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1 <!-- vim: set filetype=docbkxml shiftwidth=2 autoindent expandtab tw=77 : -->
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2
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3 <chapter id="chap:names">
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4 <?dbhtml filename="file-names-and-pattern-matching.html"?>
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5 <title>File names and pattern matching</title>
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6
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7 <para id="x_543">Mercurial provides mechanisms that let you work with file
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8 names in a consistent and expressive way.</para>
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9
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10 <sect1>
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11 <title>Simple file naming</title>
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12
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13 <para id="x_544">Mercurial uses a unified piece of machinery <quote>under the
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14 hood</quote> to handle file names. Every command behaves
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15 uniformly with respect to file names. The way in which commands
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16 work with file names is as follows.</para>
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17
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18 <para id="x_545">If you explicitly name real files on the command line,
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19 Mercurial works with exactly those files, as you would expect.
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20 &interaction.filenames.files;</para>
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21
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22 <para id="x_546">When you provide a directory name, Mercurial will interpret
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23 this as <quote>operate on every file in this directory and its
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24 subdirectories</quote>. Mercurial traverses the files and
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25 subdirectories in a directory in alphabetical order. When it
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26 encounters a subdirectory, it will traverse that subdirectory
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27 before continuing with the current directory.</para>
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28
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29 &interaction.filenames.dirs;
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30 </sect1>
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31
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32 <sect1>
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33 <title>Running commands without any file names</title>
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34
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35 <para id="x_547">Mercurial's commands that work with file names have useful
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36 default behaviors when you invoke them without providing any
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37 file names or patterns. What kind of behavior you should
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38 expect depends on what the command does. Here are a few rules
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39 of thumb you can use to predict what a command is likely to do
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40 if you don't give it any names to work with.</para>
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41 <itemizedlist>
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42 <listitem><para id="x_548">Most commands will operate on the entire working
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43 directory. This is what the <command role="hg-cmd">hg
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44 add</command> command does, for example.</para>
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45 </listitem>
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46 <listitem><para id="x_549">If the command has effects that are difficult or
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47 impossible to reverse, it will force you to explicitly
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48 provide at least one name or pattern (see below). This
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49 protects you from accidentally deleting files by running
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50 <command role="hg-cmd">hg remove</command> with no
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51 arguments, for example.</para>
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52 </listitem></itemizedlist>
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53
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54 <para id="x_54a">It's easy to work around these default behaviors if they
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55 don't suit you. If a command normally operates on the whole
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56 working directory, you can invoke it on just the current
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57 directory and its subdirectories by giving it the name
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58 <quote><filename class="directory">.</filename></quote>.</para>
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59
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60 &interaction.filenames.wdir-subdir;
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61
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62 <para id="x_54b">Along the same lines, some commands normally print file
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63 names relative to the root of the repository, even if you're
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64 invoking them from a subdirectory. Such a command will print
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65 file names relative to your subdirectory if you give it explicit
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66 names. Here, we're going to run <command role="hg-cmd">hg
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67 status</command> from a subdirectory, and get it to operate on
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68 the entire working directory while printing file names relative
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69 to our subdirectory, by passing it the output of the <command
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70 role="hg-cmd">hg root</command> command.</para>
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71
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72 &interaction.filenames.wdir-relname;
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73 </sect1>
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74
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75 <sect1>
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76 <title>Telling you what's going on</title>
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77
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78 <para id="x_54c">The <command role="hg-cmd">hg add</command> example in the
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79 preceding section illustrates something else that's helpful
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80 about Mercurial commands. If a command operates on a file that
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81 you didn't name explicitly on the command line, it will usually
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82 print the name of the file, so that you will not be surprised
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83 what's going on.</para>
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84
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85 <para id="x_54d">The principle here is of <emphasis>least
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86 surprise</emphasis>. If you've exactly named a file on the
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87 command line, there's no point in repeating it back at you. If
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88 Mercurial is acting on a file <emphasis>implicitly</emphasis>, e.g.
