Mercurial > evolve
view docs/from-mq.rst @ 387:0e87a890d84b
obsolete: rely on core for rollback support
author | Pierre-Yves David <pierre-yves.david@logilab.fr> |
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date | Wed, 25 Jul 2012 19:28:46 +0200 |
parents | 1d6cc8c22cd9 |
children | 7ecd41520dae |
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------------------------------------------- From MQ To Evolve, The Refugee Book ------------------------------------------- Cheat sheet ------------- ============================== ============================================ mq command new equivalent ============================== ============================================ qseries ``log`` qnew ``commit`` qrefresh ``amend`` qpop ``update`` or ``qdown`` qpush ``update`` or ``gup`` sometimes ``stabilize`` qrm ``prune`` qfold ``amend -c`` (for now, ``collapse`` soon) qdiff ``odiff`` qfinish -- qimport -- ============================== ============================================ Replacement details --------------------- hg qseries ``````````` All your work in progress is now in real changesets all the time. You can use the standard log command to display them. You can use the phase revset to display unfinished work only, and use templates to have the same kind of compact that the output of qseries has. This will result in something like that:: [alias] wip = log -r 'not public()' --template='{rev}:{node|short} {desc|firstline}\n' hg qnew ```````` With evolve you handle standard changesets without an additional overlay. Standard changeset are created using hg commit as usual.:: $ hg commit If you want to keep the "WIP is not pushed" behavior, you want to set your changeset in the secret phase using the phase command. Note that you only need it for the first commit you want to be secret. Later commits will inherit their parents phase. If you always want your new commit to be in the secret phase, your should consider updating your configuration: [phases] new-commit=secret hg qref ```````` A new command from evolution will allow you to rewrite the changeset you are currently on. Just call: $ hg amend This command takes the same options as commit, plus the switch '-e' (--edit) to edit the commit message in an editor. The amend command also has a -c switch which allow you to make an explicit amending commit before rewriting a changeset.:: $ hg record -m 'feature A' # oups, I forget some stuff $ hg record babar.py $ hg amend -c .^ # .^ refer to "working directoy parent, here 'feature A' note: refresh is an alias for amend hg qref -X ```````````` To remove changes from you current commit use:: $ hg uncommit not-ready.txt hg qpop ````````` The following command emulate the behavior of hg qpop: $ hg gdown If you need to go back to an arbitrary commit you can use: $ hg update .. note:: gdown and update allow movement with working directory changes applied and gracefully merge them. hg qpush ```````` When you rewrite changesets, descendants of rewritten changesets are marked as "out of sync". You need to rewrite them on top of the new version of their ancestor. The evolution extension adds a command to rewrite the "out of sync" changesets::: $ hg stabilize You can also decide to do it manually using:: $ hg graft -O <old-version> or:: $ hg rebase -r <revset for old version> -d . note: using graft allows you to pick the changeset you want next as the --move option of qpush do. hg qrm ``````` evolution introduce a new command to mark a changeset as "not wanted anymore".:: $ hg prune <revset> hg qfold ````````` :: $ hg up <top changeset> $ amend --edit -c <bottom changeset> or later:: $ hg collapse # XXX not implemented $ hg rebase --collapse # XXX not tested hg qdiff ````````` ``odiff`` is an alias for `hg diff -r .^` it works as qdiff, but outside mq. hg qfinish and hg qimport ```````````````````````````` These are not necessary anymore. If you want to control exchange and mutability of changesets, see the phase feature hg qcommit ``````````````` If you really need to send patches through versioned mq patches, you should look at the qsync extension.