Mercurial > hgbook
annotate es/undo.tex @ 482:772b30049b80
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author | Javier Rojas <jerojasro@devnull.li> |
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date | Thu, 30 Oct 2008 00:28:59 -0500 |
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1 \chapter{Encontrar y arreglar sus equivocaciones} |
442 | 2 \label{chap:undo} |
3 | |
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4 Errar es humano, pero tratar adecuadamente las consecuencias requiere |
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5 un sistema de control de revisiones de primera categoría. En este |
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6 capítulo, discutiremos algunas técnicas que puede usar cuando |
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7 encuentra que hay un problema enraizado en su proyecto. Mercurial |
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8 tiene unas características poderosas que le ayudarán a isolar las |
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9 fuentes de los problemas, y a dar cuenta de ellas apropiadamente. |
442 | 10 |
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11 \section{Borrar la historia local} |
442 | 12 |
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13 \subsection{La consignación accidental} |
442 | 14 |
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15 Tengo el problema ocasional, pero persistente de teclear más rápido de |
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16 lo que pienso, que aveces resulta en consignar un conjunto de cambios |
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17 incompleto o simplemente malo. En mi caso, el conjunto de cambios |
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18 incompleto consiste en que creé un nuevo fichero fuente, pero olvidé |
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19 hacerle \hgcmd{add}. Un conjunto de cambios``simplemente malo'' no es |
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20 tan común, pero sí resulta muy molesto. |
442 | 21 |
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22 \subsection{Hacer rollback una transacción} |
442 | 23 \label{sec:undo:rollback} |
24 | |
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25 En la sección~\ref{sec:concepts:txn}, mencioné que Mercurial trata |
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26 modificación a un repositorio como una \emph{transacción}. Cada vez |
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27 que consigna un conjunto de cambios o lo jala de otro repositorio, |
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28 Mercurial recuerda lo que hizo. Puede deshacer, o hacer \emph{roll back}\ndt{El significado igual que en los |
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29 ambientes de sistemas manejadores de bases de datos se refiere a |
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30 la atomicidad e integridad al devolver un conjunto de acciones que |
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31 permitan dejar el repositorio en un estado consistente previo}, |
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32 exactamente una de tales acciones usando la orden \hgcmd{rollback}. |
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33 (Ver en la sección~\ref{sec:undo:rollback-after-push} una anotación |
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34 importante acerca del uso de esta orden.) |
442 | 35 |
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36 A continuación una equivocación que me sucede frecuentemente: |
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37 consignar un cambio en el cual he creado un nuevo fichero, pero he |
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38 olvidado hacerle \hgcmd{add}. |
442 | 39 \interaction{rollback.commit} |
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40 La salida de \hgcmd{status} después de la consignación confirma |
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41 inmediatamente este error. |
442 | 42 \interaction{rollback.status} |
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43 La consignación capturó los cambios en el fichero \filename{a}, pero |
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44 no el nuevo fichero \filename{b}. Si yo publicara este conjunto de |
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45 cambios a un repositorio compartido con un colega, es bastante |
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46 probable que algo en \filename{a} se refiriera a \filename{b}, el cual |
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47 podría no estar presente cuando jalen mis cambios del repositorio. Me |
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48 convertiría el sujeto de cierta indignación. |
442 | 49 |
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50 Como sea, la suerte me acompaña---Encontré mi error antes de publicar |
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51 el conjunto de cambios. Uso la orden \hgcmd{rollback}, y Mercurial |
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52 hace desaparecer el último conjunto de cambios. |
442 | 53 \interaction{rollback.rollback} |
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54 El conjunto de cambios ya no está en la historia del repositorio, y el |
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55 directorio de trabajo cree que el fichero \filename{a} ha sido |
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56 modificado. La consignación y el roll back dejaron el directorio de |
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57 trabajo exactamente como estaba antes de la consignación; el conjunto |
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58 de cambios ha sido eliminado totlamente. Ahora puedo hacer \hgcmd{add} |
