Mercurial > hg
view README @ 2550:45235e492cc6
Disable automatic line endings conversion on windows
The rationale behind this is that such conversion implies a particular
situation in which all files in the repo are terminated by only LF. This
is documented nowhere and it bit me sharply when I upgraded.
Furthermore, it works on the assumption that a file containing no NULL
characters are actually a text file. Therefore it cannot guarantee that
no binary file will be harmed in the process.
Currently, if a file already contains CRLF line endings when it is
copied to the working dir from the repo, then the version in the working
dir will be corrupted by an extra CR.
I'm working on a patch that will turn this into a warning. But as a side
effect, committing such a file back will strip it from its CR.
In all case, unrequested data modification can occur under the feet of
the user, which is bad(tm), ihmo.
author | Raphael Marmier <raphael@marmier.net> |
---|---|
date | Mon, 03 Jul 2006 10:18:46 -0700 |
parents | 12e36dedf668 |
children | 72efff4be2ad |
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MERCURIAL QUICK-START Setting up Mercurial: Note: some distributions fails to include bits of distutils by default, you'll need python-dev to install. You'll also need a C compiler and a 3-way merge tool like merge, tkdiff, or kdiff3. First, unpack the source: $ tar xvzf mercurial-<ver>.tar.gz $ cd mercurial-<ver> When installing, change python to python2.3 or python2.4 if 2.2 is the default on your system. To install system-wide: $ python setup.py install --force To install in your home directory (~/bin and ~/lib, actually), run: $ python setup.py install --home=${HOME} --force $ export PYTHONPATH=${HOME}/lib/python # (or lib64/ on some systems) $ export PATH=${HOME}/bin:$PATH # add these to your .bashrc And finally: $ hg # test installation, show help If you get complaints about missing modules, you probably haven't set PYTHONPATH correctly. Setting up a Mercurial project: $ hg init project # creates project directory $ cd project # copy files in, edit them $ hg add # add all unknown files $ hg remove --after # remove deleted files $ hg commit # commit all changes, edit changelog entry Mercurial will look for a file named .hgignore in the root of your repository which contains a set of regular expressions to ignore in file paths. Branching and merging: $ hg clone linux linux-work # create a new branch $ cd linux-work $ <make changes> $ hg commit $ cd ../linux $ hg pull ../linux-work # pull changesets from linux-work $ hg merge # merge the new tip from linux-work into # our working directory $ hg commit # commit the result of the merge Importing patches: Fast: $ patch < ../p/foo.patch $ hg commit -A Faster: $ patch < ../p/foo.patch $ hg commit `lsdiff -p1 ../p/foo.patch` Fastest: $ cat ../p/patchlist | xargs hg import -p1 -b ../p Exporting a patch: (make changes) $ hg commit $ hg tip 28237:747a537bd090880c29eae861df4d81b245aa0190 $ hg export 28237 > foo.patch # export changeset 28237 Network support: # pull from the primary Mercurial repo foo$ hg clone http://selenic.com/hg/ foo$ cd hg # export your current repo via HTTP with browsable interface foo$ hg serve -n "My repo" -p 80 # pushing changes to a remote repo with SSH foo$ hg push ssh://user@example.com/~/hg/ # merge changes from a remote machine bar$ hg pull http://foo/ bar$ hg merge # merge changes into your working directory # Set up a CGI server on your webserver foo$ cp hgweb.cgi ~/public_html/hg/index.cgi foo$ emacs ~/public_html/hg/index.cgi # adjust the defaults For more info: Documentation in doc/ Mercurial website at http://selenic.com/mercurial