comparison en/ch11-mq.xml @ 682:28b5a5befb08

Fold preface and intro into one
author Bryan O'Sullivan <bos@serpentine.com>
date Thu, 19 Mar 2009 20:54:12 -0700
parents en/ch12-mq.xml@8366882f67f2
children c838b3975bc6
comparison
equal deleted inserted replaced
681:5bfa0df6aaed 682:28b5a5befb08
1 <!-- vim: set filetype=docbkxml shiftwidth=2 autoindent expandtab tw=77 : -->
2
3 <chapter id="chap:mq">
4 <?dbhtml filename="managing-change-with-mercurial-queues.html"?>
5 <title>Managing change with Mercurial Queues</title>
6
7 <sect1 id="sec:mq:patch-mgmt">
8 <title>The patch management problem</title>
9
10 <para>Here is a common scenario: you need to install a software
11 package from source, but you find a bug that you must fix in the
12 source before you can start using the package. You make your
13 changes, forget about the package for a while, and a few months
14 later you need to upgrade to a newer version of the package. If
15 the newer version of the package still has the bug, you must
16 extract your fix from the older source tree and apply it against
17 the newer version. This is a tedious task, and it's easy to
18 make mistakes.</para>
19
20 <para>This is a simple case of the <quote>patch management</quote>
21 problem. You have an <quote>upstream</quote> source tree that
22 you can't change; you need to make some local changes on top of
23 the upstream tree; and you'd like to be able to keep those
24 changes separate, so that you can apply them to newer versions
25 of the upstream source.</para>
26
27 <para>The patch management problem arises in many situations.
28 Probably the most visible is that a user of an open source
29 software project will contribute a bug fix or new feature to the
30 project's maintainers in the form of a patch.</para>
31
32 <para>Distributors of operating systems that include open source
33 software often need to make changes to the packages they
34 distribute so that they will build properly in their
35 environments.</para>
36
37 <para>When you have few changes to maintain, it is easy to manage
38 a single patch using the standard <command>diff</command> and
39 <command>patch</command> programs (see section <xref
40 linkend="sec:mq:patch"/> for a discussion of these
41 tools). Once the number of changes grows, it starts to make
42 sense to maintain patches as discrete <quote>chunks of
43 work,</quote> so that for example a single patch will contain
44 only one bug fix (the patch might modify several files, but it's
45 doing <quote>only one thing</quote>), and you may have a number
46 of such patches for different bugs you need fixed and local
47 changes you require. In this situation, if you submit a bug fix
48 patch to the upstream maintainers of a package and they include
49 your fix in a subsequent release, you can simply drop that
50 single patch when you're updating to the newer release.</para>
51
52 <para>Maintaining a single patch against an upstream tree is a
53 little tedious and error-prone, but not difficult. However, the
54 complexity of the problem grows rapidly as the number of patches
55 you have to maintain increases. With more than a tiny number of
56 patches in hand, understanding which ones you have applied and
57 maintaining them moves from messy to overwhelming.</para>
58
59 <para>Fortunately, Mercurial includes a powerful extension,
60 Mercurial Queues (or simply <quote>MQ</quote>), that massively
61 simplifies the patch management problem.</para>
62
63 </sect1>
64 <sect1 id="sec:mq:history">
65 <title>The prehistory of Mercurial Queues</title>
66
67 <para>During the late 1990s, several Linux kernel developers
68 started to maintain <quote>patch series</quote> that modified
69 the behaviour of the Linux kernel. Some of these series were
70 focused on stability, some on feature coverage, and others were
71 more speculative.</para>
72
73 <para>The sizes of these patch series grew rapidly. In 2002,
74 Andrew Morton published some shell scripts he had been using to
75 automate the task of managing his patch queues. Andrew was
76 successfully using these scripts to manage hundreds (sometimes
77 thousands) of patches on top of the Linux kernel.</para>
78
79 <sect2 id="sec:mq:quilt">
80 <title>A patchwork quilt</title>
81
82 <para>In early 2003, Andreas Gruenbacher and Martin Quinson
83 borrowed the approach of Andrew's scripts and published a tool
84 called <quote>patchwork quilt</quote>
85 <citation>web:quilt</citation>, or simply <quote>quilt</quote>
86 (see <citation>gruenbacher:2005</citation> for a paper
87 describing it). Because quilt substantially automated patch
88 management, it rapidly gained a large following among open
89 source software developers.</para>
90
91 <para>Quilt manages a <emphasis>stack of patches</emphasis> on
92 top of a directory tree. To begin, you tell quilt to manage a
93 directory tree, and tell it which files you want to manage; it
94 stores away the names and contents of those files. To fix a
95 bug, you create a new patch (using a single command), edit the
96 files you need to fix, then <quote>refresh</quote> the
97 patch.</para>
98
99 <para>The refresh step causes quilt to scan the directory tree;
100 it updates the patch with all of the changes you have made.
101 You can create another patch on top of the first, which will
102 track the changes required to modify the tree from <quote>tree
103 with one patch applied</quote> to <quote>tree with two
104 patches applied</quote>.</para>
105
106 <para>You can <emphasis>change</emphasis> which patches are
107 applied to the tree. If you <quote>pop</quote> a patch, the
108 changes made by that patch will vanish from the directory
109 tree. Quilt remembers which patches you have popped, though,
110 so you can <quote>push</quote> a popped patch again, and the
111 directory tree will be restored to contain the modifications
112 in the patch. Most importantly, you can run the
113 <quote>refresh</quote> command at any time, and the topmost
114 applied patch will be updated. This means that you can, at
115 any time, change both which patches are applied and what
116 modifications those patches make.</para>
117
118 <para>Quilt knows nothing about revision control tools, so it
119 works equally well on top of an unpacked tarball or a
120 Subversion working copy.</para>
121
122 </sect2>
123 <sect2 id="sec:mq:quilt-mq">
124 <title>From patchwork quilt to Mercurial Queues</title>
125
126 <para>In mid-2005, Chris Mason took the features of quilt and
127 wrote an extension that he called Mercurial Queues, which
128 added quilt-like behaviour to Mercurial.</para>
129
130 <para>The key difference between quilt and MQ is that quilt
131 knows nothing about revision control systems, while MQ is
132 <emphasis>integrated</emphasis> into Mercurial. Each patch
133 that you push is represented as a Mercurial changeset. Pop a
134 patch, and the changeset goes away.</para>
135
136 <para>Because quilt does not care about revision control tools,
137 it is still a tremendously useful piece of software to know
138 about for situations where you cannot use Mercurial and
139 MQ.</para>
140
141 </sect2>
142 </sect1>
143 <sect1>
144 <title>The huge advantage of MQ</title>
145
146 <para>I cannot overstate the value that MQ offers through the
147 unification of patches and revision control.</para>
148
149 <para>A major reason that patches have persisted in the free
150 software and open source world&emdash;in spite of the
151 availability of increasingly capable revision control tools over
152 the years&emdash;is the <emphasis>agility</emphasis> they
153 offer.</para>
154
155 <para>Traditional revision control tools make a permanent,
156 irreversible record of everything that you do. While this has
157 great value, it's also somewhat stifling. If you want to
158 perform a wild-eyed experiment, you have to be careful in how
159 you go about it, or you risk leaving unneeded&emdash;or worse,
160 misleading or destabilising&emdash;traces of your missteps and
161 errors in the permanent revision record.</para>
162
163 <para>By contrast, MQ's marriage of distributed revision control
164 with patches makes it much easier to isolate your work. Your
165 patches live on top of normal revision history, and you can make
166 them disappear or reappear at will. If you don't like a patch,
167 you can drop it. If a patch isn't quite as you want it to be,
168 simply fix it&emdash;as many times as you need to, until you
169 have refined it into the form you desire.</para>
170
171 <para>As an example, the integration of patches with revision
172 control makes understanding patches and debugging their
173 effects&emdash;and their interplay with the code they're based
174 on&emdash;<emphasis>enormously</emphasis> easier. Since every
175 applied patch has an associated changeset, you can give <command
176 role="hg-cmd">hg log</command> a file name to see which
177 changesets and patches affected the file. You can use the
178 <command role="hg-cmd">hg bisect</command> command to
179 binary-search through all changesets and applied patches to see
180 where a bug got introduced or fixed. You can use the <command
181 role="hg-cmd">hg annotate</command> command to see which
182 changeset or patch modified a particular line of a source file.
