Mercurial > hg
view mercurial/help/bundlespec.txt @ 36832:6bdea0efdab5
util: forward __bool__()/__nonzero__() on fileobjectproxy
In trying to debug the Windows process hang in D2720, I changed the stderr pipe
to the peer to be os.devnull instead. That caused sshpeer._cleanuppipes()[1] to
explode, complaining NoneType has no __iter__ attribute, even though the
previous line checked for None.
[1] https://www.mercurial-scm.org/repo/hg/file/b434965f984e/mercurial/sshpeer.py#l133
author | Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com> |
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date | Sat, 10 Mar 2018 12:22:08 -0500 |
parents | 01280ec5f840 |
children |
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Mercurial supports generating standalone "bundle" files that hold repository data. These "bundles" are typically saved locally and used later or exchanged between different repositories, possibly on different machines. Example commands using bundles are :hg:`bundle` and :hg:`unbundle`. Generation of bundle files is controlled by a "bundle specification" ("bundlespec") string. This string tells the bundle generation process how to create the bundle. A "bundlespec" string is composed of the following elements: type A string denoting the bundle format to use. compression Denotes the compression engine to use compressing the raw bundle data. parameters Arbitrary key-value parameters to further control bundle generation. A "bundlespec" string has the following formats: <type> The literal bundle format string is used. <compression>-<type> The compression engine and format are delimited by a hyphen (``-``). Optional parameters follow the ``<type>``. Parameters are URI escaped ``key=value`` pairs. Each pair is delimited by a semicolon (``;``). The first parameter begins after a ``;`` immediately following the ``<type>`` value. Available Types =============== The following bundle <type> strings are available: v1 Produces a legacy "changegroup" version 1 bundle. This format is compatible with nearly all Mercurial clients because it is the oldest. However, it has some limitations, which is why it is no longer the default for new repositories. ``v1`` bundles can be used with modern repositories using the "generaldelta" storage format. However, it may take longer to produce the bundle and the resulting bundle may be significantly larger than a ``v2`` bundle. ``v1`` bundles can only use the ``gzip``, ``bzip2``, and ``none`` compression formats. v2 Produces a version 2 bundle. Version 2 bundles are an extensible format that can store additional repository data (such as bookmarks and phases information) and they can store data more efficiently, resulting in smaller bundles. Version 2 bundles can also use modern compression engines, such as ``zstd``, making them faster to compress and often smaller. Available Compression Engines ============================= The following bundle <compression> engines can be used: .. bundlecompressionmarker Examples ======== ``v2`` Produce a ``v2`` bundle using default options, including compression. ``none-v1`` Produce a ``v1`` bundle with no compression. ``zstd-v2`` Produce a ``v2`` bundle with zstandard compression using default settings. ``zstd-v1`` This errors because ``zstd`` is not supported for ``v1`` types.