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author | Yoshiki Yazawa <yaz@honeyplanet.jp> |
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date | Sat, 25 Apr 2009 00:02:59 +0900 |
parents | 29f0f79cf614 |
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<!-- vim: set filetype=docbkxml shiftwidth=2 autoindent expandtab tw=77 : --> <chapter id="chap:tour-basic"> <?dbhtml filename="a-tour-of-mercurial-the-basics.html"?> <title>A tour of Mercurial: the basics</title> <sect1 id="sec:tour:install"> <title>Installing Mercurial on your system</title> <para id="x_1">Prebuilt binary packages of Mercurial are available for every popular operating system. These make it easy to start using Mercurial on your computer immediately.</para> <sect2> <title>Windows</title> <para id="x_c">The best version of Mercurial for Windows is TortoiseHg, which can be found at <ulink url="http://bitbucket.org/tortoisehg/stable/wiki/Home">http://bitbucket.org/tortoisehg/stable/wiki/Home</ulink>. This package has no external dependencies; it <quote>just works</quote>. It provides both command line and graphical user interfaces.</para> </sect2> <sect2> <title>Mac OS X</title> <para id="x_a">Lee Cantey publishes an installer of Mercurial for Mac OS X at <ulink url="http://mercurial.berkwood.com">http://mercurial.berkwood.com</ulink>.</para> </sect2> <sect2> <title>Linux</title> <para id="x_2">Because each Linux distribution has its own packaging tools, policies, and rate of development, it's difficult to give a comprehensive set of instructions on how to install Mercurial binaries. The version of Mercurial that you will end up with can vary depending on how active the person is who maintains the package for your distribution.</para> <para id="x_3">To keep things simple, I will focus on installing Mercurial from the command line under the most popular Linux distributions. Most of these distributions provide graphical package managers that will let you install Mercurial with a single click; the package name to look for is <literal>mercurial</literal>.</para> <itemizedlist> <listitem><para id="x_4">Ubuntu and Debian:</para> <programlisting>apt-get install mercurial</programlisting></listitem> <listitem><para id="x_5">Fedora and OpenSUSE:</para> <programlisting>yum install mercurial</programlisting></listitem> <listitem><para id="x_6">Gentoo:</para> <programlisting>emerge mercurial</programlisting></listitem> </itemizedlist> </sect2> <sect2> <title>Solaris</title> <para id="x_9">SunFreeWare, at <ulink url="http://www.sunfreeware.com">http://www.sunfreeware.com</ulink>, provides prebuilt packages of Mercurial.</para> </sect2> </sect1> <sect1> <title>Getting started</title> <para id="x_e">To begin, we'll use the <command role="hg-cmd">hg version</command> command to find out whether Mercurial is actually installed properly. The actual version information that it prints isn't so important; it's whether it prints anything at all that we care about.</para> &interaction.tour.version; <sect2> <title>Built-in help</title> <para id="x_f">Mercurial provides a built-in help system. This is invaluable for those times when you find yourself stuck trying to remember how to run a command. If you are completely stuck, simply run <command role="hg-cmd">hg help</command>; it will print a brief list of commands, along with a description of what each does. If you ask for help on a specific command (as below), it prints more detailed information.</para> &interaction.tour.help; <para id="x_10">For a more impressive level of detail (which you won't usually need) run <command role="hg-cmd">hg help <option role="hg-opt-global">-v</option></command>. The <option role="hg-opt-global">-v</option> option is short for <option role="hg-opt-global">--verbose</option>, and tells Mercurial to print more information than it usually would.</para> </sect2> </sect1> <sect1> <title>Working with a repository</title> <para id="x_11">In Mercurial, everything happens inside a <emphasis>repository</emphasis>. The repository for a project contains all of the files that <quote>belong to</quote> that project, along with a historical record of the project's files.</para> <para id="x_12">There's nothing particularly magical about a repository; it is simply a directory tree in your filesystem that Mercurial treats as special. You can rename or delete a repository any time you like, using either the command line or your file browser.