183 And so on.</para>
184
185 </sect1>
186 <sect1 id="sec:mq:patch">
187 <title>Understanding patches</title>
188
189 <para>Because MQ doesn't hide its patch-oriented nature, it is
190 helpful to understand what patches are, and a little about the
191 tools that work with them.</para>
192
193 <para>The traditional Unix <command>diff</command> command
194 compares two files, and prints a list of differences between
195 them. The <command>patch</command> command understands these
196 differences as <emphasis>modifications</emphasis> to make to a
197 file. Take a look below for a simple example of these commands
198 in action.</para>
199
200 &interaction.mq.dodiff.diff;
201
202 <para>The type of file that <command>diff</command> generates (and
203 <command>patch</command> takes as input) is called a
204 <quote>patch</quote> or a <quote>diff</quote>; there is no
205 difference between a patch and a diff. (We'll use the term
206 <quote>patch</quote>, since it's more commonly used.)</para>
207
208 <para>A patch file can start with arbitrary text; the
209 <command>patch</command> command ignores this text, but MQ uses
210 it as the commit message when creating changesets. To find the
211 beginning of the patch content, <command>patch</command>
212 searches for the first line that starts with the string
213 <quote><literal>diff -</literal></quote>.</para>
214
215 <para>MQ works with <emphasis>unified</emphasis> diffs
216 (<command>patch</command> can accept several other diff formats,
217 but MQ doesn't). A unified diff contains two kinds of header.
218 The <emphasis>file header</emphasis> describes the file being
219 modified; it contains the name of the file to modify. When
220 <command>patch</command> sees a new file header, it looks for a
221 file with that name to start modifying.</para>
222
223 <para>After the file header comes a series of
224 <emphasis>hunks</emphasis>. Each hunk starts with a header;
225 this identifies the range of line numbers within the file that
226 the hunk should modify. Following the header, a hunk starts and
227 ends with a few (usually three) lines of text from the
228 unmodified file; these are called the
229 <emphasis>context</emphasis> for the hunk. If there's only a
230 small amount of context between successive hunks,
231 <command>diff</command> doesn't print a new hunk header; it just
232 runs the hunks together, with a few lines of context between
233 modifications.</para>
234
235 <para>Each line of context begins with a space character. Within
236 the hunk, a line that begins with
237 <quote><literal>-</literal></quote> means <quote>remove this
238 line,</quote> while a line that begins with
239 <quote><literal>+</literal></quote> means <quote>insert this
240 line.</quote> For example, a line that is modified is
241 represented by one deletion and one insertion.</para>
242
243 <para>We will return to some of the more subtle aspects of patches
244 later (in section <xref linkend="sec:mq:adv-patch"/>), but you
245 should have
246 enough information now to use MQ.</para>
247
248 </sect1>
249 <sect1 id="sec:mq:start">
250 <title>Getting started with Mercurial Queues</title>
251
252 <para>Because MQ is implemented as an extension, you must
253 explicitly enable before you can use it. (You don't need to
254 download anything; MQ ships with the standard Mercurial
255 distribution.) To enable MQ, edit your <filename
256 role="home">~/.hgrc</filename> file, and add the lines
257 below.</para>
258
259 <programlisting>[extensions]
260 hgext.mq =</programlisting>
261
262 <para>Once the extension is enabled, it will make a number of new
263 commands available. To verify that the extension is working,
264 you can use <command role="hg-cmd">hg help</command> to see if
265 the <command role="hg-ext-mq">qinit</command> command is now
266 available.</para>
267
268 &interaction.mq.qinit-help.help;
269
270 <para>You can use MQ with <emphasis>any</emphasis> Mercurial
271 repository, and its commands only operate within that
272 repository. To get started, simply prepare the repository using
273 the <command role="hg-ext-mq">qinit</command> command.</para>
274
275 &interaction.mq.tutorial.qinit;
276
277 <para>This command creates an empty directory called <filename
278 role="special" class="directory">.hg/patches</filename>, where
279 MQ will keep its metadata. As with many Mercurial commands, the
280 <command role="hg-ext-mq">qinit</command> command prints nothing
281 if it succeeds.</para>
282
283 <sect2>
284 <title>Creating a new patch</title>
285
286 <para>To begin work on a new patch, use the <command
287 role="hg-ext-mq">qnew</command> command. This command takes
288 one argument, the name of the patch to create.</para>
289
290 <para>MQ will use this as the name of an actual file in the
291 <filename role="special"
292 class="directory">.hg/patches</filename> directory, as you
293 can see below.</para>
294
295 &interaction.mq.tutorial.qnew;
296
297 <para>Also newly present in the <filename role="special"
298 class="directory">.hg/patches</filename> directory are two
299 other files, <filename role="special">series</filename> and
300 <filename role="special">status</filename>. The <filename
301 role="special">series</filename> file lists all of the
302 patches that MQ knows about for this repository, with one
303 patch per line. Mercurial uses the <filename
304 role="special">status</filename> file for internal
305 book-keeping; it tracks all of the patches that MQ has
306 <emphasis>applied</emphasis> in this repository.</para>
307
308 <note>
309 <para> You may sometimes want to edit the <filename
310 role="special">series</filename> file by hand; for
311 example, to change the sequence in which some patches are
312 applied. However, manually editing the <filename
313 role="special">status</filename> file is almost always a
314 bad idea, as it's easy to corrupt MQ's idea of what is
315 happening.</para>
316 </note>
317
318 <para>Once you have created your new patch, you can edit files
319 in the working directory as you usually would. All of the
320 normal Mercurial commands, such as <command role="hg-cmd">hg
321 diff</command> and <command role="hg-cmd">hg
322 annotate</command>, work exactly as they did before.</para>
323
324 </sect2>
325 <sect2>
326 <title>Refreshing a patch</title>
327
328 <para>When you reach a point where you want to save your work,
329 use the <command role="hg-ext-mq">qrefresh</command> command
330 to update the patch you are working on.</para>
331
332 &interaction.mq.tutorial.qrefresh;
333
334 <para>This command folds the changes you have made in the
335 working directory into your patch, and updates its
336 corresponding changeset to contain those changes.</para>
337
338 <para>You can run <command role="hg-ext-mq">qrefresh</command>
