Differences between revisions 7 and 10 (spanning 3 versions)
Revision 7 as of 2009-11-18 17:13:27
Size: 2197
Editor: PaulBoddie
Comment: Added a workflow comparison. Apologies if it isn't accurate.
Revision 10 as of 2011-02-06 23:09:59
Size: 2741
Editor: PaulBoddie
Comment: Added notes about "cvs update" and its equivalents.
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== CVS-like working practice == = CVS-like Working Practice =
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Mercurial allows multiple WorkingPractices. In a CVS-like world, you will typically have one central repository; let's call it the "main line". This corresponds to CVS's notion of the "trunk". Mercurial allows multiple [[WorkingPractices|working practices]]. In a CVS-like world, you will typically have one central repository; let's call it the "main line". This corresponds to CVS's notion of the "trunk".
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=== Workflow === == Workflow ==
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Developers have direct SSH access (see [[SharedSSH]]) to the central repositories on a server, and push their changes directly from their local clones into the appropriate repositories. Thus, the usual CVS practice would be as follows: Developers have direct SSH access (whether that is through "normal" SSH access with each developer having their own login, or through [[SharedSSH|shared SSH logins]]) to the central repositories on a server, and push their changes directly from their local clones into the appropriate repositories. Thus, the usual CVS practice would be as follows:
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# Check for work done... # Check for work done (part of the update operation in CVS)...
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# Start working with the latest changes (part of the update operation in CVS)...
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}}}

If you do not perform the `hg update` you can keep working and ignore other people's work - it will be available in your own clone - but ultimately you are likely to want to combine your own work with theirs. The single command equivalent of `cvs update` is really...

{{{
hg pull -u
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=== Branches and Merging === == Branches and merging ==

CVS-like Working Practice

Mercurial allows multiple working practices. In a CVS-like world, you will typically have one central repository; let's call it the "main line". This corresponds to CVS's notion of the "trunk".

Repositories tend to be long-lived, and the "authoritative branches" are clones of the central repository.

Workflow

Developers have direct SSH access (whether that is through "normal" SSH access with each developer having their own login, or through shared SSH logins) to the central repositories on a server, and push their changes directly from their local clones into the appropriate repositories. Thus, the usual CVS practice would be as follows:

# Check for work done...
cvs update
# Do work, consider changes...
cvs diff
# Commit changes...
cvs commit

This doesn't always work out, and so the following workflow is typically required if cvs commit complains:

# Rectify conflicts, then...
cvs update
# Edit conflicts, then commit...
cvs commit

The corresponding practice would be as follows with Mercurial:

# Check for work done (part of the update operation in CVS)...
hg pull
# Start working with the latest changes (part of the update operation in CVS)...
hg update
# Do work, consider changes...
hg diff
# Commit changes...
hg commit
# Push changes...
hg push

If you do not perform the hg update you can keep working and ignore other people's work - it will be available in your own clone - but ultimately you are likely to want to combine your own work with theirs. The single command equivalent of cvs update is really...

hg pull -u

Note that before pushing changes, the developer is free to commit as many changesets as they like. If hg push complains about multiple heads, the following workflow becomes necessary:

# Get the remote changes and merge them...
hg pull
hg merge
# Edit any conflicts, then commit...
hg commit
# Push merged changes...
hg push

Again, the developer can defer pushing changes until later. The principal advantage of Mercurial here is that the developer need not be confronted with merging others' changes on every commit.

Branches and merging

Someone may be responsible for "back-porting" changes from a branch to the main line. They do this by pulling changes from the branch and the main line into a local repository, merging appropriately, then pushing back to the main line.

When the main line reaches a release point, someone creates a clone on the server at the appropriate revision, and people who need to work on that branch clone it, then start pushing their changes back.

CvsLikePractice (last edited 2012-06-20 16:49:32 by PaulBoddie)