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59 al fichero \filename{b}, y hacer de nuevo la consignación. |
442 | 60 \interaction{rollback.add} |
61 | |
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62 \subsection{Erroneamente jalado} |
442 | 63 |
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64 Mantener ramas de desarrollo separadas de un proyecto en distintos |
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65 repositorios es una práctica común con Mercurial. Su equipo de |
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66 desarrollo puede tener un repositorio compartido para la versión ``0.9'' |
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67 y otra con cambios distintos para la versión ``1.0''. |
442 | 68 |
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69 Con este escenario, puede imaginar las consecuencias si tuviera un |
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70 repositorio local ``0.9'', y jalara accidentalmente los cambios del |
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71 repositorio compartido de la versión ``1.0'' en este. En el peor de |
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72 los casos, por falta de atención, es posible que publique tales |
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73 cambios en el árbol compartido ``0.9'', confundiendo a todo su equipo |
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74 de trabajo(pero no se preocupe, volveremos a este terrorífico |
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75 escenario posteriormente). En todo caso, es muy probable que usted se |
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76 de cuenta inmediatamente, dado que Mercurial mostrará el URL de donde |
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77 está jalando, o que vea jalando una sospechosa gran cantidad de |
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78 cambios en el repositorio. |
442 | 79 |
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80 La orden \hgcmd{rollback} excluirá eficientemente los conjuntos de |
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81 cambios que haya acabado de jalar. Mercurial agrupa todos los cambios |
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82 de un \hgcmd{pull} a una única transacción y bastará con un |
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83 \hgcmd{rollback} para deshacer esta equivocación. |
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85 \subsection{Después de publicar, un roll back es futil} |
442 | 86 \label{sec:undo:rollback-after-push} |
87 | |
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88 El valor de \hgcmd{rollback} se anula cuando ha publicado sus cambios |
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89 a otro repositorio. Un cambio desaparece totalmente al hacer roll back, |
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90 pero \emph{solamente} en el repositorio en el cual aplica |
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91 \hgcmd{rollback}. Debido a que un roll back elimina la historia, |
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92 no hay forma de que la desaparición de un cambio se propague entre |
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93 repositorios. |
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95 Si ha publicado un cambio en otro repositorio---particularmente si es |
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96 un repositorio público---esencialmente está ``en terreno agreste,'' |
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97 y tendrá que reparar la equivocación de un modo distinto. Lo que |
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98 pasará si publica un conjunto de cambios en algún sitio, hacer |
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99 rollback y después volver a jalar del repositorio del cual había |
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100 publicado, es que el conjunto de cambios reaparecerá en su repositorio. |
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102 (Si está absolutamente segruro de que el conjunto de cambios al que |
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103 desea hacer rollback es el cambio más reciente del repositorio en el |
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104 cual publicó, \emph{y} sabe que nadie más pudo haber jalado de tal |
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105 repositorio, puede hacer rollback del conjunto de cambios allí, pero |
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106 es mejor no confiar en una solución de este estilo. Si lo hace, tarde |
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107 o temprano un conjunto de cambios logrará colarse en un repositorio |
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108 que usted no controle directamente(o del cual se ha olvidado), y |
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109 volverá a hostigarle.) |
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110 |
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111 \subsection{Solamente hay un roll back} |
442 | 112 |
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113 Mercurial almacena exactamente una transacción en su bitácora de |
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114 transacciones; tal transacción es la más reciente de las que haya |
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115 ocurrido en el repositorio. Esto significa que solamente puede hacer |
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116 roll back a una transacción. Si espera poder hacer roll back a una |
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117 transacción después al antecesor, observará que no es el |