</para> <sect2> <title>Making a local copy of a repository</title> <para id="x_13"><emphasis>Copying</emphasis> a repository is just a little bit special. While you could use a normal file copying command to make a copy of a repository, it's best to use a built-in command that Mercurial provides. This command is called <command role="hg-cmd">hg clone</command>, because it makes an identical copy of an existing repository.</para> &interaction.tour.clone; <para id="x_67c">One advantage of using <command role="hg-cmd">hg clone</command> is that, as we can see above, it lets us clone repositories over the network. Another is that it remembers where we cloned from, which we'll find useful soon when we want to fetch new changes from another repository.</para> <para id="x_14">If our clone succeeded, we should now have a local directory called <filename class="directory">hello</filename>. This directory will contain some files.</para> &interaction.tour.ls; <para id="x_15">These files have the same contents and history in our repository as they do in the repository we cloned.</para> <para id="x_16">Every Mercurial repository is complete, self-contained, and independent. It contains its own private copy of a project's files and history. As we just mentioned, a cloned repository remembers the location of the repository it was cloned from, but Mercurial will not communicate with that repository, or any other, unless you tell it to.</para> <para id="x_17">What this means for now is that we're free to experiment with our repository, safe in the knowledge that it's a private <quote>sandbox</quote> that won't affect anyone else.</para> </sect2> <sect2> <title>What's in a repository?</title> <para id="x_18">When we take a more detailed look inside a repository, we can see that it contains a directory named <filename class="directory">.hg</filename>. This is where Mercurial keeps all of its metadata for the repository.</para> &interaction.tour.ls-a; <para id="x_19">The contents of the <filename class="directory">.hg</filename> directory and its subdirectories are private to Mercurial. Every other file and directory in the repository is yours to do with as you please.</para> <para id="x_1a">To introduce a little terminology, the <filename class="directory">.hg</filename> directory is the <quote>real</quote> repository, and all of the files and directories that coexist with it are said to live in the <emphasis>working directory</emphasis>. An easy way to remember the distinction is that the <emphasis>repository</emphasis> contains the <emphasis>history</emphasis> of your project, while the <emphasis>working directory</emphasis> contains a <emphasis>snapshot</emphasis> of your project at a particular point in history.</para> </sect2> </sect1> <sect1> <title>A tour through history</title> <para id="x_1b">One of the first things we might want to do with a new, unfamiliar repository is understand its history. The <command role="hg-cmd">hg log</command> command gives us a view of the history of changes in the repository.</para> &interaction.tour.log; <para id="x_1c">By default, this command prints a brief paragraph of output for each change to the project that was recorded. In Mercurial terminology, we call each of these recorded events a <emphasis>changeset</emphasis>, because it can contain a record of changes to several files.</para> <para id="x_1d">The fields in a record of output from <command role="hg-cmd">hg log</command> are as follows.</para> <itemizedlist> <listitem><para id="x_1e"><literal>changeset</literal>: This field has the format of a number, followed by a colon, followed by a hexadecimal (or <emphasis>hex</emphasis>) string. These are <emphasis>identifiers</emphasis> for the changeset. The hex string is a unique identifier: the same hex string will always refer to the same changeset. The number is shorter and easier to type than the hex string, but it isn't unique: the same number in two different clones of a repository may identify different changesets. Why provide the number at all, then? For local convenience.</para> </listitem> <listitem><para id="x_1f"><literal>user</literal>: The identity of the person who created the changeset. This is a free-form field, but it most often contains a person's name and email address.</para></listitem> <listitem><para id="x_20"><literal>date</literal>: The date and time on which the changeset was created, and the timezone in which it was created. (The date and time are local to that timezone; they display what time and date it was for the person who created the changeset.)