Short help:
$ hg
Mercurial Distributed SCM
basic commands:
add add the specified files on the next commit
annotate show changeset information by line for each file
clone make a copy of an existing repository
commit commit the specified files or all outstanding changes
diff diff repository (or selected files)
export dump the header and diffs for one or more changesets
forget forget the specified files on the next commit
init create a new repository in the given directory
log show revision history of entire repository or files
merge merge another revision into working directory
pull pull changes from the specified source
push push changes to the specified destination
remove remove the specified files on the next commit
serve start stand-alone webserver
status show changed files in the working directory
summary summarize working directory state
update update working directory (or switch revisions)
(use 'hg help' for the full list of commands or 'hg -v' for details)
$ hg -q
add add the specified files on the next commit
annotate show changeset information by line for each file
clone make a copy of an existing repository
commit commit the specified files or all outstanding changes
diff diff repository (or selected files)
export dump the header and diffs for one or more changesets
forget forget the specified files on the next commit
init create a new repository in the given directory
log show revision history of entire repository or files
merge merge another revision into working directory
pull pull changes from the specified source
push push changes to the specified destination
remove remove the specified files on the next commit
serve start stand-alone webserver
status show changed files in the working directory
summary summarize working directory state
update update working directory (or switch revisions)
Extra extensions will be printed in help output in a non-reliable order since
the extension is unknown.
#if no-extraextensions
$ hg help
Mercurial Distributed SCM
list of commands:
Repository creation:
clone make a copy of an existing repository
init create a new repository in the given directory
Remote repository management:
incoming show new changesets found in source
outgoing show changesets not found in the destination
paths show aliases for remote repositories
pull pull changes from the specified source
push push changes to the specified destination
serve start stand-alone webserver
Change creation:
commit commit the specified files or all outstanding changes
Change manipulation:
backout reverse effect of earlier changeset
graft copy changes from other branches onto the current branch
merge merge another revision into working directory
Change organization:
bookmarks create a new bookmark or list existing bookmarks
branch set or show the current branch name
branches list repository named branches
phase set or show the current phase name
tag add one or more tags for the current or given revision
tags list repository tags
File content management:
annotate show changeset information by line for each file
cat output the current or given revision of files
copy mark files as copied for the next commit
diff diff repository (or selected files)
grep search for a pattern in specified files
Change navigation:
bisect subdivision search of changesets
heads show branch heads
identify identify the working directory or specified revision
log show revision history of entire repository or files
Working directory management:
add add the specified files on the next commit
addremove add all new files, delete all missing files
files list tracked files
forget forget the specified files on the next commit
purge removes files not tracked by Mercurial
remove remove the specified files on the next commit
rename rename files; equivalent of copy + remove
resolve redo merges or set/view the merge status of files
revert restore files to their checkout state
root print the root (top) of the current working directory
shelve save and set aside changes from the working directory
status show changed files in the working directory
summary summarize working directory state
unshelve restore a shelved change to the working directory
update update working directory (or switch revisions)
Change import/export:
archive create an unversioned archive of a repository revision
bundle create a bundle file
export dump the header and diffs for one or more changesets
import import an ordered set of patches
unbundle apply one or more bundle files
Repository maintenance:
manifest output the current or given revision of the project manifest
recover roll back an interrupted transaction
verify verify the integrity of the repository
Help:
config show combined config settings from all hgrc files
help show help for a given topic or a help overview
version output version and copyright information
additional help topics:
Mercurial identifiers:
filesets Specifying File Sets
hgignore Syntax for Mercurial Ignore Files
patterns File Name Patterns
revisions Specifying Revisions
urls URL Paths
Mercurial output:
color Colorizing Outputs
dates Date Formats
diffs Diff Formats
templating Template Usage
Mercurial configuration:
config Configuration Files
environment Environment Variables
extensions Using Additional Features
flags Command-line flags
hgweb Configuring hgweb
merge-tools Merge Tools
pager Pager Support
rust Rust in Mercurial
Concepts:
bundlespec Bundle File Formats
evolution Safely rewriting history (EXPERIMENTAL)
glossary Glossary
phases Working with Phases
subrepos Subrepositories
Miscellaneous:
deprecated Deprecated Features
internals Technical implementation topics
scripting Using Mercurial from scripts and automation
(use 'hg help -v' to show built-in aliases and global options)
$ hg -q help
Repository creation:
clone make a copy of an existing repository
init create a new repository in the given directory
Remote repository management:
incoming show new changesets found in source
outgoing show changesets not found in the destination
paths show aliases for remote repositories
pull pull changes from the specified source
push push changes to the specified destination
serve start stand-alone webserver
Change creation:
commit commit the specified files or all outstanding changes
Change manipulation:
backout reverse effect of earlier changeset
graft copy changes from other branches onto the current branch
merge merge another revision into working directory
Change organization:
bookmarks create a new bookmark or list existing bookmarks
branch set or show the current branch name
branches list repository named branches
phase set or show the current phase name
tag add one or more tags for the current or given revision
tags list repository tags
File content management:
annotate show changeset information by line for each file
cat output the current or given revision of files
copy mark files as copied for the next commit
diff diff repository (or selected files)
grep search for a pattern in specified files
Change navigation:
bisect subdivision search of changesets
heads show branch heads
identify identify the working directory or specified revision
log show revision history of entire repository or files
Working directory management:
add add the specified files on the next commit
addremove add all new files, delete all missing files
files list tracked files
forget forget the specified files on the next commit
purge removes files not tracked by Mercurial
remove remove the specified files on the next commit
rename rename files; equivalent of copy + remove
resolve redo merges or set/view the merge status of files
revert restore files to their checkout state
root print the root (top) of the current working directory
shelve save and set aside changes from the working directory
status show changed files in the working directory
summary summarize working directory state
unshelve restore a shelved change to the working directory
update update working directory (or switch revisions)
Change import/export:
archive create an unversioned archive of a repository revision
bundle create a bundle file
export dump the header and diffs for one or more changesets
import import an ordered set of patches
unbundle apply one or more bundle files
Repository maintenance:
manifest output the current or given revision of the project manifest
recover roll back an interrupted transaction
verify verify the integrity of the repository
Help:
config show combined config settings from all hgrc files
help show help for a given topic or a help overview
version output version and copyright information
additional help topics:
Mercurial identifiers:
filesets Specifying File Sets
hgignore Syntax for Mercurial Ignore Files
patterns File Name Patterns
revisions Specifying Revisions
urls URL Paths
Mercurial output:
color Colorizing Outputs
dates Date Formats
diffs Diff Formats
templating Template Usage
Mercurial configuration:
config Configuration Files
environment Environment Variables
extensions Using Additional Features
flags Command-line flags
hgweb Configuring hgweb
merge-tools Merge Tools
pager Pager Support
rust Rust in Mercurial
Concepts:
bundlespec Bundle File Formats
evolution Safely rewriting history (EXPERIMENTAL)
glossary Glossary
phases Working with Phases
subrepos Subrepositories
Miscellaneous:
deprecated Deprecated Features
internals Technical implementation topics
scripting Using Mercurial from scripts and automation
Test extension help:
$ hg help extensions --config extensions.rebase= --config extensions.children=
Using Additional Features
"""""""""""""""""""""""""
Mercurial has the ability to add new features through the use of
extensions. Extensions may add new commands, add options to existing
commands, change the default behavior of commands, or implement hooks.
To enable the "foo" extension, either shipped with Mercurial or in the
Python search path, create an entry for it in your configuration file,
like this:
[extensions]
foo =
You may also specify the full path to an extension:
[extensions]
myfeature = ~/.hgext/myfeature.py
See 'hg help config' for more information on configuration files.
Extensions are not loaded by default for a variety of reasons: they can
increase startup overhead; they may be meant for advanced usage only; they
may provide potentially dangerous abilities (such as letting you destroy
or modify history); they might not be ready for prime time; or they may
alter some usual behaviors of stock Mercurial. It is thus up to the user
to activate extensions as needed.
To explicitly disable an extension enabled in a configuration file of
broader scope, prepend its path with !:
[extensions]
# disabling extension bar residing in /path/to/extension/bar.py
bar = !/path/to/extension/bar.py
# ditto, but no path was supplied for extension baz
baz = !
enabled extensions:
children command to display child changesets (DEPRECATED)
rebase command to move sets of revisions to a different ancestor
disabled extensions:
acl hooks for controlling repository access
blackbox log repository events to a blackbox for debugging
bugzilla hooks for integrating with the Bugzilla bug tracker
censor erase file content at a given revision
churn command to display statistics about repository history
clonebundles advertise pre-generated bundles to seed clones
closehead close arbitrary heads without checking them out first
convert import revisions from foreign VCS repositories into
Mercurial
eol automatically manage newlines in repository files
extdiff command to allow external programs to compare revisions
factotum http authentication with factotum
fastexport export repositories as git fast-import stream
githelp try mapping git commands to Mercurial commands
gpg commands to sign and verify changesets
hgk browse the repository in a graphical way
highlight syntax highlighting for hgweb (requires Pygments)
histedit interactive history editing
keyword expand keywords in tracked files
largefiles track large binary files
mq manage a stack of patches
notify hooks for sending email push notifications
patchbomb command to send changesets as (a series of) patch emails
relink recreates hardlinks between repository clones
schemes extend schemes with shortcuts to repository swarms
share share a common history between several working directories
transplant command to transplant changesets from another branch
win32mbcs allow the use of MBCS paths with problematic encodings
zeroconf discover and advertise repositories on the local network
#endif
Verify that deprecated extensions are included if --verbose:
$ hg -v help extensions | grep children
children command to display child changesets (DEPRECATED)
Verify that extension keywords appear in help templates
$ hg help --config extensions.transplant= templating|grep transplant > /dev/null
Test short command list with verbose option
$ hg -v help shortlist
Mercurial Distributed SCM
basic commands:
abort abort an unfinished operation (EXPERIMENTAL)
add add the specified files on the next commit
annotate, blame
show changeset information by line for each file
clone make a copy of an existing repository
commit, ci commit the specified files or all outstanding changes
continue resumes an interrupted operation (EXPERIMENTAL)
diff diff repository (or selected files)
export dump the header and diffs for one or more changesets
forget forget the specified files on the next commit
init create a new repository in the given directory
log, history show revision history of entire repository or files
merge merge another revision into working directory
pull pull changes from the specified source
push push changes to the specified destination
remove, rm remove the specified files on the next commit
serve start stand-alone webserver
status, st show changed files in the working directory
summary, sum summarize working directory state
update, up, checkout, co
update working directory (or switch revisions)
global options ([+] can be repeated):
-R --repository REPO repository root directory or name of overlay bundle
file
--cwd DIR change working directory
-y --noninteractive do not prompt, automatically pick the first choice for
all prompts
-q --quiet suppress output
-v --verbose enable additional output
--color TYPE when to colorize (boolean, always, auto, never, or
debug)
--config CONFIG [+] set/override config option (use 'section.name=value')
--debug enable debugging output
--debugger start debugger
--encoding ENCODE set the charset encoding (default: ascii)
--encodingmode MODE set the charset encoding mode (default: strict)
--traceback always print a traceback on exception
--time time how long the command takes
--profile print command execution profile
--version output version information and exit
-h --help display help and exit
--hidden consider hidden changesets
--pager TYPE when to paginate (boolean, always, auto, or never)
(default: auto)
(use 'hg help' for the full list of commands)
$ hg add -h
hg add [OPTION]... [FILE]...
add the specified files on the next commit
Schedule files to be version controlled and added to the repository.
The files will be added to the repository at the next commit. To undo an
add before that, see 'hg forget'.
If no names are given, add all files to the repository (except files
matching ".hgignore").
Returns 0 if all files are successfully added.
options ([+] can be repeated):
-I --include PATTERN [+] include names matching the given patterns
-X --exclude PATTERN [+] exclude names matching the given patterns
-S --subrepos recurse into subrepositories
-n --dry-run do not perform actions, just print output
(some details hidden, use --verbose to show complete help)
Verbose help for add
$ hg add -hv
hg add [OPTION]... [FILE]...
add the specified files on the next commit
Schedule files to be version controlled and added to the repository.
The files will be added to the repository at the next commit. To undo an
add before that, see 'hg forget'.