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118 comportamiento que obtendrá. |
442 | 119 \interaction{rollback.twice} |
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120 Una vez que haya aplicado un rollback en una transacción a un |
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121 repositorio, no podrá volver a hacer rollback hasta que haga una |
d5f1049a79dd
roll back untranslatable and more on undo.tex
Igor TAmara <igor@tamarapatino.org>
parents:
473
diff
changeset
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122 consignación o haya jalado. |
442 | 123 |
124 \section{Reverting the mistaken change} | |
125 | |
126 If you make a modification to a file, and decide that you really | |
127 didn't want to change the file at all, and you haven't yet committed | |
128 your changes, the \hgcmd{revert} command is the one you'll need. It | |
129 looks at the changeset that's the parent of the working directory, and | |
130 restores the contents of the file to their state as of that changeset. | |
131 (That's a long-winded way of saying that, in the normal case, it | |
132 undoes your modifications.) | |
133 | |
134 Let's illustrate how the \hgcmd{revert} command works with yet another | |
135 small example. We'll begin by modifying a file that Mercurial is | |
136 already tracking. | |
137 \interaction{daily.revert.modify} | |
138 If we don't want that change, we can simply \hgcmd{revert} the file. | |
139 \interaction{daily.revert.unmodify} | |
140 The \hgcmd{revert} command provides us with an extra degree of safety | |
141 by saving our modified file with a \filename{.orig} extension. | |
142 \interaction{daily.revert.status} | |
143 | |
144 Here is a summary of the cases that the \hgcmd{revert} command can | |
145 deal with. We will describe each of these in more detail in the | |
146 section that follows. | |
147 \begin{itemize} | |
148 \item If you modify a file, it will restore the file to its unmodified | |
149 state. | |
150 \item If you \hgcmd{add} a file, it will undo the ``added'' state of | |
151 the file, but leave the file itself untouched. | |
152 \item If you delete a file without telling Mercurial, it will restore | |
153 the file to its unmodified contents. | |
154 \item If you use the \hgcmd{remove} command to remove a file, it will | |
155 undo the ``removed'' state of the file, and restore the file to its | |
156 unmodified contents. | |
157 \end{itemize} | |
158 | |
159 \subsection{File management errors} | |
160 \label{sec:undo:mgmt} | |
161 | |
162 The \hgcmd{revert} command is useful for more than just modified | |
163 files. It lets you reverse the results of all of Mercurial's file | |
164 management commands---\hgcmd{add}, \hgcmd{remove}, and so on. | |
165 | |
166 If you \hgcmd{add} a file, then decide that in fact you don't want | |
167 Mercurial to track it, use \hgcmd{revert} to undo the add. Don't | |
168 worry; Mercurial will not modify the file in any way. It will just | |
169 ``unmark'' the file. | |
170 \interaction{daily.revert.add} | |
171 | |
172 Similarly, if you ask Mercurial to \hgcmd{remove} a file, you can use | |
173 \hgcmd{revert} to restore it to the contents it had as of the parent | |
174 of the working directory. | |
175 \interaction{daily.revert.remove} | |
176 This works just as well for a file that you deleted by hand, without | |
177 telling Mercurial (recall that in Mercurial terminology, this kind of | |
178 file is called ``missing''). | |
179 \interaction{daily.revert.missing} | |
180 | |
181 If you revert a \hgcmd{copy}, the copied-to file remains in your | |
182 working directory afterwards, untracked. Since a copy doesn't affect | |
183 the copied-from file in any way, Mercurial doesn't do anything with | |
184 the copied-from file. | |
185 \interaction{daily.revert.copy} | |
186 | |
187 \subsubsection{A slightly special case: reverting a rename} | |
188 | |
189 If you \hgcmd{rename} a file, there is one small detail that | |
190 you should remember. When you \hgcmd{revert} a rename, it's not | |
191 enough to provide the name of the renamed-to file, as you can see | |
192 here. | |
193 \interaction{daily.revert.rename} | |
194 As you can see from the output of \hgcmd{status}, the renamed-to file | |
195 is no longer identified as added, but the renamed-\emph{from} file is | |
196 still removed! This is counter-intuitive (at least to me), but at | |
197 least it's easy to deal with. | |
198 \interaction{daily.revert.rename-orig} | |
199 So remember, to revert a \hgcmd{rename}, you must provide \emph{both} | |
200 the source and destination names. | |
201 | |
202 % TODO: the output doesn't look like it will be removed! | |
203 | |
204 (By the way, if you rename a file, then modify the renamed-to file, | |
205 then revert both components of the rename, when Mercurial restores the | |
206 file that was removed as part of the rename, it will be unmodified. | |
207 If you need the modifications in the renamed-to file to show up in the | |
208 renamed-from file, don't forget to copy them over.) | |
209 | |
210 These fiddly aspects of reverting a rename arguably constitute a small | |
211 bug in Mercurial. | |
212 | |
213 \section{Dealing with committed changes} | |
214 | |
215 Consider a case where you have committed a change $a$, and another | |
216 change $b$ on top of it; you then realise that change $a$ was | |
217 incorrect. Mercurial lets you ``back out'' an entire changeset | |
218 automatically, and building blocks that let you reverse part of a | |
219 changeset by hand. | |
220 | |
221 Before you read this section, here's something to keep in mind: the | |
222 \hgcmd{backout} command undoes changes by \emph{adding} history, not | |
223 by modifying or erasing it. It's the right tool to use if you're | |
