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Mercurial has been used in production by major software projects since a couple months after its initial release. Thus, Mercurial has always made a serious effort to be backward compatible from release to release with a minimum of surprises. Here's an attempt to distill what our rules are: Mercurial has been used in production by major software projects since a couple months after its initial release. Thus, Mercurial has always made a serious effort to be backward compatible from release to release with a minimum of surprises.
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=== File formats and layout: === Here's an attempt to distill what our '''rules''' are:

[[TableOfContents]]

=== File formats and layout ===
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 * Old Mercurial should break with a meaningful error message if it can't
  
read a new Mercurial repository
 * Old Mercurial should break with a meaningful error message if it can't read a new Mercurial repository
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=== Commands: === === Commands ===
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 * Output formats for commands with output likely to be parsed (especially log and status) are intended to be
  
stable enough to be parsable by dumb scripts and tools
 * Output formats for commands with output likely to be parsed (especially log and status) are intended to be stable enough to be parsable by dumb scripts and tools
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=== Config Options: === === Config Options ===
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=== Hooks: === === Hooks ===
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=== Extensions: === === Extensions ===
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 * Bear in mind that extensions are not "canonical", and their behavior may change or break core
  
Mercurial functionality
 * Bear in mind that extensions are not "canonical", and their behavior may change or break core Mercurial functionality
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=== Wire protocol: === === Wire protocol ===
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=== Web interface: === === Web interface ===
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=== Internal API: === === Internal API ===
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See also: MercurialApi

----
CategoryContributing

Compatibility Rules

Mercurial has been used in production by major software projects since a couple months after its initial release. Thus, Mercurial has always made a serious effort to be backward compatible from release to release with a minimum of surprises.

Here's an attempt to distill what our rules are:

TableOfContents

1. File formats and layout

  • New Mercurial should always be able to read old Mercurial repositories
  • Old Mercurial should always be able to pull from new Mercurial servers
  • Old Mercurial should break with a meaningful error message if it can't read a new Mercurial repository
  • New requirements are listed in the requirements file
  • Revlog files have a revision flag and per-revision feature flags
  • User-visible changes are mentioned in the release notes

2. Commands

  • Changes to existing command behavior is minimal
  • Removing a feature requires a deprecation period of at least one major release
  • Output formats for commands with output likely to be parsed (especially log and status) are intended to be stable enough to be parsable by dumb scripts and tools
  • Other commands may occasionally add or change output
  • Changes likely to affect parsers are documented in the release notes
  • Meaningless return values may become sensible

3. Config Options

  • Config options are long-lived and should not change behavior
  • We may deprecate some options, giving their replacements different names
  • Undocumented config options may quietly disappear if they've outlived their usefulness

4. Hooks

  • The hook calling convention is intended to be extremely stable
  • New hooks and environment variables may be added, but old ones will be preserved

5. Extensions

  • Extensions that are shipped in hgext/ follow the same compatibility rules as core code
  • Bear in mind that extensions are not "canonical", and their behavior may change or break core Mercurial functionality

6. Wire protocol

  • The wire protocol can check for individual features and use them if available
  • The basic wire protocol is extremely stable

7. Web interface

  • URLs from old Mercurial should continue to work with new Mercurial
  • HTML output from the web interface is moderately stable, but screen-scraping it may not be reliable
  • However, parsing of output from raw-style URLs should be stable

8. Internal API

  • Significant improvements to internal APIs are still being made
  • Writers of extensions can expect a small amount of porting work between releases
  • Extensions included in hgext/ and contrib/ will be updated by the Mercurial team

See also: MercurialApi


CategoryContributing

CompatibilityRules (last edited 2015-09-25 19:46:36 by Pierre-YvesDavid)