If no names are given, add all files to the repository (except files
matching ".hgignore").
Examples:
- New (unknown) files are added automatically by 'hg add':
$ ls
foo.c
$ hg status
? foo.c
$ hg add
adding foo.c
$ hg status
A foo.c
- Specific files to be added can be specified:
$ ls
bar.c foo.c
$ hg status
? bar.c
? foo.c
$ hg add bar.c
$ hg status
A bar.c
? foo.c
Returns 0 if all files are successfully added.
options ([+] can be repeated):
-I --include PATTERN [+] include names matching the given patterns
-X --exclude PATTERN [+] exclude names matching the given patterns
-S --subrepos recurse into subrepositories
-n --dry-run do not perform actions, just print output
global options ([+] can be repeated):
-R --repository REPO repository root directory or name of overlay bundle
file
--cwd DIR change working directory
-y --noninteractive do not prompt, automatically pick the first choice for
all prompts
-q --quiet suppress output
-v --verbose enable additional output
--color TYPE when to colorize (boolean, always, auto, never, or
debug)
--config CONFIG [+] set/override config option (use 'section.name=value')
--debug enable debugging output
--debugger start debugger
--encoding ENCODE set the charset encoding (default: ascii)
--encodingmode MODE set the charset encoding mode (default: strict)
--traceback always print a traceback on exception
--time time how long the command takes
--profile print command execution profile
--version output version information and exit
-h --help display help and exit
--hidden consider hidden changesets
--pager TYPE when to paginate (boolean, always, auto, or never)
(default: auto)
Test the textwidth config option
$ hg root -h --config ui.textwidth=50
hg root
print the root (top) of the current working
directory
Print the root directory of the current
repository.
Returns 0 on success.
options:
-T --template TEMPLATE display with template
(some details hidden, use --verbose to show
complete help)
Test help option with version option
$ hg add -h --version
Mercurial Distributed SCM (version *) (glob)
(see https://mercurial-scm.org for more information)
Copyright (C) 2005-* Olivia Mackall and others (glob)
This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. There is NO
warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
$ hg add --skjdfks
hg add: option --skjdfks not recognized
hg add [OPTION]... [FILE]...
add the specified files on the next commit
options ([+] can be repeated):
-I --include PATTERN [+] include names matching the given patterns
-X --exclude PATTERN [+] exclude names matching the given patterns
-S --subrepos recurse into subrepositories
-n --dry-run do not perform actions, just print output
(use 'hg add -h' to show more help)
[10]
Test ambiguous command help
$ hg help ad
list of commands:
add add the specified files on the next commit
addremove add all new files, delete all missing files
(use 'hg help -v ad' to show built-in aliases and global options)
Test command without options
$ hg help verify
hg verify
verify the integrity of the repository
Verify the integrity of the current repository.
This will perform an extensive check of the repository's integrity,
validating the hashes and checksums of each entry in the changelog,
manifest, and tracked files, as well as the integrity of their crosslinks
and indices.
Please see https://mercurial-scm.org/wiki/RepositoryCorruption for more
information about recovery from corruption of the repository.
Returns 0 on success, 1 if errors are encountered.
options:
(some details hidden, use --verbose to show complete help)
$ hg help diff
hg diff [OPTION]... ([-c REV] | [--from REV1] [--to REV2]) [FILE]...
diff repository (or selected files)
Show differences between revisions for the specified files.
Differences between files are shown using the unified diff format.
Note:
'hg diff' may generate unexpected results for merges, as it will
default to comparing against the working directory's first parent
changeset if no revisions are specified. To diff against the conflict
regions, you can use '--config diff.merge=yes'.
By default, the working directory files are compared to its first parent.
To see the differences from another revision, use --from. To see the
difference to another revision, use --to. For example, 'hg diff --from .^'
will show the differences from the working copy's grandparent to the
working copy, 'hg diff --to .' will show the diff from the working copy to
its parent (i.e. the reverse of the default), and 'hg diff --from 1.0 --to
1.2' will show the diff between those two revisions.
Alternatively you can specify -c/--change with a revision to see the
changes in that changeset relative to its first parent (i.e. 'hg diff -c
42' is equivalent to 'hg diff --from 42^ --to 42')
Without the -a/--text option, diff will avoid generating diffs of files it
detects as binary. With -a, diff will generate a diff anyway, probably
with undesirable results.
Use the -g/--git option to generate diffs in the git extended diff format.
For more information, read 'hg help diffs'.
Returns 0 on success.
options ([+] can be repeated):
--from REV1 revision to diff from
--to REV2 revision to diff to
-c --change REV change made by revision
-a --text treat all files as text
-g --git use git extended diff format
--binary generate binary diffs in git mode (default)
--nodates omit dates from diff headers
--noprefix omit a/ and b/ prefixes from filenames
-p --show-function show which function each change is in
--reverse produce a diff that undoes the changes
-w --ignore-all-space ignore white space when comparing lines
-b --ignore-space-change ignore changes in the amount of white space
-B --ignore-blank-lines ignore changes whose lines are all blank
-Z --ignore-space-at-eol ignore changes in whitespace at EOL
-U --unified NUM number of lines of context to show
--stat output diffstat-style summary of changes
--root DIR produce diffs relative to subdirectory
-I --include PATTERN [+] include names matching the given patterns
-X --exclude PATTERN [+] exclude names matching the given patterns
-S --subrepos recurse into subrepositories
(some details hidden, use --verbose to show complete help)
$ hg help status
hg status [OPTION]... [FILE]...
aliases: st
show changed files in the working directory
Show status of files in the repository. If names are given, only files
that match are shown. Files that are clean or ignored or the source of a
copy/move operation, are not listed unless -c/--clean, -i/--ignored,
-C/--copies or -A/--all are given. Unless options described with "show
only ..." are given, the options -mardu are used.
Option -q/--quiet hides untracked (unknown and ignored) files unless
explicitly requested with -u/--unknown or -i/--ignored.
Note:
'hg status' may appear to disagree with diff if permissions have
changed or a merge has occurred. The standard diff format does not
report permission changes and diff only reports changes relative to one
merge parent.
If one revision is given, it is used as the base revision. If two
revisions are given, the differences between them are shown. The --change
option can also be used as a shortcut to list the changed files of a
revision from its first parent.
The codes used to show the status of files are:
M = modified
A = added
R = removed
C = clean
! = missing (deleted by non-hg command, but still tracked)
? = not tracked
I = ignored
= origin of the previous file (with --copies)
Returns 0 on success.
options ([+] can be repeated):
-A --all show status of all files
-m --modified show only modified files
-a --added show only added files
-r --removed show only removed files
-d --deleted show only missing files
-c --clean show only files without changes
-u --unknown show only unknown (not tracked) files
-i --ignored show only ignored files
-n --no-status hide status prefix
-C --copies show source of copied files
-0 --print0 end filenames with NUL, for use with xargs
--rev REV [+] show difference from revision
--change REV list the changed files of a revision
-I --include PATTERN [+] include names matching the given patterns
-X --exclude PATTERN [+] exclude names matching the given patterns
-S --subrepos recurse into subrepositories
-T --template TEMPLATE display with template
(some details hidden, use --verbose to show complete help)
$ hg -q help status
hg status [OPTION]... [FILE]...
show changed files in the working directory
$ hg help foo
abort: no such help topic: foo
(try 'hg help --keyword foo')
[10]
$ hg skjdfks
hg: unknown command 'skjdfks'
(use 'hg help' for a list of commands)
[10]
Typoed command gives suggestion
$ hg puls
hg: unknown command 'puls'
(did you mean one of pull, push?)
[10]
Not enabled extension gets suggested
$ hg rebase
hg: unknown command 'rebase'
'rebase' is provided by the following extension:
rebase command to move sets of revisions to a different ancestor
(use 'hg help extensions' for information on enabling extensions)
[10]
Disabled extension gets suggested
$ hg --config extensions.rebase=! rebase
hg: unknown command 'rebase'
'rebase' is provided by the following extension:
rebase command to move sets of revisions to a different ancestor
(use 'hg help extensions' for information on enabling extensions)
[10]
Checking that help adapts based on the config:
$ hg help diff --config ui.tweakdefaults=true | egrep -e '^ *(-g|config)'
-g --[no-]git use git extended diff format (default: on from
config)
Make sure that we don't run afoul of the help system thinking that
this is a section and erroring out weirdly.
$ hg .log
hg: unknown command '.log'
(did you mean log?)
[10]
$ hg log.
hg: unknown command 'log.'
(did you mean log?)
[10]
$ hg pu.lh
hg: unknown command 'pu.lh'
(did you mean one of pull, push?)
[10]
$ cat > helpext.py <<EOF
> import os
> from mercurial import commands, fancyopts, registrar
>
> def func(arg):
> return '%sfoo' % arg
> class customopt(fancyopts.customopt):
> def newstate(self, oldstate, newparam, abort):
> return '%sbar' % oldstate
> cmdtable = {}
> command = registrar.command(cmdtable)
>
> @command(b'nohelp',
> [(b'', b'longdesc', 3, b'x'*67),
> (b'n', b'', None, b'normal desc'),
> (b'', b'newline', b'', b'line1\nline2'),
> (b'', b'default-off', False, b'enable X'),
> (b'', b'default-on', True, b'enable Y'),
> (b'', b'callableopt', func, b'adds foo'),
> (b'', b'customopt', customopt(''), b'adds bar'),
> (b'', b'customopt-withdefault', customopt('foo'), b'adds bar')],
> b'hg nohelp',
> norepo=True)
> @command(b'debugoptADV', [(b'', b'aopt', None, b'option is (ADVANCED)')])
> @command(b'debugoptDEP', [(b'', b'dopt', None, b'option is (DEPRECATED)')])
> @command(b'debugoptEXP', [(b'', b'eopt', None, b'option is (EXPERIMENTAL)')])
> def nohelp(ui, *args, **kwargs):
> pass
>
> @command(b'hashelp', [], b'hg hashelp', norepo=True)
> def hashelp(ui, *args, **kwargs):
> """Extension command's help"""
>
> def uisetup(ui):
> ui.setconfig(b'alias', b'shellalias', b'!echo hi', b'helpext')
> ui.setconfig(b'alias', b'hgalias', b'summary', b'helpext')
> ui.setconfig(b'alias', b'hgalias:doc', b'My doc', b'helpext')
> ui.setconfig(b'alias', b'hgalias:category', b'navigation', b'helpext')
> ui.setconfig(b'alias', b'hgaliasnodoc', b'summary', b'helpext')
>
> EOF
$ echo '[extensions]' >> $HGRCPATH
$ echo "helpext = `pwd`/helpext.py" >> $HGRCPATH
Test for aliases
$ hg help | grep hgalias
hgalias My doc
$ hg help hgalias
hg hgalias [--remote]
alias for: hg summary
My doc
defined by: helpext
options:
--remote check for push and pull
(some details hidden, use --verbose to show complete help)
$ hg help hgaliasnodoc
hg hgaliasnodoc [--remote]
alias for: hg summary
summarize working directory state
This generates a brief summary of the working directory state, including
parents, branch, commit status, phase and available updates.
With the --remote option, this will check the default paths for incoming
and outgoing changes. This can be time-consuming.
Returns 0 on success.
defined by: helpext
options:
--remote check for push and pull
(some details hidden, use --verbose to show complete help)
$ hg help shellalias
hg shellalias
shell alias for: echo hi
(no help text available)
defined by: helpext
(some details hidden, use --verbose to show complete help)
Test command with no help text
$ hg help nohelp
hg nohelp
(no help text available)
options:
--longdesc VALUE
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx (default: 3)
-n -- normal desc
--newline VALUE line1 line2
--default-off enable X
--[no-]default-on enable Y (default: on)
--callableopt VALUE adds foo
--customopt VALUE adds bar
--customopt-withdefault VALUE adds bar (default: foo)
(some details hidden, use --verbose to show complete help)
Test that default list of commands includes extension commands that have help,
but not those that don't, except in verbose mode, when a keyword is passed, or
when help about the extension is requested.