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89 because you provided no names, or a directory, or a pattern (see
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90 below), it is safest to tell you what files it's operating on.</para>
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91
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92 <para id="x_54e">For commands that behave this way, you can silence them
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93 using the <option role="hg-opt-global">-q</option> option. You
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94 can also get them to print the name of every file, even those
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95 you've named explicitly, using the <option
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96 role="hg-opt-global">-v</option> option.</para>
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97 </sect1>
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98
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99 <sect1>
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100 <title>Using patterns to identify files</title>
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101
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102 <para id="x_54f">In addition to working with file and directory names,
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103 Mercurial lets you use <emphasis>patterns</emphasis> to identify
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104 files. Mercurial's pattern handling is expressive.</para>
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105
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106 <para id="x_550">On Unix-like systems (Linux, MacOS, etc.), the job of
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107 matching file names to patterns normally falls to the shell. On
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108 these systems, you must explicitly tell Mercurial that a name is
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109 a pattern. On Windows, the shell does not expand patterns, so
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110 Mercurial will automatically identify names that are patterns,
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111 and expand them for you.</para>
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112
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113 <para id="x_551">To provide a pattern in place of a regular name on the
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114 command line, the mechanism is simple:</para>
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115 <programlisting>syntax:patternbody</programlisting>
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116 <para id="x_552">That is, a pattern is identified by a short text string that
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117 says what kind of pattern this is, followed by a colon, followed
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118 by the actual pattern.</para>
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119
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120 <para id="x_553">Mercurial supports two kinds of pattern syntax. The most
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121 frequently used is called <literal>glob</literal>; this is the
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122 same kind of pattern matching used by the Unix shell, and should
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123 be familiar to Windows command prompt users, too.</para>
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124
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125 <para id="x_554">When Mercurial does automatic pattern matching on Windows,
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126 it uses <literal>glob</literal> syntax. You can thus omit the
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127 <quote><literal>glob:</literal></quote> prefix on Windows, but
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128 it's safe to use it, too.</para>
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129
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130 <para id="x_555">The <literal>re</literal> syntax is more powerful; it lets
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131 you specify patterns using regular expressions, also known as
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132 regexps.</para>
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133
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134 <para id="x_556">By the way, in the examples that follow, notice that I'm
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135 careful to wrap all of my patterns in quote characters, so that
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136 they won't get expanded by the shell before Mercurial sees
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137 them.</para>
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138
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139 <sect2>
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140 <title>Shell-style <literal>glob</literal> patterns</title>
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141
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142 <para id="x_557">This is an overview of the kinds of patterns you can use
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143 when you're matching on glob patterns.</para>
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144
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145 <para id="x_558">The <quote><literal>*</literal></quote> character matches
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146 any string, within a single directory.</para>
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147
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148 &interaction.filenames.glob.star;
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149
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150 <para id="x_559">The <quote><literal>**</literal></quote> pattern matches
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151 any string, and crosses directory boundaries. It's not a
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152 standard Unix glob token, but it's accepted by several popular
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153 Unix shells, and is very useful.</para>
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154
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155 &interaction.filenames.glob.starstar;
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156
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157 <para id="x_55a">The <quote><literal>?</literal></quote> pattern matches
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158 any single character.</para>
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159
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160 &interaction.filenames.glob.question;
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161
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162 <para id="x_55b">The <quote><literal>[</literal></quote> character begins a
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163 <emphasis>character class</emphasis>. This matches any single
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164 character within the class. The class ends with a
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165 <quote><literal>]</literal></quote> character. A class may
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166 contain multiple <emphasis>range</emphasis>s of the form
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167 <quote><literal>a-f</literal></quote>, which is shorthand for
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168 <quote><literal>abcdef</literal></quote>.</para>
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169
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170 &interaction.filenames.glob.range;
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171
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172 <para id="x_55c">If the first character after the
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173 <quote><literal>[</literal></quote> in a character class is a
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174 <quote><literal>!</literal></quote>, it
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175 <emphasis>negates</emphasis> the class, making it match any
