author | Thomas Arendsen Hein <thomas@intevation.de> |
Wed, 10 Aug 2005 06:47:46 +0100 | |
changeset 862 | d70c1c31fd45 |
parent 740 | d2422f10c136 |
permissions | -rw-r--r-- |
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Mercurial Frequently Asked Questions |
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==================================== |
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Section 1: General Usage |
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------------------------ |
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.Q. I did an "hg pull" and my working directory is empty! |
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There are two parts to Mercurial: the repository and the working |
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directory. "hg pull" pulls all new changes from a remote repository |
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into the local one but doesn't alter the working directory. |
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This keeps you from upsetting your work in progress, which may not be |
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ready to merge with the new changes you've pulled and also allows you |
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to manage merging more easily (see below about best practices). |
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To update your working directory, run "hg update". If you're sure you |
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want to update your working directory on a pull, you can also use "hg |
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pull -u". This will refuse to merge or overwrite local changes. |
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.Q. What are revision numbers, changeset IDs, and tags? |
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Mercurial will generally allow you to refer to a revision in three |
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ways: by revision number, by changeset ID, and by tag. |
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A revision number is a simple decimal number that corresponds with the |
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ordering of commits in the local repository. It is important to |
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understand that this ordering can change from machine to machine due |
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to Mercurial's distributed, decentralized architecture. |
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This is where changeset IDs come in. A changeset ID is a 160-bit |
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identifier that uniquely describes a changeset and its position in the |
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change history, regardless of which machine it's on. This is |
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represented to the user as a 40 digit hexadecimal number. As that |
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tends to be unwieldy, Mercurial will accept any unambiguous substring |
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of that number when specifying versions. It will also generally print |
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these numbers in "short form", which is the first 12 digits. |
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You should always use some form of changeset ID rather than the local |
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revision number when discussing revisions with other Mercurial users |
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as they may have different revision numbering on their system. |
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Finally, a tag is an arbitrary string that has been assigned a |
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correspondence to a changeset ID. This lets you refer to revisions |
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symbolically. |
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.Q. What are branches, heads, and the tip? |
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The central concept of Mercurial is branching. A 'branch' is simply |
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an independent line of development. In most other version control |
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systems, all users generally commit to the same line of development |
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called 'the trunk' or 'the main branch'. In Mercurial, every developer |
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effectively works on a private branch and there is no internal concept |
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of 'the main branch'. |
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Thus Mercurial works hard to make repeated merging between branches |
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easy. Simply run "hg pull" and "hg update -m" and commit the result. |
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'Heads' are simply the most recent commits on a branch. Technically, |
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they are changesets which have no children. Merging is the process of |
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joining points on two branches into one, usually at their current |
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heads. Use "hg heads" to find the heads in the current repository. |
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The 'tip' is the most recently changed head, and also the highest |
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numbered revision. If you have just made a commit, that commit will be |
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the tip. Alternately, if you have just pulled from another |
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repository, the tip of that repository becomes the current tip. |
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The 'tip' is the default revision for many commands such as update, |
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and also functions as a special symbolic tag. |
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.Q. How does merging work? |
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The merge process is simple. Usually you will want to merge the tip |
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into your working directory. Thus you run "hg update -m" and Mercurial |
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will incorporate the changes from tip into your local changes. |
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The first step of this process is tracing back through the history of |
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changesets and finding the 'common ancestor' of the two versions that |
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are being merged. This is done on a project-wide and a file by file |
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basis. |
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For files that have been changed in both projects, a three-way merge |
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is attempted to add the changes made remotely into the changes made |
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locally. If there are conflicts between these changes, the user is |
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prompted to interactively resolve them. |
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Mercurial uses a helper tool for this, which is usually found by the |
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hgmerge script. Example tools include tkdiff, kdiff3, and the classic |
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RCS merge. |
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After you've completed the merge and you're satisfied that the results |
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are correct, it's a good idea to commit your changes. Mercurial won't |
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allow you to perform another merge until you've done this commit as |
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that would lose important history that will be needed for future |