224 fixing bugs, but not if you're trying to undo some change that has | |
225 catastrophic consequences. To deal with those, see | |
226 section~\ref{sec:undo:aaaiiieee}. | |
227 | |
228 \subsection{Backing out a changeset} | |
229 | |
230 The \hgcmd{backout} command lets you ``undo'' the effects of an entire | |
231 changeset in an automated fashion. Because Mercurial's history is | |
232 immutable, this command \emph{does not} get rid of the changeset you | |
233 want to undo. Instead, it creates a new changeset that | |
234 \emph{reverses} the effect of the to-be-undone changeset. | |
235 | |
236 The operation of the \hgcmd{backout} command is a little intricate, so | |
237 let's illustrate it with some examples. First, we'll create a | |
238 repository with some simple changes. | |
239 \interaction{backout.init} | |
240 | |
241 The \hgcmd{backout} command takes a single changeset ID as its | |
242 argument; this is the changeset to back out. Normally, | |
243 \hgcmd{backout} will drop you into a text editor to write a commit | |
244 message, so you can record why you're backing the change out. In this | |
245 example, we provide a commit message on the command line using the | |
246 \hgopt{backout}{-m} option. | |
247 | |
248 \subsection{Backing out the tip changeset} | |
249 | |
250 We're going to start by backing out the last changeset we committed. | |
251 \interaction{backout.simple} | |
252 You can see that the second line from \filename{myfile} is no longer | |
253 present. Taking a look at the output of \hgcmd{log} gives us an idea | |
254 of what the \hgcmd{backout} command has done. | |
255 \interaction{backout.simple.log} | |
256 Notice that the new changeset that \hgcmd{backout} has created is a | |
257 child of the changeset we backed out. It's easier to see this in | |
258 figure~\ref{fig:undo:backout}, which presents a graphical view of the | |
259 change history. As you can see, the history is nice and linear. | |
260 | |
261 \begin{figure}[htb] | |
262 \centering | |
263 \grafix{undo-simple} | |
264 \caption{Backing out a change using the \hgcmd{backout} command} | |
265 \label{fig:undo:backout} | |
266 \end{figure} | |
267 | |
268 \subsection{Backing out a non-tip change} | |
269 | |
270 If you want to back out a change other than the last one you | |
271 committed, pass the \hgopt{backout}{--merge} option to the | |
272 \hgcmd{backout} command. | |
273 \interaction{backout.non-tip.clone} | |
274 This makes backing out any changeset a ``one-shot'' operation that's | |
275 usually simple and fast. | |
276 \interaction{backout.non-tip.backout} | |
277 | |
278 If you take a look at the contents of \filename{myfile} after the | |
279 backout finishes, you'll see that the first and third changes are | |
280 present, but not the second. | |
281 \interaction{backout.non-tip.cat} | |
282 | |
283 As the graphical history in figure~\ref{fig:undo:backout-non-tip} | |
284 illustrates, Mercurial actually commits \emph{two} changes in this | |
285 kind of situation (the box-shaped nodes are the ones that Mercurial | |
286 commits automatically). Before Mercurial begins the backout process, | |
287 it first remembers what the current parent of the working directory | |
288 is. It then backs out the target changeset, and commits that as a | |
289 changeset. Finally, it merges back to the previous parent of the | |
290 working directory, and commits the result of the merge. | |
291 | |
292 % TODO: to me it looks like mercurial doesn't commit the second merge automatically! | |
293 | |
294 \begin{figure}[htb] | |
295 \centering | |
296 \grafix{undo-non-tip} | |
297 \caption{Automated backout of a non-tip change using the \hgcmd{backout} command} | |
298 \label{fig:undo:backout-non-tip} | |
299 \end{figure} | |
300 | |
301 The result is that you end up ``back where you were'', only with some | |
302 extra history that undoes the effect of the changeset you wanted to | |
303 back out. | |
304 | |
305 \subsubsection{Always use the \hgopt{backout}{--merge} option} | |
306 | |
307 In fact, since the \hgopt{backout}{--merge} option will do the ``right | |
308 thing'' whether or not the changeset you're backing out is the tip | |
309 (i.e.~it won't try to merge if it's backing out the tip, since there's | |
310 no need), you should \emph{always} use this option when you run the | |
311 \hgcmd{backout} command. | |
312 | |
313 \subsection{Gaining more control of the backout process} | |
314 | |
315 While I've recommended that you always use the | |
316 \hgopt{backout}{--merge} option when backing out a change, the | |
317 \hgcmd{backout} command lets you decide how to merge a backout | |
318 changeset. Taking control of the backout process by hand is something | |
319 you will rarely need to do, but it can be useful to understand what | |
320 the \hgcmd{backout} command is doing for you automatically. To | |
321 illustrate this, let's clone our first repository, but omit the | |
322 backout change that it contains. | |
323 | |
324 \interaction{backout.manual.clone} | |
325 As with our earlier example, We'll commit a third changeset, then back | |
326 out its parent, and see what happens. | |
327 \interaction{backout.manual.backout} | |
328 Our new changeset is again a descendant of the changeset we backout | |
329 out; it's thus a new head, \emph{not} a descendant of the changeset | |
330 that was the tip. The \hgcmd{backout} command was quite explicit in | |
331 telling us this. | |
332 \interaction{backout.manual.log} | |
333 | |
334 Again, it's easier to see what has happened by looking at a graph of | |
335 the revision history, in figure~\ref{fig:undo:backout-manual}. This | |
336 makes it clear that when we use \hgcmd{backout} to back out a change | |
337 other than the tip, Mercurial adds a new head to the repository (the | |
338 change it committed is box-shaped). | |
339 | |