#if no-extraextensions
$ hg help | grep hashelp
hashelp Extension command's help
$ hg help | grep nohelp
[1]
$ hg help -v | grep nohelp
nohelp (no help text available)
$ hg help -k nohelp
Commands:
nohelp hg nohelp
Extension Commands:
nohelp (no help text available)
$ hg help helpext
helpext extension - no help text available
list of commands:
hashelp Extension command's help
nohelp (no help text available)
(use 'hg help -v helpext' to show built-in aliases and global options)
#endif
Test list of internal help commands
$ hg help debug
debug commands (internal and unsupported):
debug-delta-find
display the computation to get to a valid delta for storing REV
debug-repair-issue6528
find affected revisions and repair them. See issue6528 for more
details.
debug-revlog-index
dump index data for a revlog
debugancestor
find the ancestor revision of two revisions in a given index
debugantivirusrunning
attempt to trigger an antivirus scanner to see if one is active
debugapplystreamclonebundle
apply a stream clone bundle file
debugbackupbundle
lists the changesets available in backup bundles
debugbuilddag
builds a repo with a given DAG from scratch in the current
empty repo
debugbundle lists the contents of a bundle
debugcapabilities
lists the capabilities of a remote peer
debugchangedfiles
list the stored files changes for a revision
debugcheckstate
validate the correctness of the current dirstate
debugcolor show available color, effects or style
debugcommands
list all available commands and options
debugcomplete
returns the completion list associated with the given command
debugcreatestreamclonebundle
create a stream clone bundle file
debugdag format the changelog or an index DAG as a concise textual
description
debugdata dump the contents of a data file revision
debugdate parse and display a date
debugdeltachain
dump information about delta chains in a revlog
debugdirstate
show the contents of the current dirstate
debugdirstateignorepatternshash
show the hash of ignore patterns stored in dirstate if v2,
debugdiscovery
runs the changeset discovery protocol in isolation
debugdownload
download a resource using Mercurial logic and config
debugextensions
show information about active extensions
debugfileset parse and apply a fileset specification
debugformat display format information about the current repository
debugfsinfo show information detected about current filesystem
debuggetbundle
retrieves a bundle from a repo
debugignore display the combined ignore pattern and information about
ignored files
debugindexdot
dump an index DAG as a graphviz dot file
debugindexstats
show stats related to the changelog index
debuginstall test Mercurial installation
debugknown test whether node ids are known to a repo
debuglocks show or modify state of locks
debugmanifestfulltextcache
show, clear or amend the contents of the manifest fulltext
cache
debugmergestate
print merge state
debugnamecomplete
complete "names" - tags, open branch names, bookmark names
debugnodemap write and inspect on disk nodemap
debugobsolete
create arbitrary obsolete marker
debugoptADV (no help text available)
debugoptDEP (no help text available)
debugoptEXP (no help text available)
debugp1copies
dump copy information compared to p1
debugp2copies
dump copy information compared to p2
debugpathcomplete
complete part or all of a tracked path
debugpathcopies
show copies between two revisions
debugpeer establish a connection to a peer repository
debugpickmergetool
examine which merge tool is chosen for specified file
debugpushkey access the pushkey key/value protocol
debugpvec (no help text available)
debugrebuilddirstate
rebuild the dirstate as it would look like for the given
revision
debugrebuildfncache
rebuild the fncache file
debugrename dump rename information
debugrequires
print the current repo requirements
debugrevlog show data and statistics about a revlog
debugrevlogindex
dump the contents of a revlog index
debugrevspec parse and apply a revision specification
debugserve run a server with advanced settings
debugsetparents
manually set the parents of the current working directory
(DANGEROUS)
debugshell run an interactive Python interpreter
debugsidedata
dump the side data for a cl/manifest/file revision
debugssl test a secure connection to a server
debugstrip strip changesets and all their descendants from the repository
debugsub (no help text available)
debugsuccessorssets
show set of successors for revision
debugtagscache
display the contents of .hg/cache/hgtagsfnodes1
debugtemplate
parse and apply a template
debuguigetpass
show prompt to type password
debuguiprompt
show plain prompt
debugupdatecaches
warm all known caches in the repository
debugupgraderepo
upgrade a repository to use different features
debugwalk show how files match on given patterns
debugwhyunstable
explain instabilities of a changeset
debugwireargs
(no help text available)
debugwireproto
send wire protocol commands to a server
(use 'hg help -v debug' to show built-in aliases and global options)
internals topic renders index of available sub-topics
$ hg help internals
Technical implementation topics
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
To access a subtopic, use "hg help internals.{subtopic-name}"
bid-merge Bid Merge Algorithm
bundle2 Bundle2
bundles Bundles
cbor CBOR
censor Censor
changegroups Changegroups
config Config Registrar
dirstate-v2 dirstate-v2 file format
extensions Extension API
mergestate Mergestate
requirements Repository Requirements
revlogs Revision Logs
wireprotocol Wire Protocol
wireprotocolrpc
Wire Protocol RPC
wireprotocolv2
Wire Protocol Version 2
sub-topics can be accessed
$ hg help internals.changegroups
Changegroups
""""""""""""
Changegroups are representations of repository revlog data, specifically
the changelog data, root/flat manifest data, treemanifest data, and
filelogs.
There are 4 versions of changegroups: "1", "2", "3" and "4". From a high-
level, versions "1" and "2" are almost exactly the same, with the only
difference being an additional item in the *delta header*. Version "3"
adds support for storage flags in the *delta header* and optionally
exchanging treemanifests (enabled by setting an option on the
"changegroup" part in the bundle2). Version "4" adds support for
exchanging sidedata (additional revision metadata not part of the digest).
Changegroups when not exchanging treemanifests consist of 3 logical
segments:
+---------------------------------+
| | | |
| changeset | manifest | filelogs |
| | | |
| | | |
+---------------------------------+
When exchanging treemanifests, there are 4 logical segments:
+-------------------------------------------------+
| | | | |
| changeset | root | treemanifests | filelogs |
| | manifest | | |
| | | | |
+-------------------------------------------------+
The principle building block of each segment is a *chunk*. A *chunk* is a
framed piece of data:
+---------------------------------------+
| | |
| length | data |
| (4 bytes) | (<length - 4> bytes) |
| | |
+---------------------------------------+
All integers are big-endian signed integers. Each chunk starts with a
32-bit integer indicating the length of the entire chunk (including the
length field itself).
There is a special case chunk that has a value of 0 for the length
("0x00000000"). We call this an *empty chunk*.
Delta Groups
============
A *delta group* expresses the content of a revlog as a series of deltas,
or patches against previous revisions.
Delta groups consist of 0 or more *chunks* followed by the *empty chunk*
to signal the end of the delta group:
+------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| | | | | |
| chunk0 length | chunk0 data | chunk1 length | chunk1 data | 0x0 |
| (4 bytes) | (various) | (4 bytes) | (various) | (4 bytes) |
| | | | | |
+------------------------------------------------------------------------+
Each *chunk*'s data consists of the following:
+---------------------------------------+
| | |
| delta header | delta data |
| (various by version) | (various) |
| | |
+---------------------------------------+
The *delta data* is a series of *delta*s that describe a diff from an
existing entry (either that the recipient already has, or previously
specified in the bundle/changegroup).
The *delta header* is different between versions "1", "2", "3" and "4" of
the changegroup format.
Version 1 (headerlen=80):
+------------------------------------------------------+
| | | | |
| node | p1 node | p2 node | link node |
| (20 bytes) | (20 bytes) | (20 bytes) | (20 bytes) |
| | | | |
+------------------------------------------------------+
Version 2 (headerlen=100):
+------------------------------------------------------------------+
| | | | | |
| node | p1 node | p2 node | base node | link node |
| (20 bytes) | (20 bytes) | (20 bytes) | (20 bytes) | (20 bytes) |
| | | | | |
+------------------------------------------------------------------+
Version 3 (headerlen=102):
+------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| | | | | | |
| node | p1 node | p2 node | base node | link node | flags |
| (20 bytes) | (20 bytes) | (20 bytes) | (20 bytes) | (20 bytes) | (2 bytes) |
| | | | | | |
+------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
Version 4 (headerlen=103):
+------------------------------------------------------------------------------+----------+
| | | | | | | |
| node | p1 node | p2 node | base node | link node | flags | pflags |
| (20 bytes) | (20 bytes) | (20 bytes) | (20 bytes) | (20 bytes) | (2 bytes) | (1 byte) |
| | | | | | | |
+------------------------------------------------------------------------------+----------+
The *delta data* consists of "chunklen - 4 - headerlen" bytes, which
contain a series of *delta*s, densely packed (no separators). These deltas
describe a diff from an existing entry (either that the recipient already
has, or previously specified in the bundle/changegroup). The format is
described more fully in "hg help internals.bdiff", but briefly:
+---------------------------------------------------------------+
| | | | |
| start offset | end offset | new length | content |
| (4 bytes) | (4 bytes) | (4 bytes) | (<new length> bytes) |
| | | | |
+---------------------------------------------------------------+
Please note that the length field in the delta data does *not* include
itself.
In version 1, the delta is always applied against the previous node from
the changegroup or the first parent if this is the first entry in the
changegroup.
In version 2 and up, the delta base node is encoded in the entry in the
changegroup. This allows the delta to be expressed against any parent,
which can result in smaller deltas and more efficient encoding of data.
The *flags* field holds bitwise flags affecting the processing of revision
data. The following flags are defined:
32768
Censored revision. The revision's fulltext has been replaced by censor
metadata. May only occur on file revisions.
16384
Ellipsis revision. Revision hash does not match data (likely due to
rewritten parents).
8192
Externally stored. The revision fulltext contains "key:value" "\n"
delimited metadata defining an object stored elsewhere. Used by the LFS
extension.
4096
Contains copy information. This revision changes files in a way that
could affect copy tracing. This does *not* affect changegroup handling,
but is relevant for other parts of Mercurial.
For historical reasons, the integer values are identical to revlog version
1 per-revision storage flags and correspond to bits being set in this
2-byte field. Bits were allocated starting from the most-significant bit,
hence the reverse ordering and allocation of these flags.
The *pflags* (protocol flags) field holds bitwise flags affecting the
protocol itself. They are first in the header since they may affect the
handling of the rest of the fields in a future version. They are defined
as such:
1 indicates whether to read a chunk of sidedata (of variable length) right
after the revision flags.
Changeset Segment
=================
The *changeset segment* consists of a single *delta group* holding
changelog data. The *empty chunk* at the end of the *delta group* denotes
the boundary to the *manifest segment*.
Manifest Segment
================
The *manifest segment* consists of a single *delta group* holding manifest
data. If treemanifests are in use, it contains only the manifest for the
root directory of the repository. Otherwise, it contains the entire
manifest data. The *empty chunk* at the end of the *delta group* denotes
the boundary to the next segment (either the *treemanifests segment* or
the *filelogs segment*, depending on version and the request options).
Treemanifests Segment
---------------------
The *treemanifests segment* only exists in changegroup version "3" and
"4", and only if the 'treemanifest' param is part of the bundle2
changegroup part (it is not possible to use changegroup version 3 or 4
outside of bundle2). Aside from the filenames in the *treemanifests
segment* containing a trailing "/" character, it behaves identically to
the *filelogs segment* (see below). The final sub-segment is followed by
an *empty chunk* (logically, a sub-segment with filename size 0). This
denotes the boundary to the *filelogs segment*.
Filelogs Segment
================
The *filelogs segment* consists of multiple sub-segments, each
corresponding to an individual file whose data is being described:
+--------------------------------------------------+
| | | | | |
| filelog0 | filelog1 | filelog2 | ... | 0x0 |
| | | | | (4 bytes) |
| | | | | |
+--------------------------------------------------+
The final filelog sub-segment is followed by an *empty chunk* (logically,
a sub-segment with filename size 0). This denotes the end of the segment
and of the overall changegroup.