339 as often as you like, so it's a good way to
340 <quote>checkpoint</quote> your work. Refresh your patch at an
341 opportune time; try an experiment; and if the experiment
342 doesn't work out, <command role="hg-cmd">hg revert</command>
343 your modifications back to the last time you refreshed.</para>
344
345 &interaction.mq.tutorial.qrefresh2;
346
347 </sect2>
348 <sect2>
349 <title>Stacking and tracking patches</title>
350
351 <para>Once you have finished working on a patch, or need to work
352 on another, you can use the <command
353 role="hg-ext-mq">qnew</command> command again to create a
354 new patch. Mercurial will apply this patch on top of your
355 existing patch.</para>
356
357 &interaction.mq.tutorial.qnew2;
358 <para>Notice that the patch contains the changes in our prior
359 patch as part of its context (you can see this more clearly in
360 the output of <command role="hg-cmd">hg
361 annotate</command>).</para>
362
363 <para>So far, with the exception of <command
364 role="hg-ext-mq">qnew</command> and <command
365 role="hg-ext-mq">qrefresh</command>, we've been careful to
366 only use regular Mercurial commands. However, MQ provides
367 many commands that are easier to use when you are thinking
368 about patches, as illustrated below.</para>
369
370 &interaction.mq.tutorial.qseries;
371
372 <itemizedlist>
373 <listitem><para>The <command
374 role="hg-ext-mq">qseries</command> command lists every
375 patch that MQ knows about in this repository, from oldest
376 to newest (most recently
377 <emphasis>created</emphasis>).</para>
378 </listitem>
379 <listitem><para>The <command
380 role="hg-ext-mq">qapplied</command> command lists every
381 patch that MQ has <emphasis>applied</emphasis> in this
382 repository, again from oldest to newest (most recently
383 applied).</para>
384 </listitem></itemizedlist>
385
386 </sect2>
387 <sect2>
388 <title>Manipulating the patch stack</title>
389
390 <para>The previous discussion implied that there must be a
391 difference between <quote>known</quote> and
392 <quote>applied</quote> patches, and there is. MQ can manage a
393 patch without it being applied in the repository.</para>
394
395 <para>An <emphasis>applied</emphasis> patch has a corresponding
396 changeset in the repository, and the effects of the patch and
397 changeset are visible in the working directory. You can undo
398 the application of a patch using the <command
399 role="hg-ext-mq">qpop</command> command. MQ still
400 <emphasis>knows about</emphasis>, or manages, a popped patch,
401 but the patch no longer has a corresponding changeset in the
402 repository, and the working directory does not contain the
403 changes made by the patch. Figure <xref
404 linkend="fig:mq:stack"/> illustrates
405 the difference between applied and tracked patches.</para>
406
407 <informalfigure id="fig:mq:stack">
408 <mediaobject><imageobject><imagedata
409 fileref="mq-stack"/></imageobject><textobject><phrase>XXX
410 add text</phrase></textobject><caption><para>Applied and
411 unapplied patches in the MQ patch
412 stack</para></caption></mediaobject>
413 </informalfigure>
414
415 <para>You can reapply an unapplied, or popped, patch using the
416 <command role="hg-ext-mq">qpush</command> command. This
417 creates a new changeset to correspond to the patch, and the
418 patch's changes once again become present in the working
419 directory. See below for examples of <command
420 role="hg-ext-mq">qpop</command> and <command
421 role="hg-ext-mq">qpush</command> in action.</para>
422 &interaction.mq.tutorial.qpop;
423
424 <para>Notice that once we have popped a patch or two patches,
425 the output of <command role="hg-ext-mq">qseries</command>
426 remains the same, while that of <command
427 role="hg-ext-mq">qapplied</command> has changed.</para>
428
429
430 </sect2>
431 <sect2>
432 <title>Pushing and popping many patches</title>
433
434 <para>While <command role="hg-ext-mq">qpush</command> and
435 <command role="hg-ext-mq">qpop</command> each operate on a
436 single patch at a time by default, you can push and pop many
437 patches in one go. The <option
438 role="hg-ext-mq-cmd-qpush-opt">hg -a</option> option to
439 <command role="hg-ext-mq">qpush</command> causes it to push
440 all unapplied patches, while the <option
441 role="hg-ext-mq-cmd-qpop-opt">-a</option> option to <command
442 role="hg-ext-mq">qpop</command> causes it to pop all applied
443 patches. (For some more ways to push and pop many patches,
444 see section <xref linkend="sec:mq:perf"/>
445 below.)</para>
446
447 &interaction.mq.tutorial.qpush-a;
448
449 </sect2>
450 <sect2>
451 <title>Safety checks, and overriding them</title>
452
453 <para>Several MQ commands check the working directory before
454 they do anything, and fail if they find any modifications.
455 They do this to ensure that you won't lose any changes that
456 you have made, but not yet incorporated into a patch. The
457 example below illustrates this; the <command
458 role="hg-ext-mq">qnew</command> command will not create a
459 new patch if there are outstanding changes, caused in this
460 case by the <command role="hg-cmd">hg add</command> of
461 <filename>file3</filename>.</para>
462
463 &interaction.mq.tutorial.add;
464
465 <para>Commands that check the working directory all take an
466 <quote>I know what I'm doing</quote> option, which is always
467 named <option>-f</option>. The exact meaning of
468 <option>-f</option> depends on the command. For example,
469 <command role="hg-cmd">hg qnew <option
470 role="hg-ext-mq-cmd-qnew-opt">hg -f</option></command>
471 will incorporate any outstanding changes into the new patch it
472 creates, but <command role="hg-cmd">hg qpop <option
473 role="hg-ext-mq-cmd-qpop-opt">hg -f</option></command>
474 will revert modifications to any files affected by the patch
475 that it is popping. Be sure to read the documentation for a
476 command's <option>-f</option> option before you use it!</para>
477
478 </sect2>
479 <sect2>
480 <title>Working on several patches at once</title>
481
482 <para>The <command role="hg-ext-mq">qrefresh</command> command
483 always refreshes the <emphasis>topmost</emphasis> applied
484 patch. This means that you can suspend work on one patch (by
485 refreshing it), pop or push to make a different patch the top,
486 and work on <emphasis>that</emphasis> patch for a
487 while.</para>
488
489 <para>Here's an example that illustrates how you can use this
490 ability. Let's say you're developing a new feature as two
491 patches. The first is a change to the core of your software,
492 and the second&emdash;layered on top of the
493 first&emdash;changes the user interface to use the code you
494 just added to the core. If you notice a bug in the core while
495 you're working on the UI patch, it's easy to fix the core.
