
|
1077 \item[\texttt{node}] A changeset ID. The changeset ID of the first
|
bos@40
|
1078 changeset in the group that was added. All changesets between this
|
bos@40
|
1079 and \index{tags!\texttt{tip}}\texttt{tip}, inclusive, were added by
|
bos@40
|
1080 a single \hgcmd{pull}, \hgcmd{push} or \hgcmd{unbundle}.
|
bos@62
|
1081 \item[\texttt{source}] A string. The source of these changes. See
|
bos@62
|
1082 section~\ref{sec:hook:sources} for details.
|
bos@62
|
1083 \item[\texttt{url}] A URL. The location of the remote repository, if
|
bos@62
|
1084 known. See section~\ref{sec:hook:url} for more information.
|
bos@40
|
1085 \end{itemize}
|
bos@40
|
1086
|
bos@40
|
1087 See also: \hook{incoming} (section~\ref{sec:hook:incoming}),
|
bos@40
|
1088 \hook{prechangegroup} (section~\ref{sec:hook:prechangegroup}),
|
bos@40
|
1089 \hook{pretxnchangegroup} (section~\ref{sec:hook:pretxnchangegroup})
|
bos@39
|
1090
|
bos@64
|
1091 \subsection{\hook{commit}---after a new changeset is created}
|
bos@39
|
1092 \label{sec:hook:commit}
|
bos@39
|
1093
|
bos@40
|
1094 This hook is run after a new changeset has been created.
|
bos@40
|
1095
|
bos@40
|
1096 Parameters to this hook:
|
bos@40
|
1097 \begin{itemize}
|
bos@40
|
1098 \item[\texttt{node}] A changeset ID. The changeset ID of the newly
|
bos@40
|
1099 committed changeset.
|
bos@40
|
1100 \item[\texttt{parent1}] A changeset ID. The changeset ID of the first
|
bos@40
|
1101 parent of the newly committed changeset.
|
bos@40
|
1102 \item[\texttt{parent2}] A changeset ID. The changeset ID of the second
|
bos@40
|
1103 parent of the newly committed changeset.
|
bos@40
|
1104 \end{itemize}
|
bos@40
|
1105
|
bos@40
|
1106 See also: \hook{precommit} (section~\ref{sec:hook:precommit}),
|
bos@40
|
1107 \hook{pretxncommit} (section~\ref{sec:hook:pretxncommit})
|
bos@40
|
1108
|
bos@64
|
1109 \subsection{\hook{incoming}---after one remote changeset is added}
|
bos@40
|
1110 \label{sec:hook:incoming}
|
bos@40
|
1111
|
bos@40
|
1112 This hook is run after a pre-existing changeset has been added to the
|
bos@40
|
1113 repository, for example via a \hgcmd{push}. If a group of changesets
|
bos@40
|
1114 was added in a single operation, this hook is called once for each
|
bos@40
|
1115 added changeset.
|
bos@40
|
1116
|
bos@41
|
1117 You can use this hook for the same purposes as the \hook{changegroup}
|
bos@41
|
1118 hook (section~\ref{sec:hook:changegroup}); it's simply more convenient
|
bos@54
|
1119 sometimes to run a hook once per group of changesets, while other
|
bos@41
|
1120 times it's handier once per changeset.
|
bos@41
|
1121
|
bos@40
|
1122 Parameters to this hook:
|
bos@40
|
1123 \begin{itemize}
|
bos@40
|
1124 \item[\texttt{node}] A changeset ID. The ID of the newly added
|
bos@39
|
1125 changeset.
|
bos@62
|
1126 \item[\texttt{source}] A string. The source of these changes. See
|
bos@62
|
1127 section~\ref{sec:hook:sources} for details.
|
bos@62
|
1128 \item[\texttt{url}] A URL. The location of the remote repository, if
|
bos@62
|
1129 known. See section~\ref{sec:hook:url} for more information.
|
bos@40
|
1130 \end{itemize}
|
bos@40
|
1131
|
bos@40
|
1132 See also: \hook{changegroup} (section~\ref{sec:hook:changegroup}) \hook{prechangegroup} (section~\ref{sec:hook:prechangegroup}), \hook{pretxnchangegroup} (section~\ref{sec:hook:pretxnchangegroup})
|
bos@40
|
1133
|
bos@64
|
1134 \subsection{\hook{outgoing}---after changesets are propagated}
|
bos@40
|
1135 \label{sec:hook:outgoing}
|
bos@40
|
1136
|
bos@40
|
1137 This hook is run after a group of changesets has been propagated out
|
bos@40
|
1138 of this repository, for example by a \hgcmd{push} or \hgcmd{bundle}
|
bos@40
|
1139 command.
