Mercurial > evolve
view docs/evolve-good-practice.rst @ 1589:d6630a6bff86
touch: prompt the user for what to do with the revived changeset
This patch improves our interface for reviving changesets.
This patch makes touch not assume that the user wants to create divergence by
default and gives a prompt instead. The prompt is skipped for changeset that
have no living successor as no divergence would be created by reviving them
anyway.
To restore the previous behavior, one should now use the --allowdivergence flag.
The prompt looks like:
[10] <description>
reviving this changeset will create divergence unless you make a duplicate.
(a)llow divergence or (d)uplicate the changeset? a
In further patches we will want to add one more choice to that prompt, for
example having a marker between the old and revived nodes but no divergence
displayed on the UI.
author | Laurent Charignon <lcharignon@fb.com> |
---|---|
date | Sun, 17 Jan 2016 16:55:40 -0800 |
parents | 6f2c1574eda8 |
children | 016ffd74026f |
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.. Copyright 2011 Pierre-Yves David <pierre-yves.david@ens-lyon.org> .. Logilab SA <contact@logilab.fr> ----------------------------------------- Good practice for (early) users of evolve ----------------------------------------- Avoid unstability ----------------- The less unstability you have the less you need to resolve. Evolve is not yet able to detect and solve every situation. And your mind is not ready neither. Branch as much as possible -------------------------- This is not MQ; you are not constrained to linear history. Making a branch per independent branch will help you avoid unstability and conflict. Rewrite your changes only ------------------------- There is no descent conflict detection and handling right now. Rewriting other people's changesets guarantees that you will get conflicts. Communicate with your fellow developers before trying to touch other people's work (which is a good pratice in any case). Using multiple branches will help you to achieve this goal. Prefer pushing unstability to touching other people changesets -------------------------------------------------------------- If you have children changesets from other people that you don't really care about, prefer not altering them to risking a conflict by stabilizing them. Do not get too confident ------------------------ This is an experimental extension and a complex concept. This is beautiful, powerful and robust on paper, but the tool and your mind may not be prepared for all situations yet.