</para></listitem> <listitem><para id="x_21"><literal>summary</literal>: The first line of the text message that the creator of the changeset entered to describe the changeset.</para></listitem> <listitem> <para id="x_67d">Some changesets, such as the first in the list above, have a <literal>tag</literal> field. A tag is another way to identify a changeset, by giving it an easy-to-remember name. (The tag named <literal>tip</literal> is special: it always refers to the newest change in a repository.)</para> </listitem> </itemizedlist> <para id="x_22">The default output printed by <command role="hg-cmd">hg log</command> is purely a summary; it is missing a lot of detail.</para> <para id="x_23"><xref linkend="fig:tour-basic:history"/> provides a graphical representation of the history of the <filename class="directory">hello</filename> repository, to make it a little easier to see which direction history is <quote>flowing</quote> in. We'll be returning to this figure several times in this chapter and the chapter that follows.</para> <figure id="fig:tour-basic:history"> <title>Graphical history of the <filename class="directory">hello</filename> repository</title> <mediaobject> <imageobject><imagedata fileref="figs/tour-history.png"/></imageobject> <textobject><phrase>XXX add text</phrase></textobject> </mediaobject> </figure> <sect2> <title>Changesets, revisions, and talking to other people</title> <para id="x_25">As English is a notoriously sloppy language, and computer science has a hallowed history of terminological confusion (why use one term when four will do?), revision control has a variety of words and phrases that mean the same thing. If you are talking about Mercurial history with other people, you will find that the word <quote>changeset</quote> is often compressed to <quote>change</quote> or (when written) <quote>cset</quote>, and sometimes a changeset is referred to as a <quote>revision</quote> or a <quote>rev</quote>.</para> <para id="x_26">While it doesn't matter what <emphasis>word</emphasis> you use to refer to the concept of <quote>a changeset</quote>, the <emphasis>identifier</emphasis> that you use to refer to <quote>a <emphasis>specific</emphasis> changeset</quote> is of great importance. Recall that the <literal>changeset</literal> field in the output from <command role="hg-cmd">hg log</command> identifies a changeset using both a number and a hexadecimal string.</para> <itemizedlist> <listitem><para id="x_27">The revision number is a handy notation that is <emphasis>only valid in that repository</emphasis>.</para></listitem> <listitem><para id="x_28">The hexadecimal string is the <emphasis>permanent, unchanging identifier</emphasis> that will always identify that exact changeset in <emphasis>every</emphasis> copy of the repository.</para></listitem></itemizedlist> <para id="x_29">This distinction is important. If you send someone an email talking about <quote>revision 33</quote>, there's a high likelihood that their revision 33 will <emphasis>not be the same</emphasis> as yours. The reason for this is that a revision number depends on the order in which changes arrived in a repository, and there is no guarantee that the same changes will happen in the same order in different repositories. Three changes <literal>a,b,c</literal> can easily appear in one repository as <literal>0,1,2</literal>, while in another as <literal>0,2,1</literal>.</para> <para id="x_2a">Mercurial uses revision numbers purely as a convenient shorthand. If you need to discuss a changeset with someone, or make a record of a changeset for some other reason (for example, in a bug report), use the hexadecimal identifier.</para> </sect2> <sect2> <title>Viewing specific revisions</title> <para id="x_2b">To narrow the output of <command role="hg-cmd">hg log</command> down to a single revision, use the <option role="hg-opt-log">-r</option> (or <option role="hg-opt-log">--rev</option>) option. You can use either a revision number or a hexadecimal identifier, and you can provide as many revisions as you want.</para> &interaction.tour.log-r; <para id="x_2c">If you want to see the history of several revisions without having to list each one, you can use <emphasis>range notation</emphasis>; this lets you express the idea <quote>I want all revisions between <literal>abc</literal> and <literal>def</literal>, inclusive</quote>.</para> &interaction.tour.log.range; <para id="x_2d">Mercurial also honours the order in which you specify revisions, so <command role="hg-cmd">hg log -r 2:4</command> prints 2, 3, and 4. while <command role="hg-cmd">hg log -r 4:2</command> prints 4, 3, and 2.