496 Simply <command role="hg-ext-mq">qrefresh</command> the UI
497 patch to save your in-progress changes, and <command
498 role="hg-ext-mq">qpop</command> down to the core patch. Fix
499 the core bug, <command role="hg-ext-mq">qrefresh</command> the
500 core patch, and <command role="hg-ext-mq">qpush</command> back
501 to the UI patch to continue where you left off.</para>
502
503 </sect2>
504 </sect1>
505 <sect1 id="sec:mq:adv-patch">
506 <title>More about patches</title>
507
508 <para>MQ uses the GNU <command>patch</command> command to apply
509 patches, so it's helpful to know a few more detailed aspects of
510 how <command>patch</command> works, and about patches
511 themselves.</para>
512
513 <sect2>
514 <title>The strip count</title>
515
516 <para>If you look at the file headers in a patch, you will
517 notice that the pathnames usually have an extra component on
518 the front that isn't present in the actual path name. This is
519 a holdover from the way that people used to generate patches
520 (people still do this, but it's somewhat rare with modern
521 revision control tools).</para>
522
523 <para>Alice would unpack a tarball, edit her files, then decide
524 that she wanted to create a patch. So she'd rename her
525 working directory, unpack the tarball again (hence the need
526 for the rename), and use the <option
527 role="cmd-opt-diff">-r</option> and <option
528 role="cmd-opt-diff">-N</option> options to
529 <command>diff</command> to recursively generate a patch
530 between the unmodified directory and the modified one. The
531 result would be that the name of the unmodified directory
532 would be at the front of the left-hand path in every file
533 header, and the name of the modified directory would be at the
534 front of the right-hand path.</para>
535
536 <para>Since someone receiving a patch from the Alices of the net
537 would be unlikely to have unmodified and modified directories
538 with exactly the same names, the <command>patch</command>
539 command has a <option role="cmd-opt-patch">-p</option> option
540 that indicates the number of leading path name components to
541 strip when trying to apply a patch. This number is called the
542 <emphasis>strip count</emphasis>.</para>
543
544 <para>An option of <quote><literal>-p1</literal></quote> means
545 <quote>use a strip count of one</quote>. If
546 <command>patch</command> sees a file name
547 <filename>foo/bar/baz</filename> in a file header, it will
548 strip <filename>foo</filename> and try to patch a file named
549 <filename>bar/baz</filename>. (Strictly speaking, the strip
550 count refers to the number of <emphasis>path
551 separators</emphasis> (and the components that go with them
552 ) to strip. A strip count of one will turn
553 <filename>foo/bar</filename> into <filename>bar</filename>,
554 but <filename>/foo/bar</filename> (notice the extra leading
555 slash) into <filename>foo/bar</filename>.)</para>
556
557 <para>The <quote>standard</quote> strip count for patches is
558 one; almost all patches contain one leading path name
559 component that needs to be stripped. Mercurial's <command
560 role="hg-cmd">hg diff</command> command generates path names
561 in this form, and the <command role="hg-cmd">hg
562 import</command> command and MQ expect patches to have a
563 strip count of one.</para>
564
565 <para>If you receive a patch from someone that you want to add
566 to your patch queue, and the patch needs a strip count other
567 than one, you cannot just <command
568 role="hg-ext-mq">qimport</command> the patch, because
569 <command role="hg-ext-mq">qimport</command> does not yet have
570 a <literal>-p</literal> option (see <ulink role="hg-bug"
571 url="http://www.selenic.com/mercurial/bts/issue311">issue
572 311</ulink>). Your best bet is to <command
573 role="hg-ext-mq">qnew</command> a patch of your own, then
574 use <command>patch -pN</command> to apply their patch,
575 followed by <command role="hg-cmd">hg addremove</command> to
576 pick up any files added or removed by the patch, followed by
577 <command role="hg-ext-mq">hg qrefresh</command>. This
578 complexity may become unnecessary; see <ulink role="hg-bug"
579 url="http://www.selenic.com/mercurial/bts/issue311">issue
580 311</ulink> for details.
581 </para>
582 </sect2>
583 <sect2>
584 <title>Strategies for applying a patch</title>
585
586 <para>When <command>patch</command> applies a hunk, it tries a
587 handful of successively less accurate strategies to try to
588 make the hunk apply. This falling-back technique often makes
589 it possible to take a patch that was generated against an old
590 version of a file, and apply it against a newer version of
591 that file.</para>
592
593 <para>First, <command>patch</command> tries an exact match,
594 where the line numbers, the context, and the text to be
595 modified must apply exactly. If it cannot make an exact
596 match, it tries to find an exact match for the context,
597 without honouring the line numbering information. If this
598 succeeds, it prints a line of output saying that the hunk was
599 applied, but at some <emphasis>offset</emphasis> from the
600 original line number.</para>
601
602 <para>If a context-only match fails, <command>patch</command>
603 removes the first and last lines of the context, and tries a
604 <emphasis>reduced</emphasis> context-only match. If the hunk
605 with reduced context succeeds, it prints a message saying that
606 it applied the hunk with a <emphasis>fuzz factor</emphasis>
607 (the number after the fuzz factor indicates how many lines of
608 context <command>patch</command> had to trim before the patch
609 applied).</para>
610
611 <para>When neither of these techniques works,
612 <command>patch</command> prints a message saying that the hunk
613 in question was rejected. It saves rejected hunks (also
614 simply called <quote>rejects</quote>) to a file with the same
615 name, and an added <filename role="special">.rej</filename>
616 extension. It also saves an unmodified copy of the file with
617 a <filename role="special">.orig</filename> extension; the
618 copy of the file without any extensions will contain any
619 changes made by hunks that <emphasis>did</emphasis> apply
620 cleanly. If you have a patch that modifies
621 <filename>foo</filename> with six hunks, and one of them fails
622 to apply, you will have: an unmodified
623 <filename>foo.orig</filename>, a <filename>foo.rej</filename>
624 containing one hunk, and <filename>foo</filename>, containing
625 the changes made by the five successful hunks.</para>
626
627 </sect2>
628 <sect2>
629 <title>Some quirks of patch representation</title>
630
631 <para>There are a few useful things to know about how
632 <command>patch</command> works with files.</para>
633 <itemizedlist>
634 <listitem><para>This should already be obvious, but
635 <command>patch</command> cannot handle binary
636 files.</para>
637 </listitem>
638 <listitem><para>Neither does it care about the executable bit;
639 it creates new files as readable, but not
640 executable.</para>
641 </listitem>
642 <listitem><para><command>patch</command> treats the removal of
643 a file as a diff between the file to be removed and the
644 empty file. So your idea of <quote>I deleted this
645 file</quote> looks like <quote>every line of this file
646 was deleted</quote> in a patch.</para>
647 </listitem>
648 <listitem><para>It treats the addition of a file as a diff
649 between the empty file and the file to be added. So in a
650 patch, your idea of <quote>I added this file</quote> looks
651 like <quote>every line of this file was
652 added</quote>.</para>
653 </listitem>
654 <listitem><para>It treats a renamed file as the removal of the
655 old name, and the addition of the new name. This means
656 that renamed files have a big footprint in patches. (Note
657 also that Mercurial does not currently try to infer when
658 files have been renamed or copied in a patch.)</para>
659 </listitem>
660 <listitem><para><command>patch</command> cannot represent
661 empty files, so you cannot use a patch to represent the
662 notion <quote>I added this empty file to the
663 tree</quote>.</para>
664 </listitem></itemizedlist>