340 \begin{figure}[htb] | |
341 \centering | |
342 \grafix{undo-manual} | |
343 \caption{Backing out a change using the \hgcmd{backout} command} | |
344 \label{fig:undo:backout-manual} | |
345 \end{figure} | |
346 | |
347 After the \hgcmd{backout} command has completed, it leaves the new | |
348 ``backout'' changeset as the parent of the working directory. | |
349 \interaction{backout.manual.parents} | |
350 Now we have two isolated sets of changes. | |
351 \interaction{backout.manual.heads} | |
352 | |
353 Let's think about what we expect to see as the contents of | |
354 \filename{myfile} now. The first change should be present, because | |
355 we've never backed it out. The second change should be missing, as | |
356 that's the change we backed out. Since the history graph shows the | |
357 third change as a separate head, we \emph{don't} expect to see the | |
358 third change present in \filename{myfile}. | |
359 \interaction{backout.manual.cat} | |
360 To get the third change back into the file, we just do a normal merge | |
361 of our two heads. | |
362 \interaction{backout.manual.merge} | |
363 Afterwards, the graphical history of our repository looks like | |
364 figure~\ref{fig:undo:backout-manual-merge}. | |
365 | |
366 \begin{figure}[htb] | |
367 \centering | |
368 \grafix{undo-manual-merge} | |
369 \caption{Manually merging a backout change} | |
370 \label{fig:undo:backout-manual-merge} | |
371 \end{figure} | |
372 | |
373 \subsection{Why \hgcmd{backout} works as it does} | |
374 | |
375 Here's a brief description of how the \hgcmd{backout} command works. | |
376 \begin{enumerate} | |
377 \item It ensures that the working directory is ``clean'', i.e.~that | |
378 the output of \hgcmd{status} would be empty. | |
379 \item It remembers the current parent of the working directory. Let's | |
380 call this changeset \texttt{orig} | |
381 \item It does the equivalent of a \hgcmd{update} to sync the working | |
382 directory to the changeset you want to back out. Let's call this | |
383 changeset \texttt{backout} | |
384 \item It finds the parent of that changeset. Let's call that | |
385 changeset \texttt{parent}. | |
386 \item For each file that the \texttt{backout} changeset affected, it | |
387 does the equivalent of a \hgcmdargs{revert}{-r parent} on that file, | |
388 to restore it to the contents it had before that changeset was | |
389 committed. | |
390 \item It commits the result as a new changeset. This changeset has | |
391 \texttt{backout} as its parent. | |
392 \item If you specify \hgopt{backout}{--merge} on the command line, it | |
393 merges with \texttt{orig}, and commits the result of the merge. | |
394 \end{enumerate} | |
395 | |
396 An alternative way to implement the \hgcmd{backout} command would be | |
397 to \hgcmd{export} the to-be-backed-out changeset as a diff, then use | |
398 the \cmdopt{patch}{--reverse} option to the \command{patch} command to | |
399 reverse the effect of the change without fiddling with the working | |
400 directory. This sounds much simpler, but it would not work nearly as | |
401 well. | |
402 | |
403 The reason that \hgcmd{backout} does an update, a commit, a merge, and | |
404 another commit is to give the merge machinery the best chance to do a | |
405 good job when dealing with all the changes \emph{between} the change | |
406 you're backing out and the current tip. | |
407 | |
408 If you're backing out a changeset that's~100 revisions back in your | |
409 project's history, the chances that the \command{patch} command will | |
410 be able to apply a reverse diff cleanly are not good, because | |
411 intervening changes are likely to have ``broken the context'' that | |
412 \command{patch} uses to determine whether it can apply a patch (if | |
413 this sounds like gibberish, see \ref{sec:mq:patch} for a | |
414 discussion of the \command{patch} command). Also, Mercurial's merge | |
415 machinery will handle files and directories being renamed, permission | |
416 changes, and modifications to binary files, none of which | |
417 \command{patch} can deal with. | |
418 | |
419 \section{Changes that should never have been} | |
420 \label{sec:undo:aaaiiieee} | |
421 | |
422 Most of the time, the \hgcmd{backout} command is exactly what you need | |
423 if you want to undo the effects of a change. It leaves a permanent | |
424 record of exactly what you did, both when committing the original | |
425 changeset and when you cleaned up after it. | |
426 | |
427 On rare occasions, though, you may find that you've committed a change | |
428 that really should not be present in the repository at all. For | |
429 example, it would be very unusual, and usually considered a mistake, | |
430 to commit a software project's object files as well as its source | |
431 files. Object files have almost no intrinsic value, and they're | |
432 \emph{big}, so they increase the size of the repository and the amount | |
433 of time it takes to clone or pull changes. | |
434 | |
435 Before I discuss the options that you have if you commit a ``brown | |
436 paper bag'' change (the kind that's so bad that you want to pull a | |
437 brown paper bag over your head), let me first discuss some approaches | |
438 that probably won't work. | |
439 | |
440 Since Mercurial treats history as accumulative---every change builds | |
441 on top of all changes that preceded it---you generally can't just make | |
442 disastrous changes disappear. The one exception is when you've just | |
443 committed a change, and it hasn't been pushed or pulled into another | |
444 repository. That's when you can safely use the \hgcmd{rollback} | |
445 command, as I detailed in section~\ref{sec:undo:rollback}. | |
446 | |
447 After you've pushed a bad change to another repository, you | |
448 \emph{could} still use \hgcmd{rollback} to make your local copy of the | |
449 change disappear, but it won't have the consequences you want. The | |
450 change will still be present in the remote repository, so it will | |
451 reappear in your local repository the next time you pull. | |
452 | |
453 If a situation like this arises, and you know which repositories your | |
454 bad change has propagated into, you can \emph{try} to get rid of the | |
455 changeefrom \emph{every} one of those repositories. This is, of | |
456 course, not a satisfactory solution: if you miss even a single | |
457 repository while you're expunging, the change is still ``in the | |
458 wild'', and could propagate further. | |
459 | |
460 If you've committed one or more changes \emph{after} the change that | |
461 you'd like to see disappear, your options are further reduced. | |
462 Mercurial doesn't provide a way to ``punch a hole'' in history, | |
463 leaving changesets intact. | |
464 | |
465 XXX This needs filling out. The \texttt{hg-replay} script in the | |
466 \texttt{examples} directory works, but doesn't handle merge | |
467 changesets. Kind of an important omission. | |
468 | |
469 \subsection{Protect yourself from ``escaped'' changes} | |
470 | |
471 If you've committed some changes to your local repository and they've | |
472 been pushed or pulled somewhere else, this isn't necessarily a | |
473 disaster. You can protect yourself ahead of time against some classes | |
474 of bad changeset. This is particularly easy if your team usually | |
475 pulls changes from a central repository. | |
476 | |
477 By configuring some hooks on that repository to validate incoming | |
478 changesets (see chapter~\ref{chap:hook}), you can automatically | |
479 prevent some kinds of bad changeset from being pushed to the central | |
480 repository at all. With such a configuration in place, some kinds of | |
481 bad changeset will naturally tend to ``die out'' because they can't | |
482 propagate into the central repository. Better yet, this happens | |
483 without any need for explicit intervention. | |
484 | |
485 For instance, an incoming change hook that verifies that a changeset | |
486 will actually compile can prevent people from inadvertantly ``breaking | |
487 the build''. | |
488 | |
489 \section{Finding the source of a bug} | |
490 \label{sec:undo:bisect} | |
491 | |
492 While it's all very well to be able to back out a changeset that | |
493 introduced a bug, this requires that you know which changeset to back | |
494 out. Mercurial provides an invaluable command, called | |
495 \hgcmd{bisect}, that helps you to automate this process and accomplish | |
496 it very efficiently. | |
497 | |
498 The idea behind the \hgcmd{bisect} command is that a changeset has | |
499 introduced some change of behaviour that you can identify with a | |
500 simple binary test. You don't know which piece of code introduced the | |
501 change, but you know how to test for the presence of the bug. The | |
502 \hgcmd{bisect} command uses your test to direct its search for the | |
503 changeset that introduced the code that caused the bug. | |
504 | |
505 Here are a few scenarios to help you understand how you might apply | |
506 this command. | |
507 \begin{itemize} | |
508 \item The most recent version of your software has a bug that you | |
509 remember wasn't present a few weeks ago, but you don't know when it | |
510 was introduced. Here, your binary test checks for the presence of | |
511 that bug. | |
512 \item You fixed a bug in a rush, and now it's time to close the entry | |
513 in your team's bug database. The bug database requires a changeset | |
514 ID when you close an entry, but you don't remember which changeset | |
515 you fixed the bug in. Once again, your binary test checks for the | |
516 presence of the bug. | |
517 \item Your software works correctly, but runs~15\% slower than the | |
518 last time you measured it. You want to know which changeset | |
519 introduced the performance regression. In this case, your binary | |
520 test measures the performance of your software, to see whether it's | |
521 ``fast'' or ``slow''. | |
522 \item The sizes of the components of your project that you ship | |
523 exploded recently, and you suspect that something changed in the way | |
524 you build your project. | |
525 \end{itemize} | |
526 | |
527 From these examples, it should be clear that the \hgcmd{bisect} | |
528 command is not useful only for finding the sources of bugs. You can | |
529 use it to find any ``emergent property'' of a repository (anything | |
530 that you can't find from a simple text search of the files in the | |
531 tree) for which you can write a binary test. | |
532 | |
533 We'll introduce a little bit of terminology here, just to make it | |
534 clear which parts of the search process are your responsibility, and | |
535 which are Mercurial's. A \emph{test} is something that \emph{you} run | |
536 when \hgcmd{bisect} chooses a changeset. A \emph{probe} is what | |
537 \hgcmd{bisect} runs to tell whether a revision is good. Finally, | |
538 we'll use the word ``bisect'', as both a noun and a verb, to stand in | |
539 for the phrase ``search using the \hgcmd{bisect} command. | |
540 | |
541 One simple way to automate the searching process would be simply to | |
542 probe every changeset. However, this scales poorly. If it took ten | |
543 minutes to test a single changeset, and you had 10,000 changesets in | |
544 your repository, the exhaustive approach would take on average~35 | |
545 \emph{days} to find the changeset that introduced a bug. Even if you | |
546 knew that the bug was introduced by one of the last 500 changesets, | |
547 and limited your search to those, you'd still be looking at over 40 | |
548 hours to find the changeset that introduced your bug. | |
549 | |
550 What the \hgcmd{bisect} command does is use its knowledge of the | |