</para> </sect2> <sect2> <title>More detailed information</title> <para id="x_2e">While the summary information printed by <command role="hg-cmd">hg log</command> is useful if you already know what you're looking for, you may need to see a complete description of the change, or a list of the files changed, if you're trying to decide whether a changeset is the one you're looking for. The <command role="hg-cmd">hg log</command> command's <option role="hg-opt-global">-v</option> (or <option role="hg-opt-global">--verbose</option>) option gives you this extra detail.</para> &interaction.tour.log-v; <para id="x_2f">If you want to see both the description and content of a change, add the <option role="hg-opt-log">-p</option> (or <option role="hg-opt-log">--patch</option>) option. This displays the content of a change as a <emphasis>unified diff</emphasis> (if you've never seen a unified diff before, see <xref linkend="sec:mq:patch"/> for an overview).</para> &interaction.tour.log-vp; <para id="x_67e">The <option role="hg-opt-log">-p</option> option is tremendously useful, so it's well worth remembering.</para> </sect2> </sect1> <sect1> <title>All about command options</title> <para id="x_30">Let's take a brief break from exploring Mercurial commands to discuss a pattern in the way that they work; you may find this useful to keep in mind as we continue our tour.</para> <para id="x_31">Mercurial has a consistent and straightforward approach to dealing with the options that you can pass to commands. It follows the conventions for options that are common to modern Linux and Unix systems.</para> <itemizedlist> <listitem> <para id="x_32">Every option has a long name. For example, as we've already seen, the <command role="hg-cmd">hg log</command> command accepts a <option role="hg-opt-log">--rev</option> option.</para> </listitem> <listitem> <para id="x_33">Most options have short names, too. Instead of <option role="hg-opt-log">--rev</option>, we can use <option role="hg-opt-log">-r</option>. (The reason that some options don't have short names is that the options in question are rarely used.)</para> </listitem> <listitem> <para id="x_34">Long options start with two dashes (e.g. <option role="hg-opt-log">--rev</option>), while short options start with one (e.g. <option role="hg-opt-log">-r</option>).</para> </listitem> <listitem> <para id="x_35">Option naming and usage is consistent across commands. For example, every command that lets you specify a changeset ID or revision number accepts both <option role="hg-opt-log">-r</option> and <option role="hg-opt-log">--rev</option> arguments.</para> </listitem> <listitem> <para id="x_67f">If you are using short options, you can save typing by running them together. For example, the command <command role="hg-cmd">hg log -v -p -r 2</command> can be written as <command role="hg-cmd">hg log -vpr2</command>.</para> </listitem> </itemizedlist> <para id="x_36">In the examples throughout this book, I use short options instead of long. This just reflects my own preference, so don't read anything significant into it.</para> <para id="x_37">Most commands that print output of some kind will print more output when passed a <option role="hg-opt-global">-v</option> (or <option role="hg-opt-global">--verbose</option>) option, and less when passed <option role="hg-opt-global">-q</option> (or <option role="hg-opt-global">--quiet</option>).</para> <note> <title>Option naming consistency</title> <para id="x_680">Almost always, Mercurial commands use consistent option names to refer to the same concepts. For instance, if a command deals with changesets, you'll always identify them with <option role="hg-opt-log">--rev</option> or <option role="hg-opt-log">-r</option>. This consistent use of option names makes it easier to remember what options a particular command takes.</para> </note> </sect1> <sect1> <title>Making and reviewing changes</title> <para id="x_38">Now that we have a grasp of viewing history in Mercurial, let's take a look at making some changes and examining them.</para> <para id="x_39">The first thing we'll do is isolate our experiment in a repository of its own. We use the <command role="hg-cmd">hg clone</command> command, but we don't need to clone a copy of the remote repository. Since we already have a copy of it locally, we can just clone that instead. This is much faster than cloning over the network, and cloning a local repository uses less disk space in most cases, too<footnote> <para id="x_681">The saving of space arises when source and destination repositories are on the same filesystem, in which case Mercurial will use hardlinks to do copy-on-write sharing of its internal metadata. If that explanation meant nothing to you, don't worry: everything happens transparently and automatically, and you don't need to understand it.