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merges. |
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.Q. How do tags work in Mercurial? |
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Tags work slightly differently in Mercurial than most revision |
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systems. The design attempts to meet the following requirements: |
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- be version controlled and mergeable just like any other file |
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- allow signing of tags |
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- allow adding a tag to an already committed changeset |
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- allow changing tags in the future |
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Thus Mercurial stores tags as a file in the working dir. This file is |
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called .hgtags and consists of a list of changeset IDs and their |
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corresponding tags. To add a tag to the system, simply add a line to |
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this file and then commit it for it to take effect. The "hg tag" |
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command will do this for you and "hg tags" will show the currently |
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effective tags. |
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Note that because tags refer to changeset IDs and the changeset ID is |
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effectively the sum of all the contents of the repository for that |
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change, it is impossible in Mercurial to simultaneously commit and add |
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a tag. Thus tagging a revision must be done as a second step. |
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.Q. What if I want to just keep local tags? |
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Update documentation of hg tag
Radoslaw Szkodzinski <astralstorm@gorzow.mm.pl>
parents:
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You can use "hg tag" command with an option "-l" or "--local". This |
a287f6cd9c6b
Update documentation of hg tag
Radoslaw Szkodzinski <astralstorm@gorzow.mm.pl>
parents:
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changeset
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will store the tag in the file .hg/localtags, which will not be |
a287f6cd9c6b
Update documentation of hg tag
Radoslaw Szkodzinski <astralstorm@gorzow.mm.pl>
parents:
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diff
changeset
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distributed or versioned. The format of this file is identical to the |
a287f6cd9c6b
Update documentation of hg tag
Radoslaw Szkodzinski <astralstorm@gorzow.mm.pl>
parents:
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changeset
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one of .hgtags and the tags stored there are handled the same. |
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.Q. How do tags work with multiple heads? |
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The tags that are in effect at any given time are the tags specified |
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in each head, with heads closer to the tip taking precedence. Local |
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tags override all other tags. |
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.Q. What are some best practices for distributed development with Mercurial? |
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First, merge often! This makes merging easier for everyone and you |
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find out about conflicts (which are often rooted in incompatible |
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design decisions) earlier. |
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Second, don't hesitate to use multiple trees locally. Mercurial makes |
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this fast and light-weight. Typical usage is to have an incoming tree, |
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an outgoing tree, and a separate tree for each area being worked on. |
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The incoming tree is best maintained as a pristine copy of the |
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upstream repository. This works as a cache so that you don't have to |
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pull multiple copies over the network. No need to check files out here |
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as you won't be changing them. |
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The outgoing tree contains all the changes you intend for merge into |
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upsteam. Publish this tree with 'hg serve" or hgweb.cgi or use 'hg |
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push" to push it to another publicly availabe repository. |
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Then, for each feature you work on, create a new tree. Commit early |
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and commit often, merge with incoming regularly, and once you're |
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satisfied with your feature, pull the changes into your outgoing tree. |
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.Q. How do I import from a repository created in a different SCM? |
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Take a look at contrib/convert-repo. This is an extensible |
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framework for converting between repository types. |
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.Q. What about Windows support? |
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Patches to support Windows are being actively integrated, a fully |
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working Windows version is probably not far off |
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Section 2: Bugs and Features |
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---------------------------- |
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.Q. I found a bug, what do I do? |
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Report it to the mercurial mailing list, mercurial@selenic.com. |
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.Q. What should I include in my bug report? |
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Enough information to reproduce or diagnose the bug. If you can, try |
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using the hg -v and hg -d switches to figure out exactly what |
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Mercurial is doing. |
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If you can reproduce the bug in a simple repository, that is very |
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helpful. The best is to create a simple shell script to automate this |
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process, which can then be added to our test suite. |
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.Q. Can Mercurial do <x>? |
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If you'd like to request a feature, send your request to |
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mercurial@selenic.com. As Mercurial is still very new, there are |
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certainly features it is missing and you can give us feedback on how |
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best to implement them. |
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Section 3: Technical |
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-------------------- |
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.Q. What limits does Mercurial have? |
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Mercurial currently assumes that single files, indices, and manifests |
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can fit in memory for efficiency. |