|
bos@40
|
1140
|
bos@41
|
1141 One possible use for this hook is to notify administrators that
|
bos@41
|
1142 changes have been pulled.
|
bos@41
|
1143
|
bos@40
|
1144 Parameters to this hook:
|
bos@40
|
1145 \begin{itemize}
|
bos@40
|
1146 \item[\texttt{node}] A changeset ID. The changeset ID of the first
|
bos@40
|
1147 changeset of the group that was sent.
|
bos@62
|
1148 \item[\texttt{source}] A string. The source of the of the operation
|
bos@62
|
1149 (see section~\ref{sec:hook:sources}). If a remote client pulled
|
bos@62
|
1150 changes from this repository, \texttt{source} will be
|
bos@62
|
1151 \texttt{serve}. If the client that obtained changes from this
|
bos@62
|
1152 repository was local, \texttt{source} will be \texttt{bundle},
|
bos@62
|
1153 \texttt{pull}, or \texttt{push}, depending on the operation the
|
bos@62
|
1154 client performed.
|
bos@62
|
1155 \item[\texttt{url}] A URL. The location of the remote repository, if
|
bos@62
|
1156 known. See section~\ref{sec:hook:url} for more information.
|
bos@40
|
1157 \end{itemize}
|
bos@40
|
1158
|
bos@40
|
1159 See also: \hook{preoutgoing} (section~\ref{sec:hook:preoutgoing})
|
bos@40
|
1160
|
bos@64
|
1161 \subsection{\hook{prechangegroup}---before starting to add remote changesets}
|
bos@40
|
1162 \label{sec:hook:prechangegroup}
|
bos@40
|
1163
|
bos@41
|
1164 This controlling hook is run before Mercurial begins to add a group of
|
bos@41
|
1165 changesets from another repository.
|
bos@41
|
1166
|
bos@41
|
1167 This hook does not have any information about the changesets to be
|
bos@41
|
1168 added, because it is run before transmission of those changesets is
|
bos@41
|
1169 allowed to begin. If this hook fails, the changesets will not be
|
bos@41
|
1170 transmitted.
|
bos@41
|
1171
|
bos@41
|
1172 One use for this hook is to prevent external changes from being added
|
bos@62
|
1173 to a repository. For example, you could use this to ``freeze'' a
|
bos@62
|
1174 server-hosted branch temporarily or permanently so that users cannot
|
bos@62
|
1175 push to it, while still allowing a local administrator to modify the
|
bos@62
|
1176 repository.
|
bos@62
|
1177
|
bos@62
|
1178 Parameters to this hook:
|
bos@62
|
1179 \begin{itemize}
|
bos@62
|
1180 \item[\texttt{source}] A string. The source of these changes. See
|
bos@62
|
1181 section~\ref{sec:hook:sources} for details.
|
bos@62
|
1182 \item[\texttt{url}] A URL. The location of the remote repository, if
|
bos@62
|
1183 known. See section~\ref{sec:hook:url} for more information.
|
bos@62
|
1184 \end{itemize}
|
bos@40
|
1185
|
bos@40
|
1186 See also: \hook{changegroup} (section~\ref{sec:hook:changegroup}),
|
bos@40
|
1187 \hook{incoming} (section~\ref{sec:hook:incoming}), ,
|
bos@40
|
1188 \hook{pretxnchangegroup} (section~\ref{sec:hook:pretxnchangegroup})
|
bos@40
|
1189
|
bos@64
|
1190 \subsection{\hook{precommit}---before starting to commit a changeset}
|
bos@40
|
1191 \label{sec:hook:precommit}
|
bos@40
|
1192
|
bos@41
|
1193 This hook is run before Mercurial begins to commit a new changeset.
|
bos@41
|
1194 It is run before Mercurial has any of the metadata for the commit,
|
bos@41
|
1195 such as the files to be committed, the commit message, or the commit
|
bos@41
|
1196 date.
|
bos@41
|
1197
|
bos@41
|
1198 One use for this hook is to disable the ability to commit new
|
bos@41
|
1199 changesets, while still allowing incoming changesets. Another is to
|
bos@41
|
1200 run a build or test, and only allow the commit to begin if the build
|
bos@41
|
1201 or test succeeds.