</para> </footnote>.</para> &interaction.tour.reclone; <para id="x_3a">As an aside, it's often good practice to keep a <quote>pristine</quote> copy of a remote repository around, which you can then make temporary clones of to create sandboxes for each task you want to work on. This lets you work on multiple tasks in parallel, each isolated from the others until it's complete and you're ready to integrate it back. Because local clones are so cheap, there's almost no overhead to cloning and destroying repositories whenever you want.</para> <para id="x_3b">In our <filename class="directory">my-hello</filename> repository, we have a file <filename>hello.c</filename> that contains the classic <quote>hello, world</quote> program.</para> &interaction.tour.cat1; <para id="x_682">Let's edit this file so that it prints a second line of output.</para> &interaction.tour.cat2; <para id="x_3c">Mercurial's <command role="hg-cmd">hg status</command> command will tell us what Mercurial knows about the files in the repository.</para> &interaction.tour.status; <para id="x_3d">The <command role="hg-cmd">hg status</command> command prints no output for some files, but a line starting with <quote><literal>M</literal></quote> for <filename>hello.c</filename>. Unless you tell it to, <command role="hg-cmd">hg status</command> will not print any output for files that have not been modified.</para> <para id="x_3e">The <quote><literal>M</literal></quote> indicates that Mercurial has noticed that we modified <filename>hello.c</filename>. We didn't need to <emphasis>inform</emphasis> Mercurial that we were going to modify the file before we started, or that we had modified the file after we were done; it was able to figure this out itself.</para> <para id="x_3f">It's somewhat helpful to know that we've modified <filename>hello.c</filename>, but we might prefer to know exactly <emphasis>what</emphasis> changes we've made to it. To do this, we use the <command role="hg-cmd">hg diff</command> command.</para> &interaction.tour.diff; <tip> <title>Understanding patches</title> <para id="x_683">Remember to take a look at <xref linkend="sec:mq:patch"/> if you don't know how to read output above.</para> </tip> </sect1> <sect1> <title>Recording changes in a new changeset</title> <para id="x_40">We can modify files, build and test our changes, and use <command role="hg-cmd">hg status</command> and <command role="hg-cmd">hg diff</command> to review our changes, until we're satisfied with what we've done and arrive at a natural stopping point where we want to record our work in a new changeset.</para> <para id="x_41">The <command role="hg-cmd">hg commit</command> command lets us create a new changeset; we'll usually refer to this as <quote>making a commit</quote> or <quote>committing</quote>.</para> <sect2> <title>Setting up a username</title> <para id="x_42">When you try to run <command role="hg-cmd">hg commit</command> for the first time, it is not guaranteed to succeed. Mercurial records your name and address with each change that you commit, so that you and others will later be able to tell who made each change. Mercurial tries to automatically figure out a sensible username to commit the change with. It will attempt each of the following methods, in order:</para> <orderedlist> <listitem><para id="x_43">If you specify a <option role="hg-opt-commit">-u</option> option to the <command role="hg-cmd">hg commit</command> command on the command line, followed by a username, this is always given the highest precedence.</para></listitem> <listitem><para id="x_44">If you have set the <envar>HGUSER</envar> environment variable, this is checked next.</para></listitem> <listitem><para id="x_45">If you create a file in your home directory called <filename role="special">.hgrc</filename>, with a <envar role="rc-item-ui">username</envar> entry, that will be used next. To see what the contents of this file should look like, refer to <xref linkend="sec:tour-basic:username"/> below.</para></listitem> <listitem><para id="x_46">If you have set the <envar>EMAIL</envar> environment variable, this will be used next.