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176 single character not in the class.</para>
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177
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178 <para id="x_55d">A <quote><literal>{</literal></quote> begins a group of
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179 subpatterns, where the whole group matches if any subpattern
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180 in the group matches. The <quote><literal>,</literal></quote>
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181 character separates subpatterns, and
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182 <quote><literal>}</literal></quote> ends the group.</para>
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183
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184 &interaction.filenames.glob.group;
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185
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186 <sect3>
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187 <title>Watch out!</title>
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188
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189 <para id="x_55e">Don't forget that if you want to match a pattern in any
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190 directory, you should not be using the
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191 <quote><literal>*</literal></quote> match-any token, as this
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192 will only match within one directory. Instead, use the
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193 <quote><literal>**</literal></quote> token. This small
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194 example illustrates the difference between the two.</para>
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195
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196 &interaction.filenames.glob.star-starstar;
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197 </sect3>
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198 </sect2>
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199
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200 <sect2>
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201 <title>Regular expression matching with <literal>re</literal>
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202 patterns</title>
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203
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204 <para id="x_55f">Mercurial accepts the same regular expression syntax as
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205 the Python programming language (it uses Python's regexp
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206 engine internally). This is based on the Perl language's
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207 regexp syntax, which is the most popular dialect in use (it's
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208 also used in Java, for example).</para>
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209
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210 <para id="x_560">I won't discuss Mercurial's regexp dialect in any detail
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211 here, as regexps are not often used. Perl-style regexps are
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212 in any case already exhaustively documented on a multitude of
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213 web sites, and in many books. Instead, I will focus here on a
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214 few things you should know if you find yourself needing to use
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215 regexps with Mercurial.</para>
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216
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217 <para id="x_561">A regexp is matched against an entire file name, relative
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218 to the root of the repository. In other words, even if you're
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219 already in subbdirectory <filename
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220 class="directory">foo</filename>, if you want to match files
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221 under this directory, your pattern must start with
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222 <quote><literal>foo/</literal></quote>.</para>
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223
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224 <para id="x_562">One thing to note, if you're familiar with Perl-style
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225 regexps, is that Mercurial's are <emphasis>rooted</emphasis>.
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226 That is, a regexp starts matching against the beginning of a
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227 string; it doesn't look for a match anywhere within the
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228 string. To match anywhere in a string, start your pattern
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229 with <quote><literal>.*</literal></quote>.</para>
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230 </sect2>
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231 </sect1>
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232
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233 <sect1>
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234 <title>Filtering files</title>
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235
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236 <para id="x_563">Not only does Mercurial give you a variety of ways to
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237 specify files; it lets you further winnow those files using
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238 <emphasis>filters</emphasis>. Commands that work with file
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239 names accept two filtering options.</para>
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240 <itemizedlist>
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241 <listitem><para id="x_564"><option role="hg-opt-global">-I</option>, or
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242 <option role="hg-opt-global">--include</option>, lets you
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243 specify a pattern that file names must match in order to be
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244 processed.</para>
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245 </listitem>
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246 <listitem><para id="x_565"><option role="hg-opt-global">-X</option>, or
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247 <option role="hg-opt-global">--exclude</option>, gives you a
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248 way to <emphasis>avoid</emphasis> processing files, if they
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249 match this pattern.</para>
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250 </listitem></itemizedlist>
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251 <para id="x_566">You can provide multiple <option
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252 role="hg-opt-global">-I</option> and <option
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253 role="hg-opt-global">-X</option> options on the command line,
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254 and intermix them as you please. Mercurial interprets the
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255 patterns you provide using glob syntax by default (but you can
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256 use regexps if you need to).</para>
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257
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258 <para id="x_567">You can read a <option role="hg-opt-global">-I</option>
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259 filter as <quote>process only the files that match this
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260 filter</quote>.</para>
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261
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262 &interaction.filenames.filter.include;
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263