665 </sect2>
666 <sect2>
667 <title>Beware the fuzz</title>
668
669 <para>While applying a hunk at an offset, or with a fuzz factor,
670 will often be completely successful, these inexact techniques
671 naturally leave open the possibility of corrupting the patched
672 file. The most common cases typically involve applying a
673 patch twice, or at an incorrect location in the file. If
674 <command>patch</command> or <command
675 role="hg-ext-mq">qpush</command> ever mentions an offset or
676 fuzz factor, you should make sure that the modified files are
677 correct afterwards.</para>
678
679 <para>It's often a good idea to refresh a patch that has applied
680 with an offset or fuzz factor; refreshing the patch generates
681 new context information that will make it apply cleanly. I
682 say <quote>often,</quote> not <quote>always,</quote> because
683 sometimes refreshing a patch will make it fail to apply
684 against a different revision of the underlying files. In some
685 cases, such as when you're maintaining a patch that must sit
686 on top of multiple versions of a source tree, it's acceptable
687 to have a patch apply with some fuzz, provided you've verified
688 the results of the patching process in such cases.</para>
689
690 </sect2>
691 <sect2>
692 <title>Handling rejection</title>
693
694 <para>If <command role="hg-ext-mq">qpush</command> fails to
695 apply a patch, it will print an error message and exit. If it
696 has left <filename role="special">.rej</filename> files
697 behind, it is usually best to fix up the rejected hunks before
698 you push more patches or do any further work.</para>
699
700 <para>If your patch <emphasis>used to</emphasis> apply cleanly,
701 and no longer does because you've changed the underlying code
702 that your patches are based on, Mercurial Queues can help; see
703 section <xref
704 linkend="sec:mq:merge"/> for details.</para>
705
706 <para>Unfortunately, there aren't any great techniques for
707 dealing with rejected hunks. Most often, you'll need to view
708 the <filename role="special">.rej</filename> file and edit the
709 target file, applying the rejected hunks by hand.</para>
710
711 <para>If you're feeling adventurous, Neil Brown, a Linux kernel
712 hacker, wrote a tool called <command>wiggle</command>
713 <citation>web:wiggle</citation>, which is more vigorous than
714 <command>patch</command> in its attempts to make a patch
715 apply.</para>
716
717 <para>Another Linux kernel hacker, Chris Mason (the author of
718 Mercurial Queues), wrote a similar tool called
719 <command>mpatch</command> <citation>web:mpatch</citation>,
720 which takes a simple approach to automating the application of
721 hunks rejected by <command>patch</command>. The
722 <command>mpatch</command> command can help with four common
723 reasons that a hunk may be rejected:</para>
724
725 <itemizedlist>
726 <listitem><para>The context in the middle of a hunk has
727 changed.</para>
728 </listitem>
729 <listitem><para>A hunk is missing some context at the
730 beginning or end.</para>
731 </listitem>
732 <listitem><para>A large hunk might apply better&emdash;either
733 entirely or in part&emdash;if it was broken up into
734 smaller hunks.</para>
735 </listitem>
736 <listitem><para>A hunk removes lines with slightly different
737 content than those currently present in the file.</para>
738 </listitem></itemizedlist>
739
740 <para>If you use <command>wiggle</command> or
741 <command>mpatch</command>, you should be doubly careful to
742 check your results when you're done. In fact,
743 <command>mpatch</command> enforces this method of
744 double-checking the tool's output, by automatically dropping
745 you into a merge program when it has done its job, so that you
746 can verify its work and finish off any remaining
747 merges.</para>
748
749 </sect2>
750 </sect1>
751 <sect1 id="sec:mq:perf">
752 <title>Getting the best performance out of MQ</title>
753
754 <para>MQ is very efficient at handling a large number of patches.
755 I ran some performance experiments in mid-2006 for a talk that I
756 gave at the 2006 EuroPython conference
757 <citation>web:europython</citation>. I used as my data set the
758 Linux 2.6.17-mm1 patch series, which consists of 1,738 patches.
759 I applied these on top of a Linux kernel repository containing
760 all 27,472 revisions between Linux 2.6.12-rc2 and Linux
761 2.6.17.</para>
762
763 <para>On my old, slow laptop, I was able to <command
764 role="hg-cmd">hg qpush <option
765 role="hg-ext-mq-cmd-qpush-opt">hg -a</option></command> all
766 1,738 patches in 3.5 minutes, and <command role="hg-cmd">hg qpop
767 <option role="hg-ext-mq-cmd-qpop-opt">hg -a</option></command>
768 them all in 30 seconds. (On a newer laptop, the time to push
769 all patches dropped to two minutes.) I could <command
770 role="hg-ext-mq">qrefresh</command> one of the biggest patches
771 (which made 22,779 lines of changes to 287 files) in 6.6
772 seconds.</para>
773
774 <para>Clearly, MQ is well suited to working in large trees, but
775 there are a few tricks you can use to get the best performance
776 of it.</para>
777
778 <para>First of all, try to <quote>batch</quote> operations
779 together. Every time you run <command
780 role="hg-ext-mq">qpush</command> or <command
781 role="hg-ext-mq">qpop</command>, these commands scan the
782 working directory once to make sure you haven't made some
783 changes and then forgotten to run <command
784 role="hg-ext-mq">qrefresh</command>. On a small tree, the
785 time that this scan takes is unnoticeable. However, on a
786 medium-sized tree (containing tens of thousands of files), it
787 can take a second or more.</para>
788
789 <para>The <command role="hg-ext-mq">qpush</command> and <command
790 role="hg-ext-mq">qpop</command> commands allow you to push and
791 pop multiple patches at a time. You can identify the
792 <quote>destination patch</quote> that you want to end up at.
793 When you <command role="hg-ext-mq">qpush</command> with a
794 destination specified, it will push patches until that patch is
795 at the top of the applied stack. When you <command
796 role="hg-ext-mq">qpop</command> to a destination, MQ will pop
797 patches until the destination patch is at the top.</para>
798
799 <para>You can identify a destination patch using either the name
800 of the patch, or by number. If you use numeric addressing,
801 patches are counted from zero; this means that the first patch
802 is zero, the second is one, and so on.</para>
803
804 </sect1>
805 <sect1 id="sec:mq:merge">
806 <title>Updating your patches when the underlying code
807 changes</title>
808
809 <para>It's common to have a stack of patches on top of an
810 underlying repository that you don't modify directly. If you're
811 working on changes to third-party code, or on a feature that is
812 taking longer to develop than the rate of change of the code
813 beneath, you will often need to sync up with the underlying
814 code, and fix up any hunks in your patches that no longer apply.
815 This is called <emphasis>rebasing</emphasis> your patch
816 series.</para>
817
818 <para>The simplest way to do this is to <command role="hg-cmd">hg
819 qpop <option role="hg-ext-mq-cmd-qpop-opt">hg
820 -a</option></command> your patches, then <command
821 role="hg-cmd">hg pull</command> changes into the underlying
822 repository, and finally <command role="hg-cmd">hg qpush <option
823 role="hg-ext-mq-cmd-qpop-opt">hg -a</option></command> your
824 patches again. MQ will stop pushing any time it runs across a
825 patch that fails to apply during conflicts, allowing you to fix
826 your conflicts, <command role="hg-ext-mq">qrefresh</command> the
827 affected patch, and continue pushing until you have fixed your
828 entire stack.</para>
829
830 <para>This approach is easy to use and works well if you don't
831 expect changes to the underlying code to affect how well your
832 patches apply. If your patch stack touches code that is modified
833 frequently or invasively in the underlying repository, however,
834 fixing up rejected hunks by hand quickly becomes
835 tiresome.</para>
836
837 <para>It's possible to partially automate the rebasing process.
838 If your patches apply cleanly against some revision of the
839 underlying repo, MQ can use this information to help you to
840 resolve conflicts between your patches and a different
841 revision.</para>
842
843 <para>The process is a little involved.</para>
844 <orderedlist>
845 <listitem><para>To begin, <command role="hg-cmd">hg qpush
846 -a</command> all of your patches on top of the revision
847 where you know that they apply cleanly.</para>
848 </listitem>
849 <listitem><para>Save a backup copy of your patch directory using
850 <command role="hg-cmd">hg qsave <option
851 role="hg-ext-mq-cmd-qsave-opt">hg -e</option> <option
852 role="hg-ext-mq-cmd-qsave-opt">hg -c</option></command>.
853 This prints the name of the directory that it has saved the
854 patches in. It will save the patches to a directory called
855 <filename role="special"
856 class="directory">.hg/patches.N</filename>, where
857 <literal>N</literal> is a small integer. It also commits a
858 <quote>save changeset</quote> on top of your applied
859 patches; this is for internal book-keeping, and records the
860 states of the <filename role="special">series</filename> and
861 <filename role="special">status</filename> files.</para>
862 </listitem>
863 <listitem><para>Use <command role="hg-cmd">hg pull</command> to
864 bring new changes into the underlying repository. (Don't
865 run <command role="hg-cmd">hg pull -u</command>; see below
866 for why.)</para>
867 </listitem>
868 <listitem><para>Update to the new tip revision, using <command
869 role="hg-cmd">hg update <option
870 role="hg-opt-update">-C</option></command> to override
871 the patches you have pushed.</para>
872 </listitem>
873 <listitem><para>Merge all patches using <command>hg qpush -m
874 -a</command>. The <option
875 role="hg-ext-mq-cmd-qpush-opt">-m</option> option to
876 <command role="hg-ext-mq">qpush</command> tells MQ to
877 perform a three-way merge if the patch fails to
878 apply.</para>
879 </listitem></orderedlist>
880
881 <para>During the <command role="hg-cmd">hg qpush <option
882 role="hg-ext-mq-cmd-qpush-opt">hg -m</option></command>,
883 each patch in the <filename role="special">series</filename>
884 file is applied normally. If a patch applies with fuzz or
885 rejects, MQ looks at the queue you <command
886 role="hg-ext-mq">qsave</command>d, and performs a three-way
887 merge with the corresponding changeset. This merge uses
888 Mercurial's normal merge machinery, so it may pop up a GUI merge
889 tool to help you to resolve problems.</para>
890
891 <para>When you finish resolving the effects of a patch, MQ
892 refreshes your patch based on the result of the merge.</para>
893
894 <para>At the end of this process, your repository will have one
895 extra head from the old patch queue, and a copy of the old patch
896 queue will be in <filename role="special"
897 class="directory">.hg/patches.N</filename>. You can remove the
898 extra head using <command role="hg-cmd">hg qpop -a -n
899 patches.N</command> or <command role="hg-cmd">hg
900 strip</command>. You can delete <filename role="special"
901 class="directory">.hg/patches.N</filename> once you are sure
902 that you no longer need it as a backup.</para>
903
904 </sect1>
905 <sect1>
906 <title>Identifying patches</title>
907
908 <para>MQ commands that work with patches let you refer to a patch
909 either by using its name or by a number. By name is obvious
910 enough; pass the name <filename>foo.patch</filename> to <command
911 role="hg-ext-mq">qpush</command>, for example, and it will
912 push patches until <filename>foo.patch</filename> is
913 applied.</para>
914
915 <para>As a shortcut, you can refer to a patch using both a name
916 and a numeric offset; <literal>foo.patch-2</literal> means
917 <quote>two patches before <literal>foo.patch</literal></quote>,
918 while <literal>bar.patch+4</literal> means <quote>four patches
919 after <literal>bar.patch</literal></quote>.</para>
920
921 <para>Referring to a patch by index isn't much different. The
922 first patch printed in the output of <command
923 role="hg-ext-mq">qseries</command> is patch zero (yes, it's
924 one of those start-at-zero counting systems); the second is
925 patch one; and so on.</para>
926
927 <para>MQ also makes it easy to work with patches when you are
928 using normal Mercurial commands. Every command that accepts a
929 changeset ID will also accept the name of an applied patch. MQ
930 augments the tags normally in the repository with an eponymous
931 one for each applied patch. In addition, the special tags
932 <literal role="tag">qbase</literal> and
933 <literal role="tag">qtip</literal> identify
934 the <quote>bottom-most</quote> and topmost applied patches,
935 respectively.</para>
936
937 <para>These additions to Mercurial's normal tagging capabilities
938 make dealing with patches even more of a breeze.</para>
939 <itemizedlist>
940 <listitem><para>Want to patchbomb a mailing list with your
941 latest series of changes?</para>
942 <programlisting>hg email qbase:qtip</programlisting>
943 <para> (Don't know what <quote>patchbombing</quote> is? See
944 section <xref linkend="sec:hgext:patchbomb"/>.)</para>
945 </listitem>
946 <listitem><para>Need to see all of the patches since
947 <literal>foo.patch</literal> that have touched files in a
948 subdirectory of your tree?</para>
949 <programlisting>hg log -r foo.patch:qtip subdir</programlisting>
950 </listitem>
951 </itemizedlist>
952
953 <para>Because MQ makes the names of patches available to the rest
954 of Mercurial through its normal internal tag machinery, you
955 don't need to type in the entire name of a patch when you want
956 to identify it by name.</para>
957
958 <para>Another nice consequence of representing patch names as tags
959 is that when you run the <command role="hg-cmd">hg log</command>
960 command, it will display a patch's name as a tag, simply as part
961 of its normal output. This makes it easy to visually
962 distinguish applied patches from underlying
963 <quote>normal</quote> revisions. The following example shows a
964 few normal Mercurial commands in use with applied
965 patches.</para>
966
967 &interaction.mq.id.output;
968
969 </sect1>
970 <sect1>
971 <title>Useful things to know about</title>
972
973 <para>There are a number of aspects of MQ usage that don't fit
974 tidily into sections of their own, but that are good to know.
975 Here they are, in one place.</para>
976
977 <itemizedlist>
978 <listitem><para>Normally, when you <command
979 role="hg-ext-mq">qpop</command> a patch and <command
980 role="hg-ext-mq">qpush</command> it again, the changeset
981 that represents the patch after the pop/push will have a
982 <emphasis>different identity</emphasis> than the changeset
983 that represented the hash beforehand. See section <xref
984 linkend="sec:mqref:cmd:qpush"/> for
985 information as to why this is.</para>
986 </listitem>
987 <listitem><para>It's not a good idea to <command
988 role="hg-cmd">hg merge</command> changes from another
989 branch with a patch changeset, at least if you want to
990 maintain the <quote>patchiness</quote> of that changeset and
991 changesets below it on the patch stack. If you try to do
992 this, it will appear to succeed, but MQ will become
993 confused.</para>
994 </listitem></itemizedlist>
995
996 </sect1>
997 <sect1 id="sec:mq:repo">
998 <title>Managing patches in a repository</title>
999
1000 <para>Because MQ's <filename role="special"
1001 class="directory">.hg/patches</filename> directory resides
1002 outside a Mercurial repository's working directory, the
1003 <quote>underlying</quote> Mercurial repository knows nothing
1004 about the management or presence of patches.</para>
1005
1006 <para>This presents the interesting possibility of managing the
1007 contents of the patch directory as a Mercurial repository in its
1008 own right. This can be a useful way to work. For example, you
1009 can work on a patch for a while, <command
1010 role="hg-ext-mq">qrefresh</command> it, then <command
1011 role="hg-cmd">hg commit</command> the current state of the
1012 patch. This lets you <quote>roll back</quote> to that version
1013 of the patch later on.</para>
1014
1015 <para>You can then share different versions of the same patch
1016 stack among multiple underlying repositories. I use this when I
1017 am developing a Linux kernel feature. I have a pristine copy of
1018 my kernel sources for each of several CPU architectures, and a
1019 cloned repository under each that contains the patches I am
1020 working on. When I want to test a change on a different
1021 architecture, I push my current patches to the patch repository
1022 associated with that kernel tree, pop and push all of my
1023 patches, and build and test that kernel.</para>
1024
1025 <para>Managing patches in a repository makes it possible for
1026 multiple developers to work on the same patch series without
1027 colliding with each other, all on top of an underlying source
1028 base that they may or may not control.</para>
1029
1030 <sect2>
1031 <title>MQ support for patch repositories</title>
1032
1033 <para>MQ helps you to work with the <filename role="special"
1034 class="directory">.hg/patches</filename> directory as a
1035 repository; when you prepare a repository for working with
1036 patches using <command role="hg-ext-mq">qinit</command>, you
1037 can pass the <option role="hg-ext-mq-cmd-qinit-opt">hg
1038 -c</option> option to create the <filename role="special"
1039 class="directory">.hg/patches</filename> directory as a
1040 Mercurial repository.</para>
1041
1042 <note>
1043 <para> If you forget to use the <option
1044 role="hg-ext-mq-cmd-qinit-opt">hg -c</option> option, you
1045 can simply go into the <filename role="special"
1046 class="directory">.hg/patches</filename> directory at any
1047 time and run <command role="hg-cmd">hg init</command>.
1048 Don't forget to add an entry for the <filename
1049 role="special">status</filename> file to the <filename
1050 role="special">.hgignore</filename> file, though</para>
1051
1052 <para> (<command role="hg-cmd">hg qinit <option
1053 role="hg-ext-mq-cmd-qinit-opt">hg -c</option></command>
1054 does this for you automatically); you
1055 <emphasis>really</emphasis> don't want to manage the
1056 <filename role="special">status</filename> file.</para>
1057 </note>
1058
1059 <para>As a convenience, if MQ notices that the <filename
1060 class="directory">.hg/patches</filename> directory is a
1061 repository, it will automatically <command role="hg-cmd">hg
1062 add</command> every patch that you create and import.</para>
1063
1064 <para>MQ provides a shortcut command, <command
1065 role="hg-ext-mq">qcommit</command>, that runs <command
1066 role="hg-cmd">hg commit</command> in the <filename
1067 role="special" class="directory">.hg/patches</filename>
1068 directory. This saves some bothersome typing.</para>
1069
1070 <para>Finally, as a convenience to manage the patch directory,
1071 you can define the alias <command>mq</command> on Unix
1072 systems. For example, on Linux systems using the
1073 <command>bash</command> shell, you can include the following
1074 snippet in your <filename
1075 role="home">~/.bashrc</filename>.</para>
1076
1077 <programlisting>alias mq=`hg -R $(hg root)/.hg/patches'</programlisting>
1078
1079 <para>You can then issue commands of the form <command>mq
1080 pull</command> from the main repository.</para>
1081
1082 </sect2>
1083 <sect2>
1084 <title>A few things to watch out for</title>
1085
1086 <para>MQ's support for working with a repository full of patches
1087 is limited in a few small respects.</para>
1088
1089 <para>MQ cannot automatically detect changes that you make to
1090 the patch directory. If you <command role="hg-cmd">hg
1091 pull</command>, manually edit, or <command role="hg-cmd">hg
1092 update</command> changes to patches or the <filename
1093 role="special">series</filename> file, you will have to
1094 <command role="hg-cmd">hg qpop <option
1095 role="hg-ext-mq-cmd-qpop-opt">hg -a</option></command> and
1096 then <command role="hg-cmd">hg qpush <option
1097 role="hg-ext-mq-cmd-qpush-opt">hg -a</option></command> in
1098 the underlying repository to see those changes show up there.
1099 If you forget to do this, you can confuse MQ's idea of which
1100 patches are applied.</para>
1101
1102 </sect2>
1103 </sect1>
1104 <sect1 id="sec:mq:tools">
1105 <title>Third party tools for working with patches</title>
1106
1107 <para>Once you've been working with patches for a while, you'll
1108 find yourself hungry for tools that will help you to understand
1109 and manipulate the patches you're dealing with.</para>
1110
1111 <para>The <command>diffstat</command> command
1112 <citation>web:diffstat</citation> generates a histogram of the
1113 modifications made to each file in a patch. It provides a good
1114 way to <quote>get a sense of</quote> a patch&emdash;which files
1115 it affects, and how much change it introduces to each file and
1116 as a whole. (I find that it's a good idea to use
1117 <command>diffstat</command>'s <option
1118 role="cmd-opt-diffstat">-p</option> option as a matter of
1119 course, as otherwise it will try to do clever things with
1120 prefixes of file names that inevitably confuse at least
1121 me.)</para>
1122
1123 &interaction.mq.tools.tools;
1124
1125 <para>The <literal role="package">patchutils</literal> package
1126 <citation>web:patchutils</citation> is invaluable. It provides a
1127 set of small utilities that follow the <quote>Unix
1128 philosophy;</quote> each does one useful thing with a patch.