</para></listitem> <listitem><para id="x_47">Mercurial will query your system to find out your local user name and host name, and construct a username from these components. Since this often results in a username that is not very useful, it will print a warning if it has to do this.</para></listitem> </orderedlist> <para id="x_48">If all of these mechanisms fail, Mercurial will fail, printing an error message. In this case, it will not let you commit until you set up a username.</para> <para id="x_49">You should think of the <envar>HGUSER</envar> environment variable and the <option role="hg-opt-commit">-u</option> option to the <command role="hg-cmd">hg commit</command> command as ways to <emphasis>override</emphasis> Mercurial's default selection of username. For normal use, the simplest and most robust way to set a username for yourself is by creating a <filename role="special">.hgrc</filename> file; see below for details.</para> <sect3 id="sec:tour-basic:username"> <title>Creating a Mercurial configuration file</title> <para id="x_4a">To set a user name, use your favorite editor to create a file called <filename role="special">.hgrc</filename> in your home directory. Mercurial will use this file to look up your personalised configuration settings. The initial contents of your <filename role="special">.hgrc</filename> should look like this.</para> <remark>Figure out what the appropriate directory is on Windows.</remark> <programlisting># This is a Mercurial configuration file. [ui] username = Firstname Lastname <email.address@domain.net></programlisting> <para id="x_4b">The <quote><literal>[ui]</literal></quote> line begins a <emphasis>section</emphasis> of the config file, so you can read the <quote><literal>username = ...</literal></quote> line as meaning <quote>set the value of the <literal>username</literal> item in the <literal>ui</literal> section</quote>. A section continues until a new section begins, or the end of the file. Mercurial ignores empty lines and treats any text from <quote><literal>#</literal></quote> to the end of a line as a comment.</para> </sect3> <sect3> <title>Choosing a user name</title> <para id="x_4c">You can use any text you like as the value of the <literal>username</literal> config item, since this information is for reading by other people, but will not be interpreted by Mercurial. The convention that most people follow is to use their name and email address, as in the example above.</para> <note> <para id="x_4d">Mercurial's built-in web server obfuscates email addresses, to make it more difficult for the email harvesting tools that spammers use. This reduces the likelihood that you'll start receiving more junk email if you publish a Mercurial repository on the web.</para></note> </sect3> </sect2> <sect2> <title>Writing a commit message</title> <para id="x_4e">When we commit a change, Mercurial drops us into a text editor, to enter a message that will describe the modifications we've made in this changeset. This is called the <emphasis>commit message</emphasis>. It will be a record for readers of what we did and why, and it will be printed by <command role="hg-cmd">hg log</command> after we've finished committing.</para> &interaction.tour.commit; <para id="x_4f">The editor that the <command role="hg-cmd">hg commit</command> command drops us into will contain an empty line or two, followed by a number of lines starting with <quote><literal>HG:</literal></quote>.</para> <programlisting> This is where I type my commit comment. HG: Enter commit message. Lines beginning with 'HG:' are removed. HG: -- HG: user: Bryan O'Sullivan <bos@serpentine.com> HG: branch 'default' HG: changed hello.c</programlisting> <para id="x_50">Mercurial ignores the lines that start with <quote><literal>HG:</literal></quote>; it uses them only to tell us which files it's recording changes to. Modifying or deleting these lines has no effect.</para> </sect2> <sect2> <title>Writing a good commit message</title> <para id="x_51">Since <command role="hg-cmd">hg log</command> only prints the first line of a commit message by default, it's best to write a commit message whose first line stands alone. Here's a real example of a commit message that <emphasis>doesn't</emphasis> follow this guideline, and hence has a summary that is not readable.</para> <programlisting> changeset: 73:584af0e231be user: Censored Person <censored.person@example.org> date: Tue Sep 26 21:37:07 2006 -0700 summary: include buildmeister/commondefs. Add exports.</programlisting> <para id="x_52">As far as the remainder of the contents of the commit message are concerned, there are no hard-and-fast rules. Mercurial itself doesn't interpret or care about the contents of the commit message, though your project may have policies that dictate a certain kind of formatting.