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author | Bryan O'Sullivan <bos@serpentine.com> |
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date | Wed, 15 Nov 2006 13:10:23 -0800 |
parents | 1ee53cb37a99 |
children | 9094c9fda8ec |
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\chapter{Mercurial in daily use} \label{chap:daily} \section{Telling Mercurial which files to track} Mercurial does not work with files in your repository unless you tell it to manage them. The \hgcmd{status} command will tell you which files Mercurial doesn't know about; it uses a ``\texttt{?}'' to display such files. To tell Mercurial to track a file, use the \hgcmd{add} command. Once you have added a file, the entry in the output of \hgcmd{status} for that file changes from ``\texttt{?}'' to ``\texttt{A}''. \interaction{daily.files.add} After you run a \hgcmd{commit}, the files that you added before the commit will no longer be listed in the output of \hgcmd{status}. The reason for this is that \hgcmd{status} only tells you about ``interesting'' files---those that you have modified or told Mercurial to do something with---by default. If you have a repository that contains thousands of files, you will rarely want to know about files that Mercurial is tracking, but that have not changed. (You can still get this information; we'll return to this later.) Once you add a file, Mercurial doesn't do anything with it immediately. Instead, it will take a snapshot of the file's state the next time you perform a commit. It will then continue to track the changes you make to the file every time you commit, until you remove the file. \subsection{Explicit versus implicit file naming} A useful behaviour that Mercurial has is that if you pass the name of a directory to a command, every Mercurial command will treat this as ``I want to operate on every file in this directory and its subdirectories''. \interaction{daily.files.add-dir} Notice in this example that Mercurial printed the names of the files it added, whereas it didn't do so when we added the file named \filename{a} in the earlier example. What's going on is that in the former case, we explicitly named the file to add on the command line, so the assumption that Mercurial makes in such cases is that we know what you were doing, and it doesn't print any output. However, when we \emph{imply} the names of files by giving the name of a directory, Mercurial takes the extra step of printing the name of each file that it does something with. This makes it more clear what is happening, and reduces the likelihood of a silent and nasty surprise. This behaviour is common to most Mercurial commands. \subsection{Aside: Mercurial tracks files, not directories} Mercurial does not track directory information. Instead, it tracks the path to a file. Before creating a file, it first creates any missing directory components of the path. After it deletes a file, it then deletes any empty directories that were in the deleted file's path. This sounds like a trivial distinction, but it has one minor practical consequence: it is not possible to represent a completely empty directory in Mercurial. Empty directories are rarely useful, and there are unintrusive workarounds that you can use to achieve an appropriate effect. The developers of Mercurial thus felt that the complexity that would be required to manage empty directories was not worth the limited benefit this feature would bring. If you need an empty directory in your repository, there are a few ways to achieve this. One is to create a directory, then \hgcmd{add} a ``hidden'' file to that directory. On Unix-like systems, any file name that begins with a period (``\texttt{.}'') is treated as hidden by most commands and GUI tools. This approach is illustrated in figure~\ref{ex:daily:hidden}. \begin{figure}[ht] \interaction{daily.files.hidden} \caption{Simulating an empty directory using a hidden file} \label{ex:daily:hidden} \end{figure} Another way to tackle a need for an empty directory is to simply create one in your automated build scripts before they will need it. \section{How to stop tracking a file} Once you decide that a file no longer belongs in your repository, use the \hgcmd{remove} command; this deletes the file, and tells Mercurial to stop tracking it. A removed file is represented in the output of \hgcmd{status} with a ``\texttt{R}''. \interaction{daily.files.remove} After you \hgcmd{remove} a file, Mercurial will no longer track changes to that file, even if you recreate a file with the same name in your working directory. If you do recreate a file with the same name and want Mercurial to track the new file, simply \hgcmd{add} it. Mercurial will know that the newly added file is not related to the old file of the same name. \subsection{Removing a file does not affect its history} It is important to understand that removing a file has only two effects. \begin{itemize} \item It removes the current version of the file from the working directory. \item It stops Mercurial from tracking changes to the file, from the time of the next commit. \end{itemize} Removing a file \emph{does not} in any way alter the \emph{history} of the file. If you update the working directory to a changeset in which a file that you have removed was still tracked, it will reappear in the working directory, with the contents it had when you committed that changeset. If you then update the working directory to a later changeset, in which the file had been removed, Mercurial will once again remove the file from the working directory. \subsection{Missing files} Mercurial considers a file that you have deleted, but not used \hgcmd{remove} to delete, to be \emph{missing}. A missing file is represented with ``\texttt{!}'' in the output of \hgcmd{status}. Mercurial commands will not generally do anything with missing files. \interaction{daily.files.missing} If your repository contains a file that \hgcmd{status} reports as missing, and you want the file to stay gone, you can run \hgcmdargs{remove}{\hgopt{remove}{--after}} at any time later on, to tell Mercurial that you really did mean to remove the file. \interaction{daily.files.remove-after} On the other hand, if you deleted the missing file by accident, use \hgcmdargs{revert}{\emph{filename}} to recover the file. It will reappear, in unmodified form. \interaction{daily.files.recover-missing} \subsection{Aside: why tell Mercurial explicitly to remove a file?