Each filelog sub-segment consists of the following:
+------------------------------------------------------+
| | | |
| filename length | filename | delta group |
| (4 bytes) | (<length - 4> bytes) | (various) |
| | | |
+------------------------------------------------------+
That is, a *chunk* consisting of the filename (not terminated or padded)
followed by N chunks constituting the *delta group* for this file. The
*empty chunk* at the end of each *delta group* denotes the boundary to the
next filelog sub-segment.
non-existent subtopics print an error
$ hg help internals.foo
abort: no such help topic: internals.foo
(try 'hg help --keyword foo')
[10]
test advanced, deprecated and experimental options are hidden in command help
$ hg help debugoptADV
hg debugoptADV
(no help text available)
options:
(some details hidden, use --verbose to show complete help)
$ hg help debugoptDEP
hg debugoptDEP
(no help text available)
options:
(some details hidden, use --verbose to show complete help)
$ hg help debugoptEXP
hg debugoptEXP
(no help text available)
options:
(some details hidden, use --verbose to show complete help)
test advanced, deprecated and experimental options are shown with -v
$ hg help -v debugoptADV | grep aopt
--aopt option is (ADVANCED)
$ hg help -v debugoptDEP | grep dopt
--dopt option is (DEPRECATED)
$ hg help -v debugoptEXP | grep eopt
--eopt option is (EXPERIMENTAL)
#if gettext
test deprecated option is hidden with translation with untranslated description
(use many globy for not failing on changed transaction)
$ LANGUAGE=sv hg help debugoptDEP
hg debugoptDEP
(*) (glob)
options:
(some details hidden, use --verbose to show complete help)
#endif
Test commands that collide with topics (issue4240)
$ hg config -hq
hg config [-u] [NAME]...
show combined config settings from all hgrc files
$ hg showconfig -hq
hg config [-u] [NAME]...
show combined config settings from all hgrc files
Test a help topic
$ hg help dates
Date Formats
""""""""""""
Some commands allow the user to specify a date, e.g.:
- backout, commit, import, tag: Specify the commit date.
- log, revert, update: Select revision(s) by date.
Many date formats are valid. Here are some examples:
- "Wed Dec 6 13:18:29 2006" (local timezone assumed)
- "Dec 6 13:18 -0600" (year assumed, time offset provided)
- "Dec 6 13:18 UTC" (UTC and GMT are aliases for +0000)
- "Dec 6" (midnight)
- "13:18" (today assumed)
- "3:39" (3:39AM assumed)
- "3:39pm" (15:39)
- "2006-12-06 13:18:29" (ISO 8601 format)
- "2006-12-6 13:18"
- "2006-12-6"
- "12-6"
- "12/6"
- "12/6/6" (Dec 6 2006)
- "today" (midnight)
- "yesterday" (midnight)
- "now" - right now
Lastly, there is Mercurial's internal format:
- "1165411109 0" (Wed Dec 6 13:18:29 2006 UTC)
This is the internal representation format for dates. The first number is
the number of seconds since the epoch (1970-01-01 00:00 UTC). The second
is the offset of the local timezone, in seconds west of UTC (negative if
the timezone is east of UTC).
The log command also accepts date ranges:
- "<DATE" - at or before a given date/time
- ">DATE" - on or after a given date/time
- "DATE to DATE" - a date range, inclusive
- "-DAYS" - within a given number of days from today
Test repeated config section name
$ hg help config.host
"http_proxy.host"
Host name and (optional) port of the proxy server, for example
"myproxy:8000".
"smtp.host"
Host name of mail server, e.g. "mail.example.com".
Test section name with dot
$ hg help config.ui.username
"ui.username"
The committer of a changeset created when running "commit". Typically
a person's name and email address, e.g. "Fred Widget
<fred@example.com>". Environment variables in the username are
expanded.
(default: "$EMAIL" or "username@hostname". If the username in hgrc is
empty, e.g. if the system admin set "username =" in the system hgrc,
it has to be specified manually or in a different hgrc file)
$ hg help config.annotate.git
abort: help section not found: config.annotate.git
[10]
$ hg help config.update.check
"commands.update.check"
Determines what level of checking 'hg update' will perform before
moving to a destination revision. Valid values are "abort", "none",
"linear", and "noconflict".
- "abort" always fails if the working directory has uncommitted
changes.
- "none" performs no checking, and may result in a merge with
uncommitted changes.
- "linear" allows any update as long as it follows a straight line in
the revision history, and may trigger a merge with uncommitted
changes.
- "noconflict" will allow any update which would not trigger a merge
with uncommitted changes, if any are present.
(default: "linear")
$ hg help config.commands.update.check
"commands.update.check"
Determines what level of checking 'hg update' will perform before
moving to a destination revision. Valid values are "abort", "none",
"linear", and "noconflict".
- "abort" always fails if the working directory has uncommitted
changes.
- "none" performs no checking, and may result in a merge with
uncommitted changes.
- "linear" allows any update as long as it follows a straight line in
the revision history, and may trigger a merge with uncommitted
changes.
- "noconflict" will allow any update which would not trigger a merge
with uncommitted changes, if any are present.
(default: "linear")
$ hg help config.ommands.update.check
abort: help section not found: config.ommands.update.check
[10]
Unrelated trailing paragraphs shouldn't be included
$ hg help config.extramsg | grep '^$'
Test capitalized section name
$ hg help scripting.HGPLAIN > /dev/null
Help subsection:
$ hg help config.charsets |grep "Email example:" > /dev/null
[1]
Show nested definitions
("profiling.type"[break]"ls"[break]"stat"[break])
$ hg help config.type | egrep '^$'|wc -l
\s*3 (re)
$ hg help config.profiling.type.ls
"profiling.type.ls"
Use Python's built-in instrumenting profiler. This profiler works on
all platforms, but each line number it reports is the first line of
a function. This restriction makes it difficult to identify the
expensive parts of a non-trivial function.
Separate sections from subsections
$ hg help config.format | egrep '^ ("|-)|^\s*$' | uniq
"format"
--------
"usegeneraldelta"
"dotencode"
"usefncache"
"use-dirstate-v2"
"use-dirstate-v2.automatic-upgrade-of-mismatching-repositories"
"use-dirstate-v2.automatic-upgrade-of-mismatching-repositories:quiet"
"use-dirstate-tracked-hint"
"use-dirstate-tracked-hint.automatic-upgrade-of-mismatching-repositories"
"use-dirstate-tracked-hint.automatic-upgrade-of-mismatching-repositories:quiet"
"use-persistent-nodemap"
"use-share-safe"
"use-share-safe.automatic-upgrade-of-mismatching-repositories"
"use-share-safe.automatic-upgrade-of-mismatching-repositories:quiet"
"usestore"
"sparse-revlog"
"revlog-compression"
"bookmarks-in-store"
"profiling"
-----------
"format"
"progress"
----------
"format"
Last item in help config.*:
$ hg help config.`hg help config|grep '^ "'| \
> tail -1|sed 's![ "]*!!g'`| \
> grep 'hg help -c config' > /dev/null
[1]
note to use help -c for general hg help config:
$ hg help config |grep 'hg help -c config' > /dev/null
Test templating help
$ hg help templating | egrep '(desc|diffstat|firstline|nonempty) '
desc String. The text of the changeset description.
diffstat String. Statistics of changes with the following format:
firstline Any text. Returns the first line of text.
nonempty Any text. Returns '(none)' if the string is empty.
Test deprecated items
$ hg help -v templating | grep currentbookmark
currentbookmark
$ hg help templating | (grep currentbookmark || true)
Test help hooks
$ cat > helphook1.py <<EOF
> from mercurial import help
>
> def rewrite(ui, topic, doc):
> return doc + b'\nhelphook1\n'
>
> def extsetup(ui):
> help.addtopichook(b'revisions', rewrite)
> EOF
$ cat > helphook2.py <<EOF
> from mercurial import help
>
> def rewrite(ui, topic, doc):
> return doc + b'\nhelphook2\n'
>
> def extsetup(ui):
> help.addtopichook(b'revisions', rewrite)
> EOF
$ echo '[extensions]' >> $HGRCPATH
$ echo "helphook1 = `pwd`/helphook1.py" >> $HGRCPATH
$ echo "helphook2 = `pwd`/helphook2.py" >> $HGRCPATH
$ hg help revsets | grep helphook
helphook1
helphook2
help -c should only show debug --debug
$ hg help -c --debug|egrep debug|wc -l|egrep '^\s*0\s*$'
[1]
help -c should only show deprecated for -v
$ hg help -c -v|egrep DEPRECATED|wc -l|egrep '^\s*0\s*$'
[1]
Test -s / --system
$ hg help config.files -s windows |grep 'etc/mercurial' | \
> wc -l | sed -e 's/ //g'
0
$ hg help config.files --system unix | grep 'USER' | \
> wc -l | sed -e 's/ //g'
0
Test -e / -c / -k combinations
$ hg help -c|egrep '^[A-Z].*:|^ debug'
Commands:
$ hg help -e|egrep '^[A-Z].*:|^ debug'
Extensions:
$ hg help -k|egrep '^[A-Z].*:|^ debug'
Topics:
Commands:
Extensions:
Extension Commands:
$ hg help -c schemes
abort: no such help topic: schemes
(try 'hg help --keyword schemes')
[10]
$ hg help -e schemes |head -1
schemes extension - extend schemes with shortcuts to repository swarms
$ hg help -c -k dates |egrep '^(Topics|Extensions|Commands):'
Commands:
$ hg help -e -k a |egrep '^(Topics|Extensions|Commands):'
Extensions:
$ hg help -e -c -k date |egrep '^(Topics|Extensions|Commands):'
Extensions:
Commands:
$ hg help -c commit > /dev/null
$ hg help -e -c commit > /dev/null
$ hg help -e commit
abort: no such help topic: commit
(try 'hg help --keyword commit')
[10]
Test keyword search help
$ cat > prefixedname.py <<EOF
> '''matched against word "clone"
> '''
> EOF
$ echo '[extensions]' >> $HGRCPATH
$ echo "dot.dot.prefixedname = `pwd`/prefixedname.py" >> $HGRCPATH
$ hg help -k clone
Topics:
config Configuration Files
extensions Using Additional Features
glossary Glossary
phases Working with Phases
subrepos Subrepositories
urls URL Paths
Commands:
bookmarks create a new bookmark or list existing bookmarks
clone make a copy of an existing repository
paths show aliases for remote repositories
pull pull changes from the specified source
update update working directory (or switch revisions)
Extensions:
clonebundles advertise pre-generated bundles to seed clones
narrow create clones which fetch history data for subset of files
(EXPERIMENTAL)
prefixedname matched against word "clone"
relink recreates hardlinks between repository clones
Extension Commands:
qclone clone main and patch repository at same time
Test unfound topic
$ hg help nonexistingtopicthatwillneverexisteverever
abort: no such help topic: nonexistingtopicthatwillneverexisteverever
(try 'hg help --keyword nonexistingtopicthatwillneverexisteverever')
[10]
Test unfound keyword
$ hg help --keyword nonexistingwordthatwillneverexisteverever
abort: no matches
(try 'hg help' for a list of topics)
[10]
Test omit indicating for help
$ cat > addverboseitems.py <<EOF
> r'''extension to test omit indicating.
>
> This paragraph is never omitted (for extension)
>
> .. container:: verbose
>
> This paragraph is omitted,
> if :hg:\`help\` is invoked without \`\`-v\`\` (for extension)
>
> This paragraph is never omitted, too (for extension)
> '''
> from mercurial import commands, help
> testtopic = br"""This paragraph is never omitted (for topic).
>
> .. container:: verbose
>
> This paragraph is omitted,
> if :hg:\`help\` is invoked without \`\`-v\`\` (for topic)
>
> This paragraph is never omitted, too (for topic)
> """
> def extsetup(ui):
> help.helptable.append(([b"topic-containing-verbose"],
> b"This is the topic to test omit indicating.",
> lambda ui: testtopic))
> EOF
$ echo '[extensions]' >> $HGRCPATH
$ echo "addverboseitems = `pwd`/addverboseitems.py" >> $HGRCPATH
$ hg help addverboseitems
addverboseitems extension - extension to test omit indicating.
This paragraph is never omitted (for extension)
This paragraph is never omitted, too (for extension)
(some details hidden, use --verbose to show complete help)
no commands defined
$ hg help -v addverboseitems
addverboseitems extension - extension to test omit indicating.
This paragraph is never omitted (for extension)
This paragraph is omitted, if 'hg help' is invoked without "-v" (for
extension)
This paragraph is never omitted, too (for extension)
no commands defined
$ hg help topic-containing-verbose
This is the topic to test omit indicating.
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
This paragraph is never omitted (for topic).