</para> <para id="x_53">My personal preference is for short, but informative, commit messages that tell me something that I can't figure out with a quick glance at the output of <command role="hg-cmd">hg log --patch</command>.</para> </sect2> <sect2> <title>Aborting a commit</title> <para id="x_54">If you decide that you don't want to commit while in the middle of editing a commit message, simply exit from your editor without saving the file that it's editing. This will cause nothing to happen to either the repository or the working directory.</para> <para id="x_55">If we run the <command role="hg-cmd">hg commit</command> command without any arguments, it records all of the changes we've made, as reported by <command role="hg-cmd">hg status</command> and <command role="hg-cmd">hg diff</command>.</para> </sect2> <sect2> <title>Admiring our new handiwork</title> <para id="x_56">Once we've finished the commit, we can use the <command role="hg-cmd">hg tip</command> command to display the changeset we just created. This command produces output that is identical to <command role="hg-cmd">hg log</command>, but it only displays the newest revision in the repository.</para> &interaction.tour.tip; <para id="x_57">We refer to the newest revision in the repository as the <emphasis>tip revision</emphasis>, or simply the <emphasis>tip</emphasis>.</para> <para id="x_684">By the way, the <command role="hg-cmd">hg tip</command> command accepts many of the same options as <command role="hg-cmd">hg log</command>, so <option role="hg-opt-global">-v</option> above indicates <quote>be verbose</quote>, <option role="hg-opt-tip">-p</option> specifies <quote>print a patch</quote>. The use of <option role="hg-opt-tip">-p</option> to print patches is another example of the consistent naming we mentioned earlier.</para> </sect2> </sect1> <sect1> <title>Sharing changes</title> <para id="x_58">We mentioned earlier that repositories in Mercurial are self-contained. This means that the changeset we just created exists only in our <filename class="directory">my-hello</filename> repository. Let's look at a few ways that we can propagate this change into other repositories.</para> <sect2 id="sec:tour:pull"> <title>Pulling changes from another repository</title> <para id="x_59">To get started, let's clone our original <filename class="directory">hello</filename> repository, which does not contain the change we just committed. We'll call our temporary repository <filename class="directory">hello-pull</filename>.</para> &interaction.tour.clone-pull; <para id="x_5a">We'll use the <command role="hg-cmd">hg pull</command> command to bring changes from <filename class="directory">my-hello</filename> into <filename class="directory">hello-pull</filename>. However, blindly pulling unknown changes into a repository is a somewhat scary prospect. Mercurial provides the <command role="hg-cmd">hg incoming</command> command to tell us what changes the <command role="hg-cmd">hg pull</command> command <emphasis>would</emphasis> pull into the repository, without actually pulling the changes in.</para> &interaction.tour.incoming; <para id="x_5b">Suppose you're pulling changes from a repository on the network somewhere. While you are looking at the <command role="hg-cmd">hg incoming</command> output, and before you pull those changes, someone might have committed something in the remote repository. This means that it's possible to pull more changes than you saw when using <command role="hg-cmd">hg incoming</command>.</para> <para id="x_5c">Bringing changes into a repository is a simple matter of running the <command role="hg-cmd">hg pull</command> command, and telling it which repository to pull from.</para> &interaction.tour.pull; <para id="x_5d">As you can see from the before-and-after output of <command role="hg-cmd">hg tip</command>, we have successfully pulled changes into our repository. There remains one step before we can see these changes in the working directory.</para> </sect2> <sect2> <title>Updating the working directory</title> <para id="x_5e">We have so far glossed over the relationship between a repository and its working directory. The <command role="hg-cmd">hg pull</command> command that we ran in <xref linkend="sec:tour:pull"/> brought changes into the repository, but if we check, there's no sign of those changes in the working directory. This is because <command role="hg-cmd">hg pull</command> does not (by default) touch the working directory. Instead, we use the <command role="hg-cmd">hg update</command> command to do this.