551 ``shape'' of your project's revision history to perform a search in | |
552 time proportional to the \emph{logarithm} of the number of changesets | |
553 to check (the kind of search it performs is called a dichotomic | |
554 search). With this approach, searching through 10,000 changesets will | |
555 take less than three hours, even at ten minutes per test (the search | |
556 will require about 14 tests). Limit your search to the last hundred | |
557 changesets, and it will take only about an hour (roughly seven tests). | |
558 | |
559 The \hgcmd{bisect} command is aware of the ``branchy'' nature of a | |
560 Mercurial project's revision history, so it has no problems dealing | |
561 with branches, merges, or multiple heads in a repoository. It can | |
562 prune entire branches of history with a single probe, which is how it | |
563 operates so efficiently. | |
564 | |
565 \subsection{Using the \hgcmd{bisect} command} | |
566 | |
567 Here's an example of \hgcmd{bisect} in action. | |
568 | |
569 \begin{note} | |
570 In versions 0.9.5 and earlier of Mercurial, \hgcmd{bisect} was not a | |
571 core command: it was distributed with Mercurial as an extension. | |
572 This section describes the built-in command, not the old extension. | |
573 \end{note} | |
574 | |
575 Now let's create a repository, so that we can try out the | |
576 \hgcmd{bisect} command in isolation. | |
577 \interaction{bisect.init} | |
578 We'll simulate a project that has a bug in it in a simple-minded way: | |
579 create trivial changes in a loop, and nominate one specific change | |
580 that will have the ``bug''. This loop creates 35 changesets, each | |
581 adding a single file to the repository. We'll represent our ``bug'' | |
582 with a file that contains the text ``i have a gub''. | |
583 \interaction{bisect.commits} | |
584 | |
585 The next thing that we'd like to do is figure out how to use the | |
586 \hgcmd{bisect} command. We can use Mercurial's normal built-in help | |
587 mechanism for this. | |
588 \interaction{bisect.help} | |
589 | |
590 The \hgcmd{bisect} command works in steps. Each step proceeds as follows. | |
591 \begin{enumerate} | |
592 \item You run your binary test. | |
593 \begin{itemize} | |
594 \item If the test succeeded, you tell \hgcmd{bisect} by running the | |
595 \hgcmdargs{bisect}{good} command. | |
596 \item If it failed, run the \hgcmdargs{bisect}{--bad} command. | |
597 \end{itemize} | |
598 \item The command uses your information to decide which changeset to | |
599 test next. | |
600 \item It updates the working directory to that changeset, and the | |
601 process begins again. | |
602 \end{enumerate} | |
603 The process ends when \hgcmd{bisect} identifies a unique changeset | |
604 that marks the point where your test transitioned from ``succeeding'' | |
605 to ``failing''. | |
606 | |
607 To start the search, we must run the \hgcmdargs{bisect}{--reset} command. | |
608 \interaction{bisect.search.init} | |
609 | |
610 In our case, the binary test we use is simple: we check to see if any | |
611 file in the repository contains the string ``i have a gub''. If it | |
612 does, this changeset contains the change that ``caused the bug''. By | |
613 convention, a changeset that has the property we're searching for is | |
614 ``bad'', while one that doesn't is ``good''. | |
615 | |
616 Most of the time, the revision to which the working directory is | |
617 synced (usually the tip) already exhibits the problem introduced by | |
618 the buggy change, so we'll mark it as ``bad''. | |
619 \interaction{bisect.search.bad-init} | |
620 | |
621 Our next task is to nominate a changeset that we know \emph{doesn't} | |
622 have the bug; the \hgcmd{bisect} command will ``bracket'' its search | |
623 between the first pair of good and bad changesets. In our case, we | |
624 know that revision~10 didn't have the bug. (I'll have more words | |
625 about choosing the first ``good'' changeset later.) | |
626 \interaction{bisect.search.good-init} | |
627 | |
628 Notice that this command printed some output. | |
629 \begin{itemize} | |
630 \item It told us how many changesets it must consider before it can | |
631 identify the one that introduced the bug, and how many tests that | |
632 will require. | |
633 \item It updated the working directory to the next changeset to test, | |
634 and told us which changeset it's testing. | |
635 \end{itemize} | |
636 | |
637 We now run our test in the working directory. We use the | |
638 \command{grep} command to see if our ``bad'' file is present in the | |
639 working directory. If it is, this revision is bad; if not, this | |
640 revision is good. | |
641 \interaction{bisect.search.step1} | |
642 | |
643 This test looks like a perfect candidate for automation, so let's turn | |
644 it into a shell function. | |
645 \interaction{bisect.search.mytest} | |
646 We can now run an entire test step with a single command, | |
647 \texttt{mytest}. | |
648 \interaction{bisect.search.step2} | |
649 A few more invocations of our canned test step command, and we're | |
650 done. | |
651 \interaction{bisect.search.rest} | |
652 | |
653 Even though we had~40 changesets to search through, the \hgcmd{bisect} | |
654 command let us find the changeset that introduced our ``bug'' with | |
655 only five tests. Because the number of tests that the \hgcmd{bisect} | |
656 command performs grows logarithmically with the number of changesets to | |
657 search, the advantage that it has over the ``brute force'' search | |
658 approach increases with every changeset you add. | |
659 | |
660 \subsection{Cleaning up after your search} | |
661 | |
662 When you're finished using the \hgcmd{bisect} command in a | |
663 repository, you can use the \hgcmdargs{bisect}{reset} command to drop | |
664 the information it was using to drive your search. The command | |