|
bos@40
|
1202
|
bos@40
|
1203 Parameters to this hook:
|
bos@40
|
1204 \begin{itemize}
|
bos@40
|
1205 \item[\texttt{parent1}] A changeset ID. The changeset ID of the first
|
bos@40
|
1206 parent of the working directory.
|
bos@40
|
1207 \item[\texttt{parent2}] A changeset ID. The changeset ID of the second
|
bos@40
|
1208 parent of the working directory.
|
bos@40
|
1209 \end{itemize}
|
bos@40
|
1210 If the commit proceeds, the parents of the working directory will
|
bos@40
|
1211 become the parents of the new changeset.
|
bos@40
|
1212
|
bos@40
|
1213 See also: \hook{commit} (section~\ref{sec:hook:commit}),
|
bos@40
|
1214 \hook{pretxncommit} (section~\ref{sec:hook:pretxncommit})
|
bos@40
|
1215
|
bos@64
|
1216 \subsection{\hook{preoutgoing}---before starting to propagate changesets}
|
bos@40
|
1217 \label{sec:hook:preoutgoing}
|
bos@40
|
1218
|
bos@40
|
1219 This hook is invoked before Mercurial knows the identities of the
|
bos@40
|
1220 changesets to be transmitted.
|
bos@40
|
1221
|
bos@41
|
1222 One use for this hook is to prevent changes from being transmitted to
|
bos@41
|
1223 another repository.
|
bos@41
|
1224
|
bos@40
|
1225 Parameters to this hook:
|
bos@40
|
1226 \begin{itemize}
|
bos@40
|
1227 \item[\texttt{source}] A string. The source of the operation that is
|
bos@62
|
1228 attempting to obtain changes from this repository (see
|
bos@62
|
1229 section~\ref{sec:hook:sources}). See the documentation for the
|
bos@62
|
1230 \texttt{source} parameter to the \hook{outgoing} hook, in
|
bos@62
|
1231 section~\ref{sec:hook:outgoing}, for possible values of this
|
bos@62
|
1232 parameter.
|
bos@62
|
1233 \item[\texttt{url}] A URL. The location of the remote repository, if
|
bos@62
|
1234 known. See section~\ref{sec:hook:url} for more information.
|
bos@40
|
1235 \end{itemize}
|
bos@40
|
1236
|
bos@40
|
1237 See also: \hook{outgoing} (section~\ref{sec:hook:outgoing})
|
bos@40
|
1238
|
bos@64
|
1239 \subsection{\hook{pretag}---before tagging a changeset}
|
bos@40
|
1240 \label{sec:hook:pretag}
|
bos@40
|
1241
|
bos@41
|
1242 This controlling hook is run before a tag is created. If the hook
|
bos@41
|
1243 succeeds, creation of the tag proceeds. If the hook fails, the tag is
|
bos@41
|
1244 not created.
|
bos@41
|
1245
|
bos@40
|
1246 Parameters to this hook:
|
bos@40
|
1247 \begin{itemize}
|
bos@40
|
1248 \item[\texttt{local}] A boolean. Whether the tag is local to this
|
bos@40
|
1249 repository instance (i.e.~stored in \sfilename{.hg/tags}) or managed
|
bos@40
|
1250 by Mercurial (stored in \sfilename{.hgtags}).
|
bos@40
|
1251 \item[\texttt{node}] A changeset ID. The ID of the changeset to be tagged.
|
bos@40
|
1252 \item[\texttt{tag}] A string. The name of the tag to be created.
|
bos@40
|
1253 \end{itemize}
|
bos@40
|
1254
|
bos@40
|
1255 If the tag to be created is revision-controlled, the \hook{precommit}
|
bos@40
|
1256 and \hook{pretxncommit} hooks (sections~\ref{sec:hook:commit}
|
bos@40
|
1257 and~\ref{sec:hook:pretxncommit}) will also be run.
|
bos@40
|
1258
|
bos@40
|
1259 See also: \hook{tag} (section~\ref{sec:hook:tag})
|
bos@40
|
1260
|
bos@64
|
1261 \subsection{\hook{pretxnchangegroup}---before completing addition of
|
bos@64
|
1262 remote changesets}
|
bos@40
|
1263 \label{sec:hook:pretxnchangegroup}
|
bos@40
|
1264
|
bos@41
|
1265 This controlling hook is run before a transaction---that manages the
|
bos@41
|
1266 addition of a group of new changesets from outside the
|
bos@41
|
1267 repository---completes. If the hook succeeds, the transaction
|
bos@41
|
1268 completes, and all of the changesets become permanent within this
|
bos@41
|
1269 repository. If the hook fails, the transaction is rolled back, and
|
bos@41
|
1270 the data for the changesets is erased.