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Offsets in revlogs are currently tracked with 32 bits, so a revlog for |
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a single file can currently not grow beyond 4G. |
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There should otherwise be no limits on file name length, file size, |
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file contents, number of files, or number of revisions. |
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The network protocol is big-endian. |
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File names cannot contain the null character. Committer addresses |
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cannot contain newlines. |
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Mercurial is primarily developed for UNIX systems, so some UNIXisms |
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may be present in ports. |
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.Q. How does Mercurial store its data? |
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The fundamental storage type in Mercurial is a "revlog". A revlog is |
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the set of all revisions of a named object. Each revision is either |
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stored compressed in its entirety or as a compressed binary delta |
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against the previous version. The decision of when to store a full |
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version is made based on how much data would be needed to reconstruct |
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the file. This lets us ensure that we never need to read huge amounts |
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of data to reconstruct a object, regardless of how many revisions of it |
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we store. |
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In fact, we should always be able to do it with a single read, |
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provided we know when and where to read. This is where the index comes |
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in. Each revlog has an index containing a special hash (nodeid) of the |
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text, hashes for its parents, and where and how much of the revlog |
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data we need to read to reconstruct it. Thus, with one read of the |
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index and one read of the data, we can reconstruct any version in time |
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proportional to the object size. |
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Similarly, revlogs and their indices are append-only. This means that |
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adding a new version is also O(1) seeks. |
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Revlogs are used to represent all revisions of files, manifests, and |
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changesets. Compression for typical objects with lots of revisions can |
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range from 100 to 1 for things like project makefiles to over 2000 to |
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1 for objects like the manifest. |
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.Q. How are manifests and changesets stored? |
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A manifest is simply a list of all files in a given revision of a |
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project along with the nodeids of the corresponding file revisions. So |
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grabbing a given version of the project means simply looking up its |
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manifest and reconstructing all the file revisions pointed to by it. |
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A changeset is a list of all files changed in a check-in along with a |
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change description and some metadata like user and date. It also |
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contains a nodeid to the relevent revision of the manifest. |
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.Q. How do Mercurial hashes get calculated? |
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Mercurial hashes both the contents of an object and the hash of its |
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parents to create an identifier that uniquely identifies an object's |
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contents and history. This greatly simplifies merging of histories |
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because it avoid graph cycles that can occur when a object is reverted |
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to an earlier state. |
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All file revisions have an associated hash value. These are listed in |
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the manifest of a given project revision, and the manifest hash is |
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listed in the changeset. The changeset hash is again a hash of the |
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changeset contents and its parents, so it uniquely identifies the |
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entire history of the project to that point. |
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.Q. What checks are there on repository integrity? |
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Every time a revlog object is retrieved, it is checked against its |
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hash for integrity. It is also incidentally doublechecked by the |
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Adler32 checksum used by the underlying zlib compression. |
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Running 'hg verify' decompresses and reconstitutes each revision of |
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each object in the repository and cross-checks all of the index |
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metadata with those contents. |
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But this alone is not enough to ensure that someone hasn't tampered |
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with a repository. For that, you need cryptographic signing. |
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.Q. How does signing work with Mercurial? |
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Take a look at the hgeditor script for an example. The basic idea is |
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to use GPG to sign the manifest ID inside that changelog entry. The |
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manifest ID is a recursive hash of all of the files in the system and |
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their complete history, and thus signing the manifest hash signs the |
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entire project contents. |
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.Q. What about hash collisions? What about weaknesses in SHA1? |
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The SHA1 hashes are large enough that the odds of accidental hash collision |
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are negligible for projects that could be handled by the human race. |
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The known weaknesses in SHA1 are currently still not practical to |
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attack, and Mercurial will switch to SHA256 hashing before that |
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becomes a realistic concern. |
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Collisions with the "short hashes" are not a concern as they're always |
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checked for ambiguity and are still long enough that they're not |
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likely to happen for reasonably-sized projects (< 1M changes). |
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