view mercurial/help/patterns.txt @ 14732:e9ed3506f066 stable

backout of d04ba50e104d: allow to qpop/push with a dirty working copy The new behavior was breaking existing tools that relied on a sequence such as this: 1) start with a dirty working copy 2) qimport some patch 3) try to qpush it 4) old behavior would fail at this point due to outstanding changes. (new behavior would only fail if the outstanding changes and the patches changes intersect) 5) innocent user qrefreshes, gets his local changes in the imported patch It's worth considering if we can move this behavior to -f in the future.
author Idan Kamara <idankk86@gmail.com>
date Fri, 24 Jun 2011 23:25:42 +0300
parents 6ab8b17adc03
children e3c7ca15cde2
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Mercurial accepts several notations for identifying one or more files
at a time.

By default, Mercurial treats filenames as shell-style extended glob
patterns.

Alternate pattern notations must be specified explicitly.

To use a plain path name without any pattern matching, start it with
``path:``. These path names must completely match starting at the
current repository root.

To use an extended glob, start a name with ``glob:``. Globs are rooted
at the current directory; a glob such as ``*.c`` will only match files
in the current directory ending with ``.c``.

The supported glob syntax extensions are ``**`` to match any string
across path separators and ``{a,b}`` to mean "a or b".

To use a Perl/Python regular expression, start a name with ``re:``.
Regexp pattern matching is anchored at the root of the repository.

To read name patterns from a file, use ``listfile:`` or ``listfile0:``.
The latter expects null delimited patterns while the former expects line
feeds. Each string read from the file is itself treated as a file
pattern.

Plain examples::

  path:foo/bar   a name bar in a directory named foo in the root
                 of the repository
  path:path:name a file or directory named "path:name"

Glob examples::

  glob:*.c       any name ending in ".c" in the current directory
  *.c            any name ending in ".c" in the current directory
  **.c           any name ending in ".c" in any subdirectory of the
                 current directory including itself.
  foo/*.c        any name ending in ".c" in the directory foo
  foo/**.c       any name ending in ".c" in any subdirectory of foo
                 including itself.

Regexp examples::

  re:.*\.c$      any name ending in ".c", anywhere in the repository

File examples::

  listfile:list.txt  read list from list.txt with one file pattern per line
  listfile0:list.txt read list from list.txt with null byte delimiters

See also :hg:`help filesets`.