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Revision 12 as of 2008-06-09 09:03:42
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Editor: abuehl
Comment: see also: +Bookmarks
Revision 13 as of 2008-08-26 08:08:58
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Editor: PeterHosey
Comment: Separated the information on finding your current branch into its own section.
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== Create a Branch == == Find What Branch You're On ==
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To begin a branch, set the branch name of the working directory and then [:Commit:commit] it: == Create a Branch ==
To begin a new branch, set the branch name of the working directory and then [:Commit:commit] it:

Named branches allow assigning persistent symbolic names to [:Branch:branches] of development inside a single [:Repository:repository].

Find What Branch You're On

Calling hg branch without a name shows the current branch name of the [:WorkingDirectory:working directory]. Calling hg branch after a hg init outputs "default", the (reserved) name of the default branch:

$ hg init
$ hg branch
default

Create a Branch

To begin a new branch, set the branch name of the working directory and then [:Commit:commit] it:

$ hg branch newfeature
marked working directory as branch newfeature
$ hg branch
newfeature
$ hg ci -m "start feature branch"
$ hg parents
changeset:   3899:c08bfc770d37
branch:      newfeature
tag:         tip
user:        Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com>
date:        Tue Dec 19 14:20:11 2006 -0600
summary:     start feature branch

From this point on, all committed [:ChangeSet:changesets] will be associated with the supplied branch name. Unless overridden with the hg branch command, the working directory inherits the branch name associated with a changeset. This way, a sequence of changesets will typically all have the same branch name.

When Mercurial lists a changeset, it will only show the branch name associated with the changeset if the branch name differs from the reserved branch name "default".

Switch Among Branches

Switch among branches using the hg update command:

$ hg update -C main
$ hg update -C newfeature

The hg update command normally allows updating along a single branch in the history. Use the -C option to switch to another. Note: the -C option also discards local changes, so be careful before using this command.

Merge Branches

When [:Merge:merging] with another branch, the local branch name takes precedence:

$ hg branch
newfeature
$ hg in remote
searching for changes
changeset:   3900:3be94ff00829
branch:      main
tag:         tip
parent:      3898:93e5f07baf75
user:        Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com>
date:        Tue Dec 19 14:26:52 2006 -0600
summary:     bug fix

$ hg pull remote
pulling from remote
searching for changes
adding changesets
adding manifests
adding file changes
added 1 changesets with 1 changes to 1 files (+1 heads)
(run 'hg heads' to see heads, 'hg merge' to merge)
$ hg merge
1 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved
(branch merge, don't forget to commit)
$ hg branch
newfeature

Branch names can be used anywhere that tag names can, including log, diff, [:Push:push], and [:Pull:pull]. When a branch has multiple [:Head:heads], the [:Tip:tipmost] revision of the branch will be found. Here are some examples:

$ hg branches
main                           3900:3be94ff00829
newfeature                     3899:c08bfc770d37
$ hg log -r main
changeset:   3900:3be94ff00829
branch:      main
tag:         tip
parent:      3898:93e5f07baf75
user:        Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com>
date:        Tue Dec 19 14:26:52 2006 -0600
summary:     bug fix
$ hg in -r main ../bd2
searching for changes
no changes found

See also: [:MultipleHeads], [:Branch], [:Bookmarks]


CategoryHowTo

NamedBranches (last edited 2013-12-26 09:53:26 by Tovim)