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264 <para id="x_568">The <option role="hg-opt-global">-X</option> filter is best
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265 read as <quote>process only the files that don't match this
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266 pattern</quote>.</para>
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267
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268 &interaction.filenames.filter.exclude;
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269 </sect1>
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270
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271 <sect1>
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272 <title>Permanently ignoring unwanted files and directories</title>
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273
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274 <para id="x_569">When you create a new repository, the chances are
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275 that over time it will grow to contain files that ought to
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276 <emphasis>not</emphasis> be managed by Mercurial, but which you
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277 don't want to see listed every time you run <command>hg
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278 status</command>. For instance, <quote>build products</quote>
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279 are files that are created as part of a build but which should
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280 not be managed by a revision control system. The most common
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281 build products are output files produced by software tools such
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282 as compilers. As another example, many text editors litter a
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283 directory with lock files, temporary working files, and backup
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284 files, which it also makes no sense to manage.</para>
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285
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286 <para id="x_6b4">To have Mercurial permanently ignore such files, create a
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287 file named <filename>.hgignore</filename> in the root of your
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288 repository. You <emphasis>should</emphasis> <command>hg
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289 add</command> this file so that it gets tracked with the rest of
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290 your repository contents, since your collaborators will probably
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291 find it useful too.</para>
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292
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293 <para id="x_6b5">By default, the <filename>.hgignore</filename> file should
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294 contain a list of regular expressions, one per line. Empty
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295 lines are skipped. Most people prefer to describe the files they
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296 want to ignore using the <quote>glob</quote> syntax that we
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297 described above, so a typical <filename>.hgignore</filename>
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298 file will start with this directive:</para>
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299
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300 <programlisting>syntax: glob</programlisting>
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301
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302 <para id="x_6b6">This tells Mercurial to interpret the lines that follow as
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303 glob patterns, not regular expressions.</para>
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304
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305 <para id="x_6b7">Here is a typical-looking <filename>.hgignore</filename>
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306 file.</para>
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307
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308 <programlisting>syntax: glob
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309 # This line is a comment, and will be skipped.
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310 # Empty lines are skipped too.
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311
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312 # Backup files left behind by the Emacs editor.
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313 *~
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314
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315 # Lock files used by the Emacs editor.
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316 # Notice that the "#" character is quoted with a backslash.
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317 # This prevents it from being interpreted as starting a comment.
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318 .\#*
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319
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320 # Temporary files used by the vim editor.
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321 .*.swp
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322
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323 # A hidden file created by the Mac OS X Finder.
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324 .DS_Store
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325 </programlisting>
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326 </sect1>
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327
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328 <sect1 id="sec:names:case">
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329 <title>Case sensitivity</title>
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330
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331 <para id="x_56a">If you're working in a mixed development environment that
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332 contains both Linux (or other Unix) systems and Macs or Windows
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333 systems, you should keep in the back of your mind the knowledge
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334 that they treat the case (<quote>N</quote> versus
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335 <quote>n</quote>) of file names in incompatible ways. This is
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336 not very likely to affect you, and it's easy to deal with if it
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337 does, but it could surprise you if you don't know about
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338 it.</para>
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339
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340 <para id="x_56b">Operating systems and filesystems differ in the way they
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341 handle the <emphasis>case</emphasis> of characters in file and
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342 directory names. There are three common ways to handle case in
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343 names.</para>
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344 <itemizedlist>
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345 <listitem><para id="x_56c">Completely case insensitive. Uppercase and
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346 lowercase versions of a letter are treated as identical,
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347 both when creating a file and during subsequent accesses.
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348 This is common on older DOS-based systems.</para>
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349 </listitem>
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350 <listitem><para id="x_56d">Case preserving, but insensitive. When a file
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351 or directory is created, the case of its name is stored, and
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352 can be retrieved and displayed by the operating system.