665 doesn't use much space, so it doesn't matter if you forget to run this | |
666 command. However, \hgcmd{bisect} won't let you start a new search in | |
667 that repository until you do a \hgcmdargs{bisect}{reset}. | |
668 \interaction{bisect.search.reset} | |
669 | |
670 \section{Tips for finding bugs effectively} | |
671 | |
672 \subsection{Give consistent input} | |
673 | |
674 The \hgcmd{bisect} command requires that you correctly report the | |
675 result of every test you perform. If you tell it that a test failed | |
676 when it really succeeded, it \emph{might} be able to detect the | |
677 inconsistency. If it can identify an inconsistency in your reports, | |
678 it will tell you that a particular changeset is both good and bad. | |
679 However, it can't do this perfectly; it's about as likely to report | |
680 the wrong changeset as the source of the bug. | |
681 | |
682 \subsection{Automate as much as possible} | |
683 | |
684 When I started using the \hgcmd{bisect} command, I tried a few times | |
685 to run my tests by hand, on the command line. This is an approach | |
686 that I, at least, am not suited to. After a few tries, I found that I | |
687 was making enough mistakes that I was having to restart my searches | |
688 several times before finally getting correct results. | |
689 | |
690 My initial problems with driving the \hgcmd{bisect} command by hand | |
691 occurred even with simple searches on small repositories; if the | |
692 problem you're looking for is more subtle, or the number of tests that | |
693 \hgcmd{bisect} must perform increases, the likelihood of operator | |
694 error ruining the search is much higher. Once I started automating my | |
695 tests, I had much better results. | |
696 | |
697 The key to automated testing is twofold: | |
698 \begin{itemize} | |
699 \item always test for the same symptom, and | |
700 \item always feed consistent input to the \hgcmd{bisect} command. | |
701 \end{itemize} | |
702 In my tutorial example above, the \command{grep} command tests for the | |
703 symptom, and the \texttt{if} statement takes the result of this check | |
704 and ensures that we always feed the same input to the \hgcmd{bisect} | |
705 command. The \texttt{mytest} function marries these together in a | |
706 reproducible way, so that every test is uniform and consistent. | |
707 | |
708 \subsection{Check your results} | |
709 | |
710 Because the output of a \hgcmd{bisect} search is only as good as the | |
711 input you give it, don't take the changeset it reports as the | |
712 absolute truth. A simple way to cross-check its report is to manually | |
713 run your test at each of the following changesets: | |
714 \begin{itemize} | |
715 \item The changeset that it reports as the first bad revision. Your | |
716 test should still report this as bad. | |
717 \item The parent of that changeset (either parent, if it's a merge). | |
718 Your test should report this changeset as good. | |
719 \item A child of that changeset. Your test should report this | |
720 changeset as bad. | |
721 \end{itemize} | |
722 | |
723 \subsection{Beware interference between bugs} | |
724 | |
725 It's possible that your search for one bug could be disrupted by the | |
726 presence of another. For example, let's say your software crashes at | |
727 revision 100, and worked correctly at revision 50. Unknown to you, | |
728 someone else introduced a different crashing bug at revision 60, and | |
729 fixed it at revision 80. This could distort your results in one of | |
730 several ways. | |
731 | |
732 It is possible that this other bug completely ``masks'' yours, which | |
733 is to say that it occurs before your bug has a chance to manifest | |
734 itself. If you can't avoid that other bug (for example, it prevents | |
735 your project from building), and so can't tell whether your bug is | |
736 present in a particular changeset, the \hgcmd{bisect} command cannot | |
737 help you directly. Instead, you can mark a changeset as untested by | |
738 running \hgcmdargs{bisect}{--skip}. | |
739 | |
740 A different problem could arise if your test for a bug's presence is | |
741 not specific enough. If you check for ``my program crashes'', then | |
742 both your crashing bug and an unrelated crashing bug that masks it | |
743 will look like the same thing, and mislead \hgcmd{bisect}. | |
744 | |
745 Another useful situation in which to use \hgcmdargs{bisect}{--skip} is | |
746 if you can't test a revision because your project was in a broken and | |
747 hence untestable state at that revision, perhaps because someone | |
748 checked in a change that prevented the project from building. | |
749 | |
750 \subsection{Bracket your search lazily} | |
751 | |
752 Choosing the first ``good'' and ``bad'' changesets that will mark the | |
753 end points of your search is often easy, but it bears a little | |
754 discussion nevertheless. From the perspective of \hgcmd{bisect}, the | |
755 ``newest'' changeset is conventionally ``bad'', and the older | |
756 changeset is ``good''. | |
757 | |
758 If you're having trouble remembering when a suitable ``good'' change | |
759 was, so that you can tell \hgcmd{bisect}, you could do worse than | |
760 testing changesets at random. Just remember to eliminate contenders | |
761 that can't possibly exhibit the bug (perhaps because the feature with | |
762 the bug isn't present yet) and those where another problem masks the | |
763 bug (as I discussed above). | |
764 | |
765 Even if you end up ``early'' by thousands of changesets or months of | |
766 history, you will only add a handful of tests to the total number that | |
767 \hgcmd{bisect} must perform, thanks to its logarithmic behaviour. | |
768 | |
769 %%% Local Variables: | |
770 %%% mode: latex | |
771 %%% TeX-master: "00book" | |
772 %%% End: |