This paragraph is never omitted, too (for topic)
(some details hidden, use --verbose to show complete help)
$ hg help -v topic-containing-verbose
This is the topic to test omit indicating.
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
This paragraph is never omitted (for topic).
This paragraph is omitted, if 'hg help' is invoked without "-v" (for
topic)
This paragraph is never omitted, too (for topic)
Test section lookup
$ hg help revset.merge
"merge()"
Changeset is a merge changeset.
$ hg help glossary.dag
DAG
The repository of changesets of a distributed version control system
(DVCS) can be described as a directed acyclic graph (DAG), consisting
of nodes and edges, where nodes correspond to changesets and edges
imply a parent -> child relation. This graph can be visualized by
graphical tools such as 'hg log --graph'. In Mercurial, the DAG is
limited by the requirement for children to have at most two parents.
$ hg help hgrc.paths
"paths"
-------
Assigns symbolic names and behavior to repositories.
Options are symbolic names defining the URL or directory that is the
location of the repository. Example:
[paths]
my_server = https://example.com/my_repo
local_path = /home/me/repo
These symbolic names can be used from the command line. To pull from
"my_server": 'hg pull my_server'. To push to "local_path": 'hg push
local_path'. You can check 'hg help urls' for details about valid URLs.
Options containing colons (":") denote sub-options that can influence
behavior for that specific path. Example:
[paths]
my_server = https://example.com/my_path
my_server:pushurl = ssh://example.com/my_path
Paths using the 'path://otherpath' scheme will inherit the sub-options
value from the path they point to.
The following sub-options can be defined:
"multi-urls"
A boolean option. When enabled the value of the '[paths]' entry will be
parsed as a list and the alias will resolve to multiple destination. If
some of the list entry use the 'path://' syntax, the suboption will be
inherited individually.
"pushurl"
The URL to use for push operations. If not defined, the location
defined by the path's main entry is used.
"pushrev"
A revset defining which revisions to push by default.
When 'hg push' is executed without a "-r" argument, the revset defined
by this sub-option is evaluated to determine what to push.
For example, a value of "." will push the working directory's revision
by default.
Revsets specifying bookmarks will not result in the bookmark being
pushed.
"bookmarks.mode"
How bookmark will be dealt during the exchange. It support the following
value
- "default": the default behavior, local and remote bookmarks are
"merged" on push/pull.
- "mirror": when pulling, replace local bookmarks by remote bookmarks.
This is useful to replicate a repository, or as an optimization.
- "ignore": ignore bookmarks during exchange. (This currently only
affect pulling)
The following special named paths exist:
"default"
The URL or directory to use when no source or remote is specified.
'hg clone' will automatically define this path to the location the
repository was cloned from.
"default-push"
(deprecated) The URL or directory for the default 'hg push' location.
"default:pushurl" should be used instead.
$ hg help glossary.mcguffin
abort: help section not found: glossary.mcguffin
[10]
$ hg help glossary.mc.guffin
abort: help section not found: glossary.mc.guffin
[10]
$ hg help template.files
files List of strings. All files modified, added, or removed by
this changeset.
files(pattern)
All files of the current changeset matching the pattern. See
'hg help patterns'.
Test section lookup by translated message
str.lower() instead of encoding.lower(str) on translated message might
make message meaningless, because some encoding uses 0x41(A) - 0x5a(Z)
as the second or later byte of multi-byte character.
For example, "\x8bL\x98^" (translation of "record" in ja_JP.cp932)
contains 0x4c (L). str.lower() replaces 0x4c(L) by 0x6c(l) and this
replacement makes message meaningless.
This tests that section lookup by translated string isn't broken by
such str.lower().
$ "$PYTHON" <<EOF
> def escape(s):
> return b''.join(b'\\u%x' % ord(uc) for uc in s.decode('cp932'))
> # translation of "record" in ja_JP.cp932
> upper = b"\x8bL\x98^"
> # str.lower()-ed section name should be treated as different one
> lower = b"\x8bl\x98^"
> with open('ambiguous.py', 'wb') as fp:
> fp.write(b"""# ambiguous section names in ja_JP.cp932
> u'''summary of extension
>
> %s
> ----
>
> Upper name should show only this message
>
> %s
> ----
>
> Lower name should show only this message
>
> subsequent section
> ------------------
>
> This should be hidden at 'hg help ambiguous' with section name.
> '''
> """ % (escape(upper), escape(lower)))
> EOF
$ cat >> $HGRCPATH <<EOF
> [extensions]
> ambiguous = ./ambiguous.py
> EOF
$ "$PYTHON" <<EOF | sh
> from mercurial.utils import procutil
> upper = b"\x8bL\x98^"
> procutil.stdout.write(b"hg --encoding cp932 help -e ambiguous.%s\n" % upper)
> EOF
\x8bL\x98^ (esc)
----
Upper name should show only this message
$ "$PYTHON" <<EOF | sh
> from mercurial.utils import procutil
> lower = b"\x8bl\x98^"
> procutil.stdout.write(b"hg --encoding cp932 help -e ambiguous.%s\n" % lower)
> EOF
\x8bl\x98^ (esc)
----
Lower name should show only this message
$ cat >> $HGRCPATH <<EOF
> [extensions]
> ambiguous = !
> EOF
Show help content of disabled extensions
$ cat >> $HGRCPATH <<EOF
> [extensions]
> ambiguous = !./ambiguous.py
> EOF
$ hg help -e ambiguous
ambiguous extension - (no help text available)
(use 'hg help extensions' for information on enabling extensions)
Test dynamic list of merge tools only shows up once
$ hg help merge-tools
Merge Tools
"""""""""""
To merge files Mercurial uses merge tools.
A merge tool combines two different versions of a file into a merged file.
Merge tools are given the two files and the greatest common ancestor of
the two file versions, so they can determine the changes made on both
branches.
Merge tools are used both for 'hg resolve', 'hg merge', 'hg update', 'hg
backout' and in several extensions.
Usually, the merge tool tries to automatically reconcile the files by
combining all non-overlapping changes that occurred separately in the two
different evolutions of the same initial base file. Furthermore, some
interactive merge programs make it easier to manually resolve conflicting
merges, either in a graphical way, or by inserting some conflict markers.
Mercurial does not include any interactive merge programs but relies on
external tools for that.
Available merge tools
=====================
External merge tools and their properties are configured in the merge-
tools configuration section - see hgrc(5) - but they can often just be
named by their executable.
A merge tool is generally usable if its executable can be found on the
system and if it can handle the merge. The executable is found if it is an
absolute or relative executable path or the name of an application in the
executable search path. The tool is assumed to be able to handle the merge
if it can handle symlinks if the file is a symlink, if it can handle
binary files if the file is binary, and if a GUI is available if the tool
requires a GUI.
There are some internal merge tools which can be used. The internal merge
tools are:
":dump"
Creates three versions of the files to merge, containing the contents of
local, other and base. These files can then be used to perform a merge
manually. If the file to be merged is named "a.txt", these files will
accordingly be named "a.txt.local", "a.txt.other" and "a.txt.base" and
they will be placed in the same directory as "a.txt".
This implies premerge. Therefore, files aren't dumped, if premerge runs
successfully. Use :forcedump to forcibly write files out.
(actual capabilities: binary, symlink)
":fail"
Rather than attempting to merge files that were modified on both
branches, it marks them as unresolved. The resolve command must be used
to resolve these conflicts.
(actual capabilities: binary, symlink)
":forcedump"
Creates three versions of the files as same as :dump, but omits
premerge.
(actual capabilities: binary, symlink)
":local"
Uses the local 'p1()' version of files as the merged version.
(actual capabilities: binary, symlink)
":merge"
Uses the internal non-interactive simple merge algorithm for merging
files. It will fail if there are any conflicts and leave markers in the
partially merged file. Markers will have two sections, one for each side
of merge.
":merge-local"
Like :merge, but resolve all conflicts non-interactively in favor of the
local 'p1()' changes.
":merge-other"
Like :merge, but resolve all conflicts non-interactively in favor of the
other 'p2()' changes.
":merge3"
Uses the internal non-interactive simple merge algorithm for merging
files. It will fail if there are any conflicts and leave markers in the
partially merged file. Marker will have three sections, one from each
side of the merge and one for the base content.
":mergediff"
Uses the internal non-interactive simple merge algorithm for merging
files. It will fail if there are any conflicts and leave markers in the
partially merged file. The marker will have two sections, one with the
content from one side of the merge, and one with a diff from the base
content to the content on the other side. (experimental)
":other"
Uses the other 'p2()' version of files as the merged version.
(actual capabilities: binary, symlink)
":prompt"
Asks the user which of the local 'p1()' or the other 'p2()' version to
keep as the merged version.
(actual capabilities: binary, symlink)
":tagmerge"
Uses the internal tag merge algorithm (experimental).
":union"
Uses the internal non-interactive simple merge algorithm for merging
files. It will use both left and right sides for conflict regions. No
markers are inserted.
Internal tools are always available and do not require a GUI but will by
default not handle symlinks or binary files. See next section for detail
about "actual capabilities" described above.
Choosing a merge tool
=====================
Mercurial uses these rules when deciding which merge tool to use:
1. If a tool has been specified with the --tool option to merge or
resolve, it is used. If it is the name of a tool in the merge-tools
configuration, its configuration is used. Otherwise the specified tool
must be executable by the shell.
2. If the "HGMERGE" environment variable is present, its value is used and
must be executable by the shell.
3. If the filename of the file to be merged matches any of the patterns in
the merge-patterns configuration section, the first usable merge tool
corresponding to a matching pattern is used.
4. If ui.merge is set it will be considered next. If the value is not the
name of a configured tool, the specified value is used and must be
executable by the shell. Otherwise the named tool is used if it is
usable.
5. If any usable merge tools are present in the merge-tools configuration
section, the one with the highest priority is used.
6. If a program named "hgmerge" can be found on the system, it is used -
but it will by default not be used for symlinks and binary files.
7. If the file to be merged is not binary and is not a symlink, then
internal ":merge" is used.
8. Otherwise, ":prompt" is used.
For historical reason, Mercurial treats merge tools as below while
examining rules above.
step specified via binary symlink
----------------------------------
1. --tool o/o o/o
2. HGMERGE o/o o/o
3. merge-patterns o/o(*) x/?(*)
4. ui.merge x/?(*) x/?(*)
Each capability column indicates Mercurial behavior for internal/external
merge tools at examining each rule.
- "o": "assume that a tool has capability"
- "x": "assume that a tool does not have capability"
- "?": "check actual capability of a tool"
If "merge.strict-capability-check" configuration is true, Mercurial checks
capabilities of merge tools strictly in (*) cases above (= each capability
column becomes "?/?"). It is false by default for backward compatibility.
Note:
After selecting a merge program, Mercurial will by default attempt to
merge the files using a simple merge algorithm first. Only if it
doesn't succeed because of conflicting changes will Mercurial actually
execute the merge program. Whether to use the simple merge algorithm
first can be controlled by the premerge setting of the merge tool.
Premerge is enabled by default unless the file is binary or a symlink.
See the merge-tools and ui sections of hgrc(5) for details on the
configuration of merge tools.
Compression engines listed in `hg help bundlespec`
$ hg help bundlespec | grep gzip
"v1" bundles can only use the "gzip", "bzip2", and "none" compression
An algorithm that produces smaller bundles than "gzip".
This engine will likely produce smaller bundles than "gzip" but will be
"gzip"
better compression than "gzip". It also frequently yields better (?)
Test usage of section marks in help documents
$ cd "$TESTDIR"/../doc
$ "$PYTHON" check-seclevel.py
$ cd $TESTTMP
#if serve
Test the help pages in hgweb.
Dish up an empty repo; serve it cold.