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353 When an existing file is being looked up, its case is
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354 ignored. This is the standard arrangement on Windows and
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355 MacOS. The names <filename>foo</filename> and
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356 <filename>FoO</filename> identify the same file. This
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357 treatment of uppercase and lowercase letters as
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358 interchangeable is also referred to as <emphasis>case
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359 folding</emphasis>.</para>
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360 </listitem>
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361 <listitem><para id="x_56e">Case sensitive. The case of a name
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362 is significant at all times. The names
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363 <filename>foo</filename> and <filename>FoO</filename>
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364 identify different files. This is the way Linux and Unix
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365 systems normally work.</para>
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366 </listitem></itemizedlist>
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367
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368 <para id="x_56f">On Unix-like systems, it is possible to have any or all of
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369 the above ways of handling case in action at once. For example,
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370 if you use a USB thumb drive formatted with a FAT32 filesystem
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371 on a Linux system, Linux will handle names on that filesystem in
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372 a case preserving, but insensitive, way.</para>
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373
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374 <sect2>
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375 <title>Safe, portable repository storage</title>
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376
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377 <para id="x_570">Mercurial's repository storage mechanism is <emphasis>case
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378 safe</emphasis>. It translates file names so that they can
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379 be safely stored on both case sensitive and case insensitive
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380 filesystems. This means that you can use normal file copying
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381 tools to transfer a Mercurial repository onto, for example, a
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382 USB thumb drive, and safely move that drive and repository
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383 back and forth between a Mac, a PC running Windows, and a
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384 Linux box.</para>
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385
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386 </sect2>
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387 <sect2>
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388 <title>Detecting case conflicts</title>
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389
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390 <para id="x_571">When operating in the working directory, Mercurial honours
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391 the naming policy of the filesystem where the working
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392 directory is located. If the filesystem is case preserving,
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393 but insensitive, Mercurial will treat names that differ only
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394 in case as the same.</para>
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395
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396 <para id="x_572">An important aspect of this approach is that it is
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397 possible to commit a changeset on a case sensitive (typically
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398 Linux or Unix) filesystem that will cause trouble for users on
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399 case insensitive (usually Windows and MacOS) users. If a
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400 Linux user commits changes to two files, one named
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401 <filename>myfile.c</filename> and the other named
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402 <filename>MyFile.C</filename>, they will be stored correctly
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403 in the repository. And in the working directories of other
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404 Linux users, they will be correctly represented as separate
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405 files.</para>
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406
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407 <para id="x_573">If a Windows or Mac user pulls this change, they will not
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408 initially have a problem, because Mercurial's repository
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409 storage mechanism is case safe. However, once they try to
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410 <command role="hg-cmd">hg update</command> the working
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411 directory to that changeset, or <command role="hg-cmd">hg
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412 merge</command> with that changeset, Mercurial will spot the
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413 conflict between the two file names that the filesystem would
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414 treat as the same, and forbid the update or merge from
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415 occurring.</para>
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416 </sect2>
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417
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418 <sect2>
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419 <title>Fixing a case conflict</title>
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420
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421 <para id="x_574">If you are using Windows or a Mac in a mixed environment
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422 where some of your collaborators are using Linux or Unix, and
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423 Mercurial reports a case folding conflict when you try to
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424 <command role="hg-cmd">hg update</command> or <command
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425 role="hg-cmd">hg merge</command>, the procedure to fix the
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426 problem is simple.</para>
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427
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428 <para id="x_575">Just find a nearby Linux or Unix box, clone the problem
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429 repository onto it, and use Mercurial's <command
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430 role="hg-cmd">hg rename</command> command to change the
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431 names of any offending files or directories so that they will
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432 no longer cause case folding conflicts. Commit this change,
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433 <command role="hg-cmd">hg pull</command> or <command
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434 role="hg-cmd">hg push</command> it across to your Windows or
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435 MacOS system, and <command role="hg-cmd">hg update</command>
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436 to the revision with the non-conflicting names.</para>
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437
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438 <para id="x_576">The changeset with case-conflicting names will remain in
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439 your project's history, and you still won't be able to
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440 <command role="hg-cmd">hg update</command> your working
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441 directory to that changeset on a Windows or MacOS system, but
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442 you can continue development unimpeded.</para>
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443 </sect2>
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444 </sect1>
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445 </chapter>
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446
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447 <!--
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448 local variables:
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449 sgml-parent-document: ("00book.xml" "book" "chapter")
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450 end:
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451 -->
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