|
bos@41
|
1271
|
bos@41
|
1272 This hook can access the metadata associated with the almost-added
|
bos@41
|
1273 changesets, but it should not do anything permanent with this data.
|
bos@41
|
1274 It must also not modify the working directory.
|
bos@41
|
1275
|
bos@41
|
1276 While this hook is running, if other Mercurial processes access this
|
bos@41
|
1277 repository, they will be able to see the almost-added changesets as if
|
bos@41
|
1278 they are permanent. This may lead to race conditions if you do not
|
bos@41
|
1279 take steps to avoid them.
|
bos@41
|
1280
|
bos@41
|
1281 This hook can be used to automatically vet a group of changesets. If
|
bos@41
|
1282 the hook fails, all of the changesets are ``rejected'' when the
|
bos@41
|
1283 transaction rolls back.
|
bos@41
|
1284
|
bos@62
|
1285 Parameters to this hook:
|
bos@62
|
1286 \begin{itemize}
|
bos@62
|
1287 \item[\texttt{node}] A changeset ID. The changeset ID of the first
|
bos@62
|
1288 changeset in the group that was added. All changesets between this
|
bos@62
|
1289 and \index{tags!\texttt{tip}}\texttt{tip}, inclusive, were added by
|
bos@62
|
1290 a single \hgcmd{pull}, \hgcmd{push} or \hgcmd{unbundle}.
|
bos@62
|
1291 \item[\texttt{source}] A string. The source of these changes. See
|
bos@62
|
1292 section~\ref{sec:hook:sources} for details.
|
bos@62
|
1293 \item[\texttt{url}] A URL. The location of the remote repository, if
|
bos@62
|
1294 known. See section~\ref{sec:hook:url} for more information.
|
bos@62
|
1295 \end{itemize}
|
bos@40
|
1296
|
bos@40
|
1297 See also: \hook{changegroup} (section~\ref{sec:hook:changegroup}),
|
bos@40
|
1298 \hook{incoming} (section~\ref{sec:hook:incoming}),
|
bos@40
|
1299 \hook{prechangegroup} (section~\ref{sec:hook:prechangegroup})
|
bos@40
|
1300
|
bos@64
|
1301 \subsection{\hook{pretxncommit}---before completing commit of new changeset}
|
bos@40
|
1302 \label{sec:hook:pretxncommit}
|
bos@40
|
1303
|
bos@41
|
1304 This controlling hook is run before a transaction---that manages a new
|
bos@41
|
1305 commit---completes. If the hook succeeds, the transaction completes
|
bos@41
|
1306 and the changeset becomes permanent within this repository. If the
|
bos@41
|
1307 hook fails, the transaction is rolled back, and the commit data is
|
bos@41
|
1308 erased.
|
bos@41
|
1309
|
bos@41
|
1310 This hook can access the metadata associated with the almost-new
|
bos@41
|
1311 changeset, but it should not do anything permanent with this data. It
|
bos@41
|
1312 must also not modify the working directory.
|
bos@41
|
1313
|
bos@41
|
1314 While this hook is running, if other Mercurial processes access this
|
bos@41
|
1315 repository, they will be able to see the almost-new changeset as if it
|
bos@41
|
1316 is permanent. This may lead to race conditions if you do not take
|
bos@41
|
1317 steps to avoid them.
|
bos@41
|
1318
|
bos@62
|
1319 Parameters to this hook:
|
bos@62
|
1320 \begin{itemize}
|
bos@62
|
1321 \item[\texttt{node}] A changeset ID. The changeset ID of the newly
|
bos@62
|
1322 committed changeset.
|
bos@62
|
1323 \item[\texttt{parent1}] A changeset ID. The changeset ID of the first
|
bos@62
|
1324 parent of the newly committed changeset.
|
bos@62
|
1325 \item[\texttt{parent2}] A changeset ID. The changeset ID of the second
|
bos@62
|
1326 parent of the newly committed changeset.