$ hg init "$TESTTMP/test"
$ hg serve -R "$TESTTMP/test" -n test -p $HGPORT -d --pid-file=hg.pid
$ cat hg.pid >> $DAEMON_PIDS
$ get-with-headers.py $LOCALIP:$HGPORT "help"
200 Script output follows
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.1//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml11/DTD/xhtml11.dtd">
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en-US">
<head>
<link rel="icon" href="/static/hgicon.png" type="image/png" />
<meta name="robots" content="index, nofollow" />
<link rel="stylesheet" href="/static/style-paper.css" type="text/css" />
<script type="text/javascript" src="/static/mercurial.js"></script>
<title>Help: Index</title>
</head>
<body>
<div class="container">
<div class="menu">
<div class="logo">
<a href="https://mercurial-scm.org/">
<img src="/static/hglogo.png" alt="mercurial" /></a>
</div>
<ul>
<li><a href="/shortlog">log</a></li>
<li><a href="/graph">graph</a></li>
<li><a href="/tags">tags</a></li>
<li><a href="/bookmarks">bookmarks</a></li>
<li><a href="/branches">branches</a></li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li class="active">help</li>
</ul>
</div>
<div class="main">
<h2 class="breadcrumb"><a href="/">Mercurial</a> </h2>
<form class="search" action="/log">
<p><input name="rev" id="search1" type="text" size="30" value="" /></p>
<div id="hint">Find changesets by keywords (author, files, the commit message), revision
number or hash, or <a href="/help/revsets">revset expression</a>.</div>
</form>
<table class="bigtable">
<tr><td colspan="2"><h2><a name="topics" href="#topics">Topics</a></h2></td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/bundlespec">
bundlespec
</a>
</td><td>
Bundle File Formats
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/color">
color
</a>
</td><td>
Colorizing Outputs
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/config">
config
</a>
</td><td>
Configuration Files
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/dates">
dates
</a>
</td><td>
Date Formats
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/deprecated">
deprecated
</a>
</td><td>
Deprecated Features
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/diffs">
diffs
</a>
</td><td>
Diff Formats
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/environment">
environment
</a>
</td><td>
Environment Variables
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/evolution">
evolution
</a>
</td><td>
Safely rewriting history (EXPERIMENTAL)
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/extensions">
extensions
</a>
</td><td>
Using Additional Features
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/filesets">
filesets
</a>
</td><td>
Specifying File Sets
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/flags">
flags
</a>
</td><td>
Command-line flags
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/glossary">
glossary
</a>
</td><td>
Glossary
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/hgignore">
hgignore
</a>
</td><td>
Syntax for Mercurial Ignore Files
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/hgweb">
hgweb
</a>
</td><td>
Configuring hgweb
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/internals">
internals
</a>
</td><td>
Technical implementation topics
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/merge-tools">
merge-tools
</a>
</td><td>
Merge Tools
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/pager">
pager
</a>
</td><td>
Pager Support
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/patterns">
patterns
</a>
</td><td>
File Name Patterns
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/phases">
phases
</a>
</td><td>
Working with Phases
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/revisions">
revisions
</a>
</td><td>
Specifying Revisions
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/rust">
rust
</a>
</td><td>
Rust in Mercurial
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/scripting">
scripting
</a>
</td><td>
Using Mercurial from scripts and automation
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/subrepos">
subrepos
</a>
</td><td>
Subrepositories
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/templating">
templating
</a>
</td><td>
Template Usage
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/urls">
urls
</a>
</td><td>
URL Paths
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/topic-containing-verbose">
topic-containing-verbose
</a>
</td><td>
This is the topic to test omit indicating.
</td></tr>
<tr><td colspan="2"><h2><a name="main" href="#main">Main Commands</a></h2></td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/abort">
abort
</a>
</td><td>
abort an unfinished operation (EXPERIMENTAL)
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/add">
add
</a>
</td><td>
add the specified files on the next commit
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/annotate">
annotate
</a>
</td><td>
show changeset information by line for each file
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/clone">
clone
</a>
</td><td>
make a copy of an existing repository
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/commit">
commit
</a>
</td><td>
commit the specified files or all outstanding changes
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/continue">
continue
</a>
</td><td>
resumes an interrupted operation (EXPERIMENTAL)
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/diff">
diff
</a>
</td><td>
diff repository (or selected files)
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/export">
export
</a>
</td><td>
dump the header and diffs for one or more changesets
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/forget">
forget
</a>
</td><td>
forget the specified files on the next commit
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/init">
init
</a>
</td><td>
create a new repository in the given directory
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/log">
log
</a>
</td><td>
show revision history of entire repository or files
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/merge">
merge
</a>
</td><td>
merge another revision into working directory
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/pull">
pull
</a>
</td><td>
pull changes from the specified source
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/push">
push
</a>
</td><td>
push changes to the specified destination
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/remove">
remove
</a>
</td><td>
remove the specified files on the next commit
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/serve">
serve
</a>
</td><td>
start stand-alone webserver
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/status">
status
</a>
</td><td>
show changed files in the working directory
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/summary">
summary
</a>
</td><td>
summarize working directory state
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/update">
update
</a>
</td><td>
update working directory (or switch revisions)
</td></tr>
<tr><td colspan="2"><h2><a name="other" href="#other">Other Commands</a></h2></td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/addremove">
addremove
</a>
</td><td>
add all new files, delete all missing files
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/archive">
archive
</a>
</td><td>
create an unversioned archive of a repository revision
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/backout">
backout
</a>
</td><td>
reverse effect of earlier changeset
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/bisect">
bisect
</a>
</td><td>
subdivision search of changesets
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/bookmarks">
bookmarks
</a>
</td><td>
create a new bookmark or list existing bookmarks
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/branch">
branch
</a>
</td><td>
set or show the current branch name
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/branches">
branches
</a>
</td><td>
list repository named branches
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/bundle">
bundle
</a>
</td><td>
create a bundle file
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/cat">
cat
</a>
</td><td>
output the current or given revision of files
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/config">
config
</a>
</td><td>
show combined config settings from all hgrc files
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/copy">
copy
</a>
</td><td>
mark files as copied for the next commit
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/files">
files
</a>
</td><td>
list tracked files
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/graft">
graft
</a>
</td><td>
copy changes from other branches onto the current branch
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/grep">
grep
</a>
</td><td>
search for a pattern in specified files
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/hashelp">
hashelp
</a>
</td><td>
Extension command's help
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/heads">
heads
</a>
</td><td>
show branch heads
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/help">
help
</a>
</td><td>
show help for a given topic or a help overview
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/hgalias">
hgalias
</a>
</td><td>
My doc
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/hgaliasnodoc">
hgaliasnodoc
</a>
</td><td>
summarize working directory state
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/identify">
identify
</a>
</td><td>
identify the working directory or specified revision
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/import">
import
</a>
</td><td>
import an ordered set of patches
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/incoming">
incoming
</a>
</td><td>
show new changesets found in source
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/manifest">
manifest
</a>
</td><td>
output the current or given revision of the project manifest
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/nohelp">
nohelp
</a>
</td><td>
(no help text available)
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/outgoing">
outgoing
</a>
</td><td>
show changesets not found in the destination
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/paths">
paths
</a>
</td><td>
show aliases for remote repositories
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/phase">
phase
</a>
</td><td>
set or show the current phase name
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/purge">
purge
</a>
</td><td>
removes files not tracked by Mercurial
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/recover">
recover
</a>
</td><td>
roll back an interrupted transaction
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/rename">
rename
</a>
</td><td>
rename files; equivalent of copy + remove
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/resolve">
resolve
</a>
</td><td>
redo merges or set/view the merge status of files
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/revert">
revert
</a>
</td><td>
restore files to their checkout state
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/root">
root
</a>
</td><td>
print the root (top) of the current working directory
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/shellalias">
shellalias
</a>
</td><td>
(no help text available)
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/shelve">
shelve
</a>
</td><td>
save and set aside changes from the working directory
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/tag">
tag
</a>
</td><td>
add one or more tags for the current or given revision
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/tags">
tags
</a>
</td><td>
list repository tags
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/unbundle">
unbundle
</a>
</td><td>
apply one or more bundle files
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/unshelve">
unshelve
</a>
</td><td>
restore a shelved change to the working directory
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/verify">
verify
</a>
</td><td>
verify the integrity of the repository
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/version">
version
</a>
</td><td>
output version and copyright information
</td></tr>
</table>
</div>
</div>
</body>
</html>
$ get-with-headers.py $LOCALIP:$HGPORT "help/add"
200 Script output follows
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.1//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml11/DTD/xhtml11.dtd">
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en-US">
<head>
<link rel="icon" href="/static/hgicon.png" type="image/png" />
<meta name="robots" content="index, nofollow" />
<link rel="stylesheet" href="/static/style-paper.css" type="text/css" />
<script type="text/javascript" src="/static/mercurial.js"></script>
<title>Help: add</title>
</head>
<body>
<div class="container">
<div class="menu">
<div class="logo">
<a href="https://mercurial-scm.org/">
<img src="/static/hglogo.png" alt="mercurial" /></a>
</div>
<ul>
<li><a href="/shortlog">log</a></li>
<li><a href="/graph">graph</a></li>
<li><a href="/tags">tags</a></li>
<li><a href="/bookmarks">bookmarks</a></li>
<li><a href="/branches">branches</a></li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li class="active"><a href="/help">help</a></li>
</ul>
</div>
<div class="main">
<h2 class="breadcrumb"><a href="/">Mercurial</a> </h2>
<h3>Help: add</h3>
<form class="search" action="/log">
<p><input name="rev" id="search1" type="text" size="30" value="" /></p>
<div id="hint">Find changesets by keywords (author, files, the commit message), revision
number or hash, or <a href="/help/revsets">revset expression</a>.</div>
</form>
<div id="doc">
<p>
hg add [OPTION]... [FILE]...
</p>
<p>
add the specified files on the next commit
</p>
<p>
Schedule files to be version controlled and added to the
repository.
</p>
<p>
The files will be added to the repository at the next commit. To
undo an add before that, see 'hg forget'.
</p>
<p>
If no names are given, add all files to the repository (except
files matching ".hgignore").
</p>
<p>
Examples:
</p>
<ul>
<li> New (unknown) files are added automatically by 'hg add':
<pre>
\$ ls (re)
foo.c
\$ hg status (re)
? foo.c
\$ hg add (re)
adding foo.c
\$ hg status (re)
A foo.c
</pre>
<li> Specific files to be added can be specified:
<pre>
\$ ls (re)
bar.c foo.c
\$ hg status (re)
? bar.c
? foo.c
\$ hg add bar.c (re)
\$ hg status (re)
A bar.c
? foo.c
</pre>
</ul>
<p>
Returns 0 if all files are successfully added.
</p>
<p>
options ([+] can be repeated):
</p>
<table>
<tr><td>-I</td>
<td>--include PATTERN [+]</td>
<td>include names matching the given patterns</td></tr>
<tr><td>-X</td>
<td>--exclude PATTERN [+]</td>
<td>exclude names matching the given patterns</td></tr>
<tr><td>-S</td>
<td>--subrepos</td>
<td>recurse into subrepositories</td></tr>
<tr><td>-n</td>
<td>--dry-run</td>
<td>do not perform actions, just print output</td></tr>
</table>
<p>
global options ([+] can be repeated):
</p>
<table>
<tr><td>-R</td>
<td>--repository REPO</td>
<td>repository root directory or name of overlay bundle file</td></tr>
<tr><td></td>
<td>--cwd DIR</td>
<td>change working directory</td></tr>
<tr><td>-y</td>
<td>--noninteractive</td>
<td>do not prompt, automatically pick the first choice for all prompts</td></tr>
<tr><td>-q</td>
<td>--quiet</td>
<td>suppress output</td></tr>
<tr><td>-v</td>
<td>--verbose</td>
<td>enable additional output</td></tr>
<tr><td></td>
<td>--color TYPE</td>
<td>when to colorize (boolean, always, auto, never, or debug)</td></tr>
<tr><td></td>
<td>--config CONFIG [+]</td>
<td>set/override config option (use 'section.name=value')</td></tr>
<tr><td></td>
<td>--debug</td>
<td>enable debugging output</td></tr>
<tr><td></td>
<td>--debugger</td>
<td>start debugger</td></tr>
<tr><td></td>
<td>--encoding ENCODE</td>
<td>set the charset encoding (default: ascii)</td></tr>
<tr><td></td>
<td>--encodingmode MODE</td>
<td>set the charset encoding mode (default: strict)</td></tr>
<tr><td></td>
<td>--traceback</td>
<td>always print a traceback on exception</td></tr>
<tr><td></td>
<td>--time</td>
<td>time how long the command takes</td></tr>
<tr><td></td>
<td>--profile</td>
<td>print command execution profile</td></tr>
<tr><td></td>
<td>--version</td>
<td>output version information and exit</td></tr>
<tr><td>-h</td>
<td>--help</td>
<td>display help and exit</td></tr>
<tr><td></td>
<td>--hidden</td>
<td>consider hidden changesets</td></tr>
<tr><td></td>
<td>--pager TYPE</td>
<td>when to paginate (boolean, always, auto, or never) (default: auto)</td></tr>
</table>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</body>
</html>
$ get-with-headers.py $LOCALIP:$HGPORT "help/remove"
200 Script output follows
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.1//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml11/DTD/xhtml11.dtd">
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en-US">
<head>
<link rel="icon" href="/static/hgicon.png" type="image/png" />
<meta name="robots" content="index, nofollow" />
<link rel="stylesheet" href="/static/style-paper.css" type="text/css" />
<script type="text/javascript" src="/static/mercurial.js"></script>
<title>Help: remove</title>
</head>
<body>
<div class="container">
<div class="menu">
<div class="logo">
<a href="https://mercurial-scm.org/">
<img src="/static/hglogo.png" alt="mercurial" /></a>
</div>
<ul>
<li><a href="/shortlog">log</a></li>
<li><a href="/graph">graph</a></li>
<li><a href="/tags">tags</a></li>
<li><a href="/bookmarks">bookmarks</a></li>
<li><a href="/branches">branches</a></li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li class="active"><a href="/help">help</a></li>
</ul>
</div>
<div class="main">
<h2 class="breadcrumb"><a href="/">Mercurial</a> </h2>
<h3>Help: remove</h3>
<form class="search" action="/log">
<p><input name="rev" id="search1" type="text" size="30" value="" /></p>
<div id="hint">Find changesets by keywords (author, files, the commit message), revision
number or hash, or <a href="/help/revsets">revset expression</a>.</div>
</form>
<div id="doc">
<p>
hg remove [OPTION]... FILE...