</para> &interaction.tour.update; <para id="x_5f">It might seem a bit strange that <command role="hg-cmd">hg pull</command> doesn't update the working directory automatically. There's actually a good reason for this: you can use <command role="hg-cmd">hg update</command> to update the working directory to the state it was in at <emphasis>any revision</emphasis> in the history of the repository. If you had the working directory updated to an old revision&emdash;to hunt down the origin of a bug, say&emdash;and ran a <command role="hg-cmd">hg pull</command> which automatically updated the working directory to a new revision, you might not be terribly happy.</para> <para id="x_60">However, since pull-then-update is such a common thing to do, Mercurial lets you combine the two by passing the <option role="hg-opt-pull">-u</option> option to <command role="hg-cmd">hg pull</command>.</para> <para id="x_61">If you look back at the output of <command role="hg-cmd">hg pull</command> in <xref linkend="sec:tour:pull"/> when we ran it without <option role="hg-opt-pull">-u</option>, you can see that it printed a helpful reminder that we'd have to take an explicit step to update the working directory:</para> <!-- &interaction.xxx.fixme; --> <para id="x_62">To find out what revision the working directory is at, use the <command role="hg-cmd">hg parents</command> command.</para> &interaction.tour.parents; <para id="x_63">If you look back at <xref linkend="fig:tour-basic:history"/>, you'll see arrows connecting each changeset. The node that the arrow leads <emphasis>from</emphasis> in each case is a parent, and the node that the arrow leads <emphasis>to</emphasis> is its child. The working directory has a parent in just the same way; this is the changeset that the working directory currently contains.</para> <para id="x_64">To update the working directory to a particular revision, give a revision number or changeset ID to the <command role="hg-cmd">hg update</command> command.</para> &interaction.tour.older; <para id="x_65">If you omit an explicit revision, <command role="hg-cmd">hg update</command> will update to the tip revision, as shown by the second call to <command role="hg-cmd">hg update</command> in the example above.</para> </sect2> <sect2> <title>Pushing changes to another repository</title> <para id="x_66">Mercurial lets us push changes to another repository, from the repository we're currently visiting. As with the example of <command role="hg-cmd">hg pull</command> above, we'll create a temporary repository to push our changes into.</para> &interaction.tour.clone-push; <para id="x_67">The <command role="hg-cmd">hg outgoing</command> command tells us what changes would be pushed into another repository.</para> &interaction.tour.outgoing; <para id="x_68">And the <command role="hg-cmd">hg push</command> command does the actual push.</para> &interaction.tour.push; <para id="x_69">As with <command role="hg-cmd">hg pull</command>, the <command role="hg-cmd">hg push</command> command does not update the working directory in the repository that it's pushing changes into. Unlike <command role="hg-cmd">hg pull</command>, <command role="hg-cmd">hg push</command> does not provide a <literal>-u</literal> option that updates the other repository's working directory. This asymmetry is deliberate: the repository we're pushing to might be on a remote server and shared between several people. If we were to update its working directory while someone was working in it, their work would be disrupted.</para> <para id="x_6a">What happens if we try to pull or push changes and the receiving repository already has those changes? Nothing too exciting.</para> &interaction.tour.push.nothing; </sect2> <sect2> <title>Sharing changes over a network</title> <para id="x_6b">The commands we have covered in the previous few sections are not limited to working with local repositories. Each works in exactly the same fashion over a network connection; simply pass in a URL instead of a local path.</para> &interaction.tour.outgoing.net; <para id="x_6c">In this example, we can see what changes we could push to the remote repository, but the repository is understandably not set up to let anonymous users push to it.</para> &interaction.tour.push.net; </sect2> </sect1> </chapter> <!-- local variables: sgml-parent-document: ("00book.xml" "book" "chapter") end: -->