|
bos@62
|
1327 \end{itemize}
|
bos@40
|
1328
|
bos@40
|
1329 See also: \hook{precommit} (section~\ref{sec:hook:precommit})
|
bos@40
|
1330
|
bos@64
|
1331 \subsection{\hook{preupdate}---before updating or merging working directory}
|
bos@40
|
1332 \label{sec:hook:preupdate}
|
bos@40
|
1333
|
bos@41
|
1334 This controlling hook is run before an update or merge of the working
|
bos@41
|
1335 directory begins. It is run only if Mercurial's normal pre-update
|
bos@41
|
1336 checks determine that the update or merge can proceed. If the hook
|
bos@41
|
1337 succeeds, the update or merge may proceed; if it fails, the update or
|
bos@41
|
1338 merge does not start.
|
bos@41
|
1339
|
bos@40
|
1340 Parameters to this hook:
|
bos@40
|
1341 \begin{itemize}
|
bos@40
|
1342 \item[\texttt{parent1}] A changeset ID. The ID of the parent that the
|
bos@40
|
1343 working directory is to be updated to. If the working directory is
|
bos@40
|
1344 being merged, it will not change this parent.
|
bos@40
|
1345 \item[\texttt{parent2}] A changeset ID. Only set if the working
|
bos@40
|
1346 directory is being merged. The ID of the revision that the working
|
bos@40
|
1347 directory is being merged with.
|
bos@40
|
1348 \end{itemize}
|
bos@40
|
1349
|
bos@40
|
1350 See also: \hook{update} (section~\ref{sec:hook:update})
|
bos@40
|
1351
|
bos@64
|
1352 \subsection{\hook{tag}---after tagging a changeset}
|
bos@40
|
1353 \label{sec:hook:tag}
|
bos@40
|
1354
|
bos@41
|
1355 This hook is run after a tag has been created.
|
bos@41
|
1356
|
bos@62
|
1357 Parameters to this hook:
|
bos@62
|
1358 \begin{itemize}
|
bos@62
|
1359 \item[\texttt{local}] A boolean. Whether the new tag is local to this
|
bos@62
|
1360 repository instance (i.e.~stored in \sfilename{.hg/tags}) or managed
|
bos@62
|
1361 by Mercurial (stored in \sfilename{.hgtags}).
|
bos@62
|
1362 \item[\texttt{node}] A changeset ID. The ID of the changeset that was
|
bos@62
|
1363 tagged.
|
bos@62
|
1364 \item[\texttt{tag}] A string. The name of the tag that was created.
|
bos@62
|
1365 \end{itemize}
|
bos@40
|
1366
|
bos@40
|
1367 If the created tag is revision-controlled, the \hook{commit} hook
|
bos@41
|
1368 (section~\ref{sec:hook:commit}) is run before this hook.
|
bos@40
|
1369
|
bos@40
|
1370 See also: \hook{pretag} (section~\ref{sec:hook:pretag})
|
bos@40
|
1371
|
bos@64
|
1372 \subsection{\hook{update}---after updating or merging working directory}
|
bos@40
|
1373 \label{sec:hook:update}
|
bos@40
|
1374
|
bos@41
|
1375 This hook is run after an update or merge of the working directory
|
bos@41
|
1376 completes. Since a merge can fail (if the external \command{hgmerge}
|
bos@41
|
1377 command fails to resolve conflicts in a file), this hook communicates
|
bos@41
|
1378 whether the update or merge completed cleanly.
|
bos@41
|
1379
|
bos@40
|
1380 \begin{itemize}
|
bos@40
|
1381 \item[\texttt{error}] A boolean. Indicates whether the update or
|
bos@40
|
1382 merge completed successfully.
|
bos@40
|
1383 \item[\texttt{parent1}] A changeset ID. The ID of the parent that the
|
bos@40
|
1384 working directory was updated to. If the working directory was
|
bos@40
|
1385 merged, it will not have changed this parent.
|
bos@40
|
1386 \item[\texttt{parent2}] A changeset ID. Only set if the working
|
bos@40
|
1387 directory was merged. The ID of the revision that the working
|
bos@40
|
1388 directory was merged with.
|
bos@40
|
1389 \end{itemize}
|
bos@40
|
1390
|
bos@40
|
1391 See also: \hook{preupdate} (section~\ref{sec:hook:preupdate})
|
bos@34
|
1392
|
bos@34
|
1393 %%% Local Variables:
|
bos@34
|
1394 %%% mode: latex
|
bos@34
|
1395 %%% TeX-master: "00book"
|
bos@34
|
1396 %%% End:
|