} You might wonder why Mercurial requires you to explicitly tell it that you are deleting a file. Early during the development of Mercurial, it let you delete a file however you pleased; Mercurial would notice the absence of the file automatically when you next ran a \hgcmd{commit}, and stop tracking the file. In practice, this made it too easy to accidentally remove a file without noticing. \subsection{Useful shorthand---adding and removing files in one step} Mercurial offers a combination command, \hgcmd{addremove}, that adds untracked files and marks missing files as removed. \interaction{daily.files.addremove} The \hgcmd{commit} command also provides a \hgopt{commit}{-A} option that performs this same add-and-remove, immediately followed by a commit. \interaction{daily.files.commit-addremove} \section{Copying files} Mercurial provides a \hgcmd{copy} command that lets you make a new copy of a file. When you copy a file using this command, Mercurial makes a record of the fact that the new file is a copy of the original file. It treats these copied files specially when you merge your work with someone else's. What happens during a merge is that changes ``follow'' a copy. To best illustrate what this means, let's create an example. We'll start with the usual tiny repository that contains a single file. \interaction{daily.copy.init} We need to do some work in parallel, so that we'll have something to merge. So let's clone our repository. \interaction{daily.copy.clone} Back in our initial repository, let's use the \hgcmd{copy} command to make a copy of the first file we created. \interaction{daily.copy.copy} If we look at the output of the \hgcmd{status} command afterwards, the copied file looks just like a normal added file. \interaction{daily.copy.status} But if we pass the \hgopt{status}{-C} option to \hgcmd{status}, it prints another line of output: this is the file that our newly-added file was copied \emph{from}. \interaction{daily.copy.status-copy} Now, back in the repository we cloned, let's make a change in parallel. We'll add a line of content to the original file that we created. \interaction{daily.copy.other} Now we have a modified \filename{file} in this repository. When we pull the changes from the first repository, and merge the two heads, Mercurial will propagate the changes that we made locally to \filename{file} into its copy, \filename{new-file}. \interaction{daily.copy.merge} \subsection{Why should changes follow copies?} \label{sec:daily:why-copy} This behaviour, of changes to a file propagating out to copies of the file, might seem esoteric, but in most cases it's highly desirable. First of all, remember that this propagation \emph{only} happens when you merge. So if you \hgcmd{copy} a file, and subsequently modify the original file during the normal course of your work, nothing will happen. The second thing to know is that modifications will only propagate across a copy as long as the repository that you're pulling changes from \emph{doesn't know} about the copy. The reason that Mercurial does this is as follows. Let's say I make an important bug fix in a source file, and commit my changes. Meanwhile, you've decided to \hgcmd{copy} the file in your repository, without knowing about the bug or having seen the fix, and you have started hacking on your copy of the file. If you pulled and merged my changes, and Mercurial \emph{didn't} propagate changes across copies, your source file would now contain the bug, and unless you remembered to propagate the bug fix by hand, the bug would \emph{remain} in your copy of the file. By automatically propagating the change that fixed the bug from the original file to the copy, Mercurial prevents this class of problem. To my knowledge, Mercurial is the \emph{only} revision control system that propagates changes across copies like this. Once your change history has a record that the copy and subsequent merge occurred, there's usually no further need to propagate changes from the original file to the copied file, and that's why Mercurial only propagates changes across copies until this point, and no further. \subsection{How to make changes \emph{not} follow a copy} If, for some reason, you decide that this business of automatically propagating changes across copies is not for you, simply use your system's normal file copy command (on Unix-like systems, that's \command{cp}) to make a copy of a file, then \hgcmd{add} the new copy by hand. Before you do so, though, please do reread section~\ref{sec:daily:why-copy}, and make an informed decision that this behaviour is not appropriate to your specific case. \subsection{Behaviour of the \hgcmd{copy} command} When you use the \hgcmd{copy} command, Mercurial makes a copy of each source file as it currently stands in the working directory. This means that if you make some modifications to a file, then copy it without first having committed those changes, the new copy will contain your modifications. The \hgcmd{copy} command acts similarly to the Unix \command{cp} command (you can use the \hgcmd{cp} alias if you prefer). The last argument is the \emph{destination}, and all prior arguments are \emph{sources}. If you pass it a single file as the source, and the destination does not exist, it creates a new file with that name. \interaction{daily.copy.simple} If the destination is a directory, Mercurial copies its sources into that directory. \interaction{daily.copy.dir-dest} Copying a directory is recursive, and preserves the directory structure of the source. \interaction{daily.copy.dir-src} If the source and destination are both directories, the source tree is recreated in the destination directory. \interaction{daily.copy.dir-src-dest} As with the \hgcmd{rename} command, if you copy a file manually and then want Mercurial to know that you've copied the file, simply use the \hgopt{--after} option to \hgcmd{copy}. \interaction{daily.copy.after} \section{Renaming files} It's rather more common to need to rename a file than to make a copy of it. The reason I discussed the \hgcmd{copy} command before talking about renaming files is that Mercurial treats a rename in essentially the same way as a copy. Therefore, knowing what Mercurial does when you copy a file tells you what to expect when you rename a file. When you use the \hgcmd{rename} command, Mercurial makes a copy of each source file, then deletes it and marks the file as removed. \interaction{daily.rename.rename} The \hgcmd{status} command shows the newly copied file as added, and the copied-from file as removed. \interaction{daily.rename.status} As with the results of a \hgcmd{copy}, we must use the \hgopt{status}{-C} option to \hgcmd{status} to see that the added file is really being tracked by Mercurial as a copy of the original, now removed, file. \interaction{daily.rename.status-copy} As with \hgcmd{remove} and \hgcmd{copy}, you can tell Mercurial about a rename after the fact using the \hgopt{rename}{--after} option. In most other respects, the behaviour of the \hgcmd{rename} command, and the options it accepts, are similar to the \hgcmd{copy} command. \subsection{Renaming files and merging changes} Since Mercurial's rename is implemented as copy-and-remove, the same propagation of changes happens when you merge after a rename as after a copy. If I modify a file, and you rename it to a new name, then we merge our respective changes, my modifications to the file under its original name will be propagated into the file under its new name. (This is something you might expect to ``simply work,'' but not all revision control systems actually do this.) %%% Local Variables: %%% mode: latex %%% TeX-master: "00book" %%% End: