Mercurial > hg
view mercurial/helptext/dates.txt @ 44814:1cdc80280286 stable
copy: to find copy source, walk parent of revision we're marking copies in
As shown in the previous patch, `hg cp --after --at-rev . src dst`
fails if `src` is not in `.`. It seems obvious that you should always
walk the *parent* of the revision you're marking copies in, but that's
not how it was done for the working copy, and I didn't think to change
it when marking copies in a non-working-copy commit.
This patch fixes that by walking the parent commit instead, but only
if we're marking copies for a non-working-copy commit. We need to
leave the working-copy code unchanged because it depends on the weird
behavior of `workingctx.walk()`. With these changes, there's very
little overlap between the working-copy version and the
non-working-copy version of `walkpats()`, but I've refrained from
cleaning that up on the stable branch.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D8494
author | Martin von Zweigbergk <martinvonz@google.com> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 06 May 2020 10:33:56 -0700 |
parents | 2e017696181f |
children | d010adc483cc |
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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 of today