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1 \chapter{Command reference}
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2 \label{cmdref}
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3
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4 \cmdref{add}{add files at the next commit}
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5 \optref{add}{I}{include}
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6 \optref{add}{X}{exclude}
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7 \optref{add}{n}{dry-run}
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8
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9 \cmdref{diff}{print changes in history or working directory}
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10
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11 Show differences between revisions for the specified files or
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12 directories, using the unified diff format. For a description of the
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13 unified diff format, see section~\ref{sec:mq:patch}.
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14
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15 By default, this command does not print diffs for files that Mercurial
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16 considers to contain binary data. To control this behaviour, see the
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17 \hgopt{diff}{-a} and \hgopt{diff}{--git} options.
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18
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19 \subsection{Options}
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20
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21 \loptref{diff}{nodates}
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22
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23 Omit date and time information when printing diff headers.
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24
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25 \optref{diff}{B}{ignore-blank-lines}
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26
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27 Do not print changes that only insert or delete blank lines. A line
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28 that contains only whitespace is not considered blank.
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29
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30 \optref{diff}{I}{include}
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31
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32 Include files and directories whose names match the given patterns.
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33
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34 \optref{diff}{X}{exclude}
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35
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36 Exclude files and directories whose names match the given patterns.
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37
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38 \optref{diff}{a}{text}
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39
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40 If this option is not specified, \hgcmd{diff} will refuse to print
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41 diffs for files that it detects as binary. Specifying \hgopt{diff}{-a}
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42 forces \hgcmd{diff} to treat all files as text, and generate diffs for
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43 all of them.
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44
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45 This option is useful for files that are ``mostly text'' but have a
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46 few embedded NUL characters. If you use it on files that contain a
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47 lot of binary data, its output will be incomprehensible.
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48
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49 \optref{diff}{b}{ignore-space-change}
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50
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51 Do not print a line if the only change to that line is in the amount
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52 of white space it contains.
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53
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54 \optref{diff}{g}{git}
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55
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56 Print \command{git}-compatible diffs. XXX reference a format
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57 description.
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58
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59 \optref{diff}{p}{show-function}
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60
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61 Display the name of the enclosing function in a hunk header, using a
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62 simple heuristic. This functionality is enabled by default, so the
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63 \hgopt{diff}{-p} option has no effect unless you change the value of
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64 the \rcitem{diff}{showfunc} config item, as in the following example.
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65 \interaction{cmdref.diff-p}
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66
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67 \optref{diff}{r}{rev}
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68
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69 Specify one or more revisions to compare. The \hgcmd{diff} command
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70 accepts up to two \hgopt{diff}{-r} options to specify the revisions to
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71 compare.
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72
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73 \begin{enumerate}
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74 \setcounter{enumi}{0}
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75 \item Display the differences between the parent revision of the
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76 working directory and the working directory.
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77 \item Display the differences between the specified changeset and the
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78 working directory.
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79 \item Display the differences between the two specified changesets.
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80 \end{enumerate}
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81
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82 You can specify two revisions using either two \hgopt{diff}{-r}
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83 options or revision range notation. For example, the two revision
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84 specifications below are equivalent.
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85 \begin{codesample2}
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86 hg diff -r 10 -r 20
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87 hg diff -r10:20
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88 \end{codesample2}
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89
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90 When you provide two revisions, Mercurial treats the order of those
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91 revisions as significant. Thus, \hgcmdargs{diff}{-r10:20} will
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92 produce a diff that will transform files from their contents as of
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93 revision~10 to their contents as of revision~20, while
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94 \hgcmdargs{diff}{-r20:10} means the opposite: the diff that will
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95 transform files from their revision~20 contents to their revision~10
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96 contents. You cannot reverse the ordering in this way if you are
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97 diffing against the working directory.
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98
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99 \optref{diff}{w}{ignore-all-space}
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100
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101 \cmdref{version}{print version and copyright information}
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102
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103 This command displays the version of Mercurial you are running, and
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104 its copyright license. There are four kinds of version string that
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105 you may see.
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106 \begin{itemize}
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107 \item The string ``\texttt{unknown}''. This version of Mercurial was
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108 not built in a Mercurial repository, and cannot determine its own
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109 version.
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110 \item A short numeric string, such as ``\texttt{1.1}''. This is a
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111 build of a revision of Mercurial that was identified by a specific
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112 tag in the repository where it was built. (This doesn't necessarily
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113 mean that you're running an official release; someone else could
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114 have added that tag to any revision in the repository where they
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115 built Mercurial.)
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116 \item A hexadecimal string, such as ``\texttt{875489e31abe}''. This
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117 is a build of the given revision of Mercurial.
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118 \item A hexadecimal string followed by a date, such as
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119 ``\texttt{875489e31abe+20070205}''. This is a build of the given
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120 revision of Mercurial, where the build repository contained some
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121 local changes that had not been committed.
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122 \end{itemize}
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123
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124 \subsection{Tips and tricks}
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125
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126 \subsubsection{Why do the results of \hgcmd{diff} and \hgcmd{status}
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127 differ?}
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128 \label{cmdref:diff-vs-status}
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129
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130 When you run the \hgcmd{status} command, you'll see a list of files
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131 that Mercurial will record changes for the next time you perform a
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132 commit. If you run the \hgcmd{diff} command, you may notice that it
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133 prints diffs for only a \emph{subset} of the files that \hgcmd{status}
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134 listed. There are two possible reasons for this.
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135
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136 The first is that \hgcmd{status} prints some kinds of modifications
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137 that \hgcmd{diff} doesn't normally display. The \hgcmd{diff} command
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138 normally outputs unified diffs, which don't have the ability to
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139 represent some changes that Mercurial can track. Most notably,
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140 traditional diffs can't represent a change in whether or not a file is
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141 executable, but Mercurial records this information.
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142
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143 If you use the \hgopt{diff}{--git} option to \hgcmd{diff}, it will
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144 display \command{git}-compatible diffs that \emph{can} display this
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145 extra information.
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146
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147 The second possible reason that \hgcmd{diff} might be printing diffs
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148 for a subset of the files displayed by \hgcmd{status} is that if you
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149 invoke it without any arguments, \hgcmd{diff} prints diffs against the
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150 first parent of the working directory. If you have run \hgcmd{merge}
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151 to merge two changesets, but you haven't yet committed the results of
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152 the merge, your working directory has two parents (use \hgcmd{parents}
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153 to see them). While \hgcmd{status} prints modifications relative to
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154 \emph{both} parents after an uncommitted merge, \hgcmd{diff} still
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155 operates relative only to the first parent. You can get it to print
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156 diffs relative to the second parent by specifying that parent with the
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157 \hgopt{diff}{-r} option. There is no way to print diffs relative to
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158 both parents.
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159
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160 \subsubsection{Generating safe binary diffs}
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161
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162 If you use the \hgopt{diff}{-a} option to force Mercurial to print
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163 diffs of files that are either ``mostly text'' or contain lots of
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164 binary data, those diffs cannot subsequently be applied by either
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165 Mercurial's \hgcmd{import} command or the system's \command{patch}
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166 command.
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167
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168 If you want to generate a diff of a binary file that is safe to use as
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169 input for \hgcmd{import}, use the \hgcmd{diff}{--git} option when you
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170 generate the patch. The system \command{patch} command cannot handle
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171 binary patches at all.
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172
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173 %%% Local Variables:
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174 %%% mode: latex
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175 %%% TeX-master: "00book"
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176 %%% End:
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