</p>
<p>
aliases: rm
</p>
<p>
remove the specified files on the next commit
</p>
<p>
Schedule the indicated files for removal from the current branch.
</p>
<p>
This command schedules the files to be removed at the next commit.
To undo a remove before that, see 'hg revert'. To undo added
files, see 'hg forget'.
</p>
<p>
-A/--after can be used to remove only files that have already
been deleted, -f/--force can be used to force deletion, and -Af
can be used to remove files from the next revision without
deleting them from the working directory.
</p>
<p>
The following table details the behavior of remove for different
file states (columns) and option combinations (rows). The file
states are Added [A], Clean [C], Modified [M] and Missing [!]
(as reported by 'hg status'). The actions are Warn, Remove
(from branch) and Delete (from disk):
</p>
<table>
<tr><td>opt/state</td>
<td>A</td>
<td>C</td>
<td>M</td>
<td>!</td></tr>
<tr><td>none</td>
<td>W</td>
<td>RD</td>
<td>W</td>
<td>R</td></tr>
<tr><td>-f</td>
<td>R</td>
<td>RD</td>
<td>RD</td>
<td>R</td></tr>
<tr><td>-A</td>
<td>W</td>
<td>W</td>
<td>W</td>
<td>R</td></tr>
<tr><td>-Af</td>
<td>R</td>
<td>R</td>
<td>R</td>
<td>R</td></tr>
</table>
<p>
<b>Note:</b>
</p>
<p>
'hg remove' never deletes files in Added [A] state from the
working directory, not even if "--force" is specified.
</p>
<p>
Returns 0 on success, 1 if any warnings encountered.
</p>
<p>
options ([+] can be repeated):
</p>
<table>
<tr><td>-A</td>
<td>--after</td>
<td>record delete for missing files</td></tr>
<tr><td>-f</td>
<td>--force</td>
<td>forget added files, delete modified files</td></tr>
<tr><td>-S</td>
<td>--subrepos</td>
<td>recurse into subrepositories</td></tr>
<tr><td>-I</td>
<td>--include PATTERN [+]</td>
<td>include names matching the given patterns</td></tr>
<tr><td>-X</td>
<td>--exclude PATTERN [+]</td>
<td>exclude names matching the given patterns</td></tr>
<tr><td>-n</td>
<td>--dry-run</td>
<td>do not perform actions, just print output</td></tr>
</table>
<p>
global options ([+] can be repeated):
</p>
<table>
<tr><td>-R</td>
<td>--repository REPO</td>
<td>repository root directory or name of overlay bundle file</td></tr>
<tr><td></td>
<td>--cwd DIR</td>
<td>change working directory</td></tr>
<tr><td>-y</td>
<td>--noninteractive</td>
<td>do not prompt, automatically pick the first choice for all prompts</td></tr>
<tr><td>-q</td>
<td>--quiet</td>
<td>suppress output</td></tr>
<tr><td>-v</td>
<td>--verbose</td>
<td>enable additional output</td></tr>
<tr><td></td>
<td>--color TYPE</td>
<td>when to colorize (boolean, always, auto, never, or debug)</td></tr>
<tr><td></td>
<td>--config CONFIG [+]</td>
<td>set/override config option (use 'section.name=value')</td></tr>
<tr><td></td>
<td>--debug</td>
<td>enable debugging output</td></tr>
<tr><td></td>
<td>--debugger</td>
<td>start debugger</td></tr>
<tr><td></td>
<td>--encoding ENCODE</td>
<td>set the charset encoding (default: ascii)</td></tr>
<tr><td></td>
<td>--encodingmode MODE</td>
<td>set the charset encoding mode (default: strict)</td></tr>
<tr><td></td>
<td>--traceback</td>
<td>always print a traceback on exception</td></tr>
<tr><td></td>
<td>--time</td>
<td>time how long the command takes</td></tr>
<tr><td></td>
<td>--profile</td>
<td>print command execution profile</td></tr>
<tr><td></td>
<td>--version</td>
<td>output version information and exit</td></tr>
<tr><td>-h</td>
<td>--help</td>
<td>display help and exit</td></tr>
<tr><td></td>
<td>--hidden</td>
<td>consider hidden changesets</td></tr>
<tr><td></td>
<td>--pager TYPE</td>
<td>when to paginate (boolean, always, auto, or never) (default: auto)</td></tr>
</table>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</body>
</html>
$ get-with-headers.py $LOCALIP:$HGPORT "help/dates"
200 Script output follows
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.1//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml11/DTD/xhtml11.dtd">
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en-US">
<head>
<link rel="icon" href="/static/hgicon.png" type="image/png" />
<meta name="robots" content="index, nofollow" />
<link rel="stylesheet" href="/static/style-paper.css" type="text/css" />
<script type="text/javascript" src="/static/mercurial.js"></script>
<title>Help: dates</title>
</head>
<body>
<div class="container">
<div class="menu">
<div class="logo">
<a href="https://mercurial-scm.org/">
<img src="/static/hglogo.png" alt="mercurial" /></a>
</div>
<ul>
<li><a href="/shortlog">log</a></li>
<li><a href="/graph">graph</a></li>
<li><a href="/tags">tags</a></li>
<li><a href="/bookmarks">bookmarks</a></li>
<li><a href="/branches">branches</a></li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li class="active"><a href="/help">help</a></li>
</ul>
</div>
<div class="main">
<h2 class="breadcrumb"><a href="/">Mercurial</a> </h2>
<h3>Help: dates</h3>
<form class="search" action="/log">
<p><input name="rev" id="search1" type="text" size="30" value="" /></p>
<div id="hint">Find changesets by keywords (author, files, the commit message), revision
number or hash, or <a href="/help/revsets">revset expression</a>.</div>
</form>
<div id="doc">
<h1>Date Formats</h1>
<p>
Some commands allow the user to specify a date, e.g.:
</p>
<ul>
<li> backout, commit, import, tag: Specify the commit date.
<li> log, revert, update: Select revision(s) by date.
</ul>
<p>
Many date formats are valid. Here are some examples:
</p>
<ul>
<li> "Wed Dec 6 13:18:29 2006" (local timezone assumed)
<li> "Dec 6 13:18 -0600" (year assumed, time offset provided)
<li> "Dec 6 13:18 UTC" (UTC and GMT are aliases for +0000)
<li> "Dec 6" (midnight)
<li> "13:18" (today assumed)
<li> "3:39" (3:39AM assumed)
<li> "3:39pm" (15:39)
<li> "2006-12-06 13:18:29" (ISO 8601 format)
<li> "2006-12-6 13:18"
<li> "2006-12-6"
<li> "12-6"
<li> "12/6"
<li> "12/6/6" (Dec 6 2006)
<li> "today" (midnight)
<li> "yesterday" (midnight)
<li> "now" - right now
</ul>
<p>
Lastly, there is Mercurial's internal format:
</p>
<ul>
<li> "1165411109 0" (Wed Dec 6 13:18:29 2006 UTC)
</ul>
<p>
This is the internal representation format for dates. The first number
is the number of seconds since the epoch (1970-01-01 00:00 UTC). The
second is the offset of the local timezone, in seconds west of UTC
(negative if the timezone is east of UTC).
</p>
<p>
The log command also accepts date ranges:
</p>
<ul>
<li> "<DATE" - at or before a given date/time
<li> ">DATE" - on or after a given date/time
<li> "DATE to DATE" - a date range, inclusive
<li> "-DAYS" - within a given number of days from today
</ul>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</body>
</html>
$ get-with-headers.py $LOCALIP:$HGPORT "help/pager"
200 Script output follows
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.1//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml11/DTD/xhtml11.dtd">
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en-US">
<head>
<link rel="icon" href="/static/hgicon.png" type="image/png" />
<meta name="robots" content="index, nofollow" />
<link rel="stylesheet" href="/static/style-paper.css" type="text/css" />
<script type="text/javascript" src="/static/mercurial.js"></script>
<title>Help: pager</title>
</head>
<body>
<div class="container">
<div class="menu">
<div class="logo">
<a href="https://mercurial-scm.org/">
<img src="/static/hglogo.png" alt="mercurial" /></a>
</div>
<ul>
<li><a href="/shortlog">log</a></li>
<li><a href="/graph">graph</a></li>
<li><a href="/tags">tags</a></li>
<li><a href="/bookmarks">bookmarks</a></li>
<li><a href="/branches">branches</a></li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li class="active"><a href="/help">help</a></li>
</ul>
</div>
<div class="main">
<h2 class="breadcrumb"><a href="/">Mercurial</a> </h2>
<h3>Help: pager</h3>
<form class="search" action="/log">
<p><input name="rev" id="search1" type="text" size="30" value="" /></p>
<div id="hint">Find changesets by keywords (author, files, the commit message), revision
number or hash, or <a href="/help/revsets">revset expression</a>.</div>
</form>
<div id="doc">
<h1>Pager Support</h1>
<p>
Some Mercurial commands can produce a lot of output, and Mercurial will
attempt to use a pager to make those commands more pleasant.
</p>
<p>
To set the pager that should be used, set the application variable:
</p>
<pre>
[pager]
pager = less -FRX
</pre>
<p>
If no pager is set in the user or repository configuration, Mercurial uses the
environment variable $PAGER. If $PAGER is not set, pager.pager from the default
or system configuration is used. If none of these are set, a default pager will
be used, typically 'less' on Unix and 'more' on Windows.
</p>
<p>
You can disable the pager for certain commands by adding them to the
pager.ignore list:
</p>
<pre>
[pager]
ignore = version, help, update
</pre>
<p>
To ignore global commands like 'hg version' or 'hg help', you have
to specify them in your user configuration file.
</p>
<p>
To control whether the pager is used at all for an individual command,
you can use --pager=<value>:
</p>
<ul>
<li> use as needed: 'auto'.
<li> require the pager: 'yes' or 'on'.
<li> suppress the pager: 'no' or 'off' (any unrecognized value will also work).
</ul>
<p>
To globally turn off all attempts to use a pager, set:
</p>
<pre>
[ui]
paginate = never
</pre>
<p>
which will prevent the pager from running.