1129 The <literal role="package">patchutils</literal> command I use
1130 most is <command>filterdiff</command>, which extracts subsets
1131 from a patch file. For example, given a patch that modifies
1132 hundreds of files across dozens of directories, a single
1133 invocation of <command>filterdiff</command> can generate a
1134 smaller patch that only touches files whose names match a
1135 particular glob pattern. See section <xref
1136 linkend="mq-collab:tips:interdiff"/> for another
1137 example.</para>
1138
1139 </sect1>
1140 <sect1>
1141 <title>Good ways to work with patches</title>
1142
1143 <para>Whether you are working on a patch series to submit to a
1144 free software or open source project, or a series that you
1145 intend to treat as a sequence of regular changesets when you're
1146 done, you can use some simple techniques to keep your work well
1147 organised.</para>
1148
1149 <para>Give your patches descriptive names. A good name for a
1150 patch might be <filename>rework-device-alloc.patch</filename>,
1151 because it will immediately give you a hint what the purpose of
1152 the patch is. Long names shouldn't be a problem; you won't be
1153 typing the names often, but you <emphasis>will</emphasis> be
1154 running commands like <command
1155 role="hg-ext-mq">qapplied</command> and <command
1156 role="hg-ext-mq">qtop</command> over and over. Good naming
1157 becomes especially important when you have a number of patches
1158 to work with, or if you are juggling a number of different tasks
1159 and your patches only get a fraction of your attention.</para>
1160
1161 <para>Be aware of what patch you're working on. Use the <command
1162 role="hg-ext-mq">qtop</command> command and skim over the text
1163 of your patches frequently&emdash;for example, using <command
1164 role="hg-cmd">hg tip <option
1165 role="hg-opt-tip">-p</option></command>)&emdash;to be sure
1166 of where you stand. I have several times worked on and <command
1167 role="hg-ext-mq">qrefresh</command>ed a patch other than the
1168 one I intended, and it's often tricky to migrate changes into
1169 the right patch after making them in the wrong one.</para>
1170
1171 <para>For this reason, it is very much worth investing a little
1172 time to learn how to use some of the third-party tools I
1173 described in section <xref linkend="sec:mq:tools"/>,
1174 particularly
1175 <command>diffstat</command> and <command>filterdiff</command>.
1176 The former will give you a quick idea of what changes your patch
1177 is making, while the latter makes it easy to splice hunks
1178 selectively out of one patch and into another.</para>
1179
1180 </sect1>
1181 <sect1>
1182 <title>MQ cookbook</title>
1183
1184 <sect2>
1185 <title>Manage <quote>trivial</quote> patches</title>
1186
1187 <para>Because the overhead of dropping files into a new
1188 Mercurial repository is so low, it makes a lot of sense to
1189 manage patches this way even if you simply want to make a few
1190 changes to a source tarball that you downloaded.</para>
1191
1192 <para>Begin by downloading and unpacking the source tarball, and
1193 turning it into a Mercurial repository.</para>
1194
1195 &interaction.mq.tarball.download;
1196
1197 <para>Continue by creating a patch stack and making your
1198 changes.</para>
1199
1200 &interaction.mq.tarball.qinit;
1201
1202 <para>Let's say a few weeks or months pass, and your package
1203 author releases a new version. First, bring their changes
1204 into the repository.</para>
1205
1206 &interaction.mq.tarball.newsource;
1207
1208 <para>The pipeline starting with <command role="hg-cmd">hg
1209 locate</command> above deletes all files in the working
1210 directory, so that <command role="hg-cmd">hg
1211 commit</command>'s <option
1212 role="hg-opt-commit">--addremove</option> option can
1213 actually tell which files have really been removed in the
1214 newer version of the source.</para>
1215
1216 <para>Finally, you can apply your patches on top of the new
1217 tree.</para>
1218
1219 &interaction.mq.tarball.repush;
1220
1221 </sect2>
1222 <sect2 id="sec:mq:combine">
1223 <title>Combining entire patches</title>
1224
1225 <para>MQ provides a command, <command
1226 role="hg-ext-mq">qfold</command> that lets you combine
1227 entire patches. This <quote>folds</quote> the patches you
1228 name, in the order you name them, into the topmost applied
1229 patch, and concatenates their descriptions onto the end of its
1230 description. The patches that you fold must be unapplied
1231 before you fold them.</para>
1232
1233 <para>The order in which you fold patches matters. If your
1234 topmost applied patch is <literal>foo</literal>, and you
1235 <command role="hg-ext-mq">qfold</command>
1236 <literal>bar</literal> and <literal>quux</literal> into it,
1237 you will end up with a patch that has the same effect as if
1238 you applied first <literal>foo</literal>, then
1239 <literal>bar</literal>, followed by
1240 <literal>quux</literal>.</para>
1241
1242 </sect2>
1243 <sect2>
1244 <title>Merging part of one patch into another</title>
1245
1246 <para>Merging <emphasis>part</emphasis> of one patch into
1247 another is more difficult than combining entire
1248 patches.</para>
1249
1250 <para>If you want to move changes to entire files, you can use
1251 <command>filterdiff</command>'s <option
1252 role="cmd-opt-filterdiff">-i</option> and <option
1253 role="cmd-opt-filterdiff">-x</option> options to choose the
1254 modifications to snip out of one patch, concatenating its
1255 output onto the end of the patch you want to merge into. You
1256 usually won't need to modify the patch you've merged the
1257 changes from. Instead, MQ will report some rejected hunks
1258 when you <command role="hg-ext-mq">qpush</command> it (from
1259 the hunks you moved into the other patch), and you can simply
1260 <command role="hg-ext-mq">qrefresh</command> the patch to drop
1261 the duplicate hunks.</para>
1262
1263 <para>If you have a patch that has multiple hunks modifying a
1264 file, and you only want to move a few of those hunks, the job
1265 becomes more messy, but you can still partly automate it. Use
1266 <command>lsdiff -nvv</command> to print some metadata about
1267 the patch.</para>
1268
1269 &interaction.mq.tools.lsdiff;
1270
1271 <para>This command prints three different kinds of
1272 number:</para>
1273 <itemizedlist>
1274 <listitem><para>(in the first column) a <emphasis>file
1275 number</emphasis> to identify each file modified in the
1276 patch;</para>
1277 </listitem>
1278 <listitem><para>(on the next line, indented) the line number
1279 within a modified file where a hunk starts; and</para>
1280 </listitem>
1281 <listitem><para>(on the same line) a <emphasis>hunk
1282 number</emphasis> to identify that hunk.</para>
1283 </listitem></itemizedlist>
1284
1285 <para>You'll have to use some visual inspection, and reading of
1286 the patch, to identify the file and hunk numbers you'll want,
1287 but you can then pass them to to
1288 <command>filterdiff</command>'s <option
1289 role="cmd-opt-filterdiff">--files</option> and <option
1290 role="cmd-opt-filterdiff">--hunks</option> options, to
1291 select exactly the file and hunk you want to extract.</para>
1292
1293 <para>Once you have this hunk, you can concatenate it onto the
1294 end of your destination patch and continue with the remainder
1295 of section <xref linkend="sec:mq:combine"/>.</para>
1296
1297 </sect2>
1298 </sect1>
1299 <sect1>
1300 <title>Differences between quilt and MQ</title>
1301
1302 <para>If you are already familiar with quilt, MQ provides a
1303 similar command set. There are a few differences in the way
1304 that it works.</para>
1305
1306 <para>You will already have noticed that most quilt commands have
1307 MQ counterparts that simply begin with a
1308 <quote><literal>q</literal></quote>. The exceptions are quilt's
1309 <literal>add</literal> and <literal>remove</literal> commands,
1310 the counterparts for which are the normal Mercurial <command
1311 role="hg-cmd">hg add</command> and <command role="hg-cmd">hg
1312 remove</command> commands. There is no MQ equivalent of the
1313 quilt <literal>edit</literal> command.</para>
1314
1315 </sect1>
1316 </chapter>
1317
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