</p>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</body>
</html>
Sub-topic indexes rendered properly
$ get-with-headers.py $LOCALIP:$HGPORT "help/internals"
200 Script output follows
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.1//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml11/DTD/xhtml11.dtd">
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en-US">
<head>
<link rel="icon" href="/static/hgicon.png" type="image/png" />
<meta name="robots" content="index, nofollow" />
<link rel="stylesheet" href="/static/style-paper.css" type="text/css" />
<script type="text/javascript" src="/static/mercurial.js"></script>
<title>Help: internals</title>
</head>
<body>
<div class="container">
<div class="menu">
<div class="logo">
<a href="https://mercurial-scm.org/">
<img src="/static/hglogo.png" alt="mercurial" /></a>
</div>
<ul>
<li><a href="/shortlog">log</a></li>
<li><a href="/graph">graph</a></li>
<li><a href="/tags">tags</a></li>
<li><a href="/bookmarks">bookmarks</a></li>
<li><a href="/branches">branches</a></li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a href="/help">help</a></li>
</ul>
</div>
<div class="main">
<h2 class="breadcrumb"><a href="/">Mercurial</a> </h2>
<form class="search" action="/log">
<p><input name="rev" id="search1" type="text" size="30" value="" /></p>
<div id="hint">Find changesets by keywords (author, files, the commit message), revision
number or hash, or <a href="/help/revsets">revset expression</a>.</div>
</form>
<table class="bigtable">
<tr><td colspan="2"><h2><a name="topics" href="#topics">Topics</a></h2></td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/internals.bid-merge">
bid-merge
</a>
</td><td>
Bid Merge Algorithm
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/internals.bundle2">
bundle2
</a>
</td><td>
Bundle2
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/internals.bundles">
bundles
</a>
</td><td>
Bundles
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/internals.cbor">
cbor
</a>
</td><td>
CBOR
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/internals.censor">
censor
</a>
</td><td>
Censor
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/internals.changegroups">
changegroups
</a>
</td><td>
Changegroups
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/internals.config">
config
</a>
</td><td>
Config Registrar
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/internals.dirstate-v2">
dirstate-v2
</a>
</td><td>
dirstate-v2 file format
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/internals.extensions">
extensions
</a>
</td><td>
Extension API
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/internals.mergestate">
mergestate
</a>
</td><td>
Mergestate
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/internals.requirements">
requirements
</a>
</td><td>
Repository Requirements
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/internals.revlogs">
revlogs
</a>
</td><td>
Revision Logs
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/internals.wireprotocol">
wireprotocol
</a>
</td><td>
Wire Protocol
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/internals.wireprotocolrpc">
wireprotocolrpc
</a>
</td><td>
Wire Protocol RPC
</td></tr>
<tr><td>
<a href="/help/internals.wireprotocolv2">
wireprotocolv2
</a>
</td><td>
Wire Protocol Version 2
</td></tr>
</table>
</div>
</div>
</body>
</html>
Sub-topic topics rendered properly
$ get-with-headers.py $LOCALIP:$HGPORT "help/internals.changegroups"
200 Script output follows
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.1//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml11/DTD/xhtml11.dtd">
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en-US">
<head>
<link rel="icon" href="/static/hgicon.png" type="image/png" />
<meta name="robots" content="index, nofollow" />
<link rel="stylesheet" href="/static/style-paper.css" type="text/css" />
<script type="text/javascript" src="/static/mercurial.js"></script>
<title>Help: internals.changegroups</title>
</head>
<body>
<div class="container">
<div class="menu">
<div class="logo">
<a href="https://mercurial-scm.org/">
<img src="/static/hglogo.png" alt="mercurial" /></a>
</div>
<ul>
<li><a href="/shortlog">log</a></li>
<li><a href="/graph">graph</a></li>
<li><a href="/tags">tags</a></li>
<li><a href="/bookmarks">bookmarks</a></li>
<li><a href="/branches">branches</a></li>
</ul>
<ul>
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<h2 class="breadcrumb"><a href="/">Mercurial</a> </h2>
<h3>Help: internals.changegroups</h3>
<form class="search" action="/log">
<p><input name="rev" id="search1" type="text" size="30" value="" /></p>
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<h1>Changegroups</h1>
<p>
Changegroups are representations of repository revlog data, specifically
the changelog data, root/flat manifest data, treemanifest data, and
filelogs.
</p>
<p>
There are 4 versions of changegroups: "1", "2", "3" and "4". From a
high-level, versions "1" and "2" are almost exactly the same, with the
only difference being an additional item in the *delta header*. Version
"3" adds support for storage flags in the *delta header* and optionally
exchanging treemanifests (enabled by setting an option on the
"changegroup" part in the bundle2). Version "4" adds support for exchanging
sidedata (additional revision metadata not part of the digest).
</p>
<p>
Changegroups when not exchanging treemanifests consist of 3 logical
segments:
</p>
<pre>
+---------------------------------+
| | | |
| changeset | manifest | filelogs |
| | | |
| | | |
+---------------------------------+
</pre>
<p>
When exchanging treemanifests, there are 4 logical segments:
</p>
<pre>
+-------------------------------------------------+
| | | | |
| changeset | root | treemanifests | filelogs |
| | manifest | | |
| | | | |
+-------------------------------------------------+
</pre>
<p>
The principle building block of each segment is a *chunk*. A *chunk*
is a framed piece of data:
</p>
<pre>
+---------------------------------------+
| | |
| length | data |
| (4 bytes) | (<length - 4> bytes) |
| | |
+---------------------------------------+
</pre>
<p>
All integers are big-endian signed integers. Each chunk starts with a 32-bit
integer indicating the length of the entire chunk (including the length field
itself).
</p>
<p>
There is a special case chunk that has a value of 0 for the length
("0x00000000"). We call this an *empty chunk*.
</p>
<h2>Delta Groups</h2>
<p>
A *delta group* expresses the content of a revlog as a series of deltas,
or patches against previous revisions.
</p>
<p>
Delta groups consist of 0 or more *chunks* followed by the *empty chunk*
to signal the end of the delta group:
</p>
<pre>
+------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| | | | | |
| chunk0 length | chunk0 data | chunk1 length | chunk1 data | 0x0 |
| (4 bytes) | (various) | (4 bytes) | (various) | (4 bytes) |
| | | | | |
+------------------------------------------------------------------------+
</pre>
<p>
Each *chunk*'s data consists of the following:
</p>
<pre>
+---------------------------------------+
| | |
| delta header | delta data |
| (various by version) | (various) |
| | |
+---------------------------------------+
</pre>
<p>
The *delta data* is a series of *delta*s that describe a diff from an existing
entry (either that the recipient already has, or previously specified in the
bundle/changegroup).
</p>
<p>
The *delta header* is different between versions "1", "2", "3" and "4"
of the changegroup format.
</p>
<p>
Version 1 (headerlen=80):
</p>
<pre>
+------------------------------------------------------+
| | | | |
| node | p1 node | p2 node | link node |
| (20 bytes) | (20 bytes) | (20 bytes) | (20 bytes) |
| | | | |
+------------------------------------------------------+
</pre>
<p>
Version 2 (headerlen=100):
</p>
<pre>
+------------------------------------------------------------------+
| | | | | |
| node | p1 node | p2 node | base node | link node |
| (20 bytes) | (20 bytes) | (20 bytes) | (20 bytes) | (20 bytes) |
| | | | | |
+------------------------------------------------------------------+
</pre>
<p>
Version 3 (headerlen=102):
</p>
<pre>
+------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| | | | | | |
| node | p1 node | p2 node | base node | link node | flags |
| (20 bytes) | (20 bytes) | (20 bytes) | (20 bytes) | (20 bytes) | (2 bytes) |
| | | | | | |
+------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
</pre>
<p>
Version 4 (headerlen=103):
</p>
<pre>
+------------------------------------------------------------------------------+----------+
| | | | | | | |
| node | p1 node | p2 node | base node | link node | flags | pflags |
| (20 bytes) | (20 bytes) | (20 bytes) | (20 bytes) | (20 bytes) | (2 bytes) | (1 byte) |
| | | | | | | |
+------------------------------------------------------------------------------+----------+
</pre>
<p>
The *delta data* consists of "chunklen - 4 - headerlen" bytes, which contain a
series of *delta*s, densely packed (no separators). These deltas describe a diff
from an existing entry (either that the recipient already has, or previously
specified in the bundle/changegroup). The format is described more fully in
"hg help internals.bdiff", but briefly:
</p>
<pre>
+---------------------------------------------------------------+
| | | | |
| start offset | end offset | new length | content |
| (4 bytes) | (4 bytes) | (4 bytes) | (<new length> bytes) |
| | | | |
+---------------------------------------------------------------+
</pre>
<p>
Please note that the length field in the delta data does *not* include itself.
</p>
<p>
In version 1, the delta is always applied against the previous node from
the changegroup or the first parent if this is the first entry in the
changegroup.
</p>
<p>
In version 2 and up, the delta base node is encoded in the entry in the
changegroup. This allows the delta to be expressed against any parent,
which can result in smaller deltas and more efficient encoding of data.
</p>
<p>
The *flags* field holds bitwise flags affecting the processing of revision
data. The following flags are defined:
</p>
<dl>
<dt>32768
<dd>Censored revision. The revision's fulltext has been replaced by censor metadata. May only occur on file revisions.
<dt>16384
<dd>Ellipsis revision. Revision hash does not match data (likely due to rewritten parents).
<dt>8192
<dd>Externally stored. The revision fulltext contains "key:value" "\n" delimited metadata defining an object stored elsewhere. Used by the LFS extension.
<dt>4096
<dd>Contains copy information. This revision changes files in a way that could affect copy tracing. This does *not* affect changegroup handling, but is relevant for other parts of Mercurial.
</dl>
<p>
For historical reasons, the integer values are identical to revlog version 1
per-revision storage flags and correspond to bits being set in this 2-byte
field. Bits were allocated starting from the most-significant bit, hence the
reverse ordering and allocation of these flags.
</p>
<p>
The *pflags* (protocol flags) field holds bitwise flags affecting the protocol
itself. They are first in the header since they may affect the handling of the
rest of the fields in a future version. They are defined as such:
</p>
<dl>
<dt>1 indicates whether to read a chunk of sidedata (of variable length) right
<dd>after the revision flags.
</dl>
<h2>Changeset Segment</h2>
<p>
The *changeset segment* consists of a single *delta group* holding
changelog data. The *empty chunk* at the end of the *delta group* denotes
the boundary to the *manifest segment*.
</p>
<h2>Manifest Segment</h2>
<p>
The *manifest segment* consists of a single *delta group* holding manifest
data. If treemanifests are in use, it contains only the manifest for the
root directory of the repository. Otherwise, it contains the entire
manifest data. The *empty chunk* at the end of the *delta group* denotes
the boundary to the next segment (either the *treemanifests segment* or the
*filelogs segment*, depending on version and the request options).
</p>
<h3>Treemanifests Segment</h3>
<p>
The *treemanifests segment* only exists in changegroup version "3" and "4",
and only if the 'treemanifest' param is part of the bundle2 changegroup part
(it is not possible to use changegroup version 3 or 4 outside of bundle2).
Aside from the filenames in the *treemanifests segment* containing a
trailing "/" character, it behaves identically to the *filelogs segment*
(see below). The final sub-segment is followed by an *empty chunk* (logically,
a sub-segment with filename size 0). This denotes the boundary to the
*filelogs segment*.
</p>
<h2>Filelogs Segment</h2>
<p>
The *filelogs segment* consists of multiple sub-segments, each
corresponding to an individual file whose data is being described:
</p>
<pre>
+--------------------------------------------------+
| | | | | |
| filelog0 | filelog1 | filelog2 | ... | 0x0 |
| | | | | (4 bytes) |
| | | | | |
+--------------------------------------------------+
</pre>
<p>
The final filelog sub-segment is followed by an *empty chunk* (logically,
a sub-segment with filename size 0). This denotes the end of the segment
and of the overall changegroup.
</p>
<p>
Each filelog sub-segment consists of the following:
</p>
<pre>
+------------------------------------------------------+
| | | |
| filename length | filename | delta group |
| (4 bytes) | (<length - 4> bytes) | (various) |
| | | |
+------------------------------------------------------+
</pre>
<p>
That is, a *chunk* consisting of the filename (not terminated or padded)
followed by N chunks constituting the *delta group* for this file. The
*empty chunk* at the end of each *delta group* denotes the boundary to the
next filelog sub-segment.
</p>
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#endif