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#pragma section-numbers 3
= Tips and Tricks =
''(see also [[FAQ]], [[HOWTOs]], CategoryTipsAndTricks)''
||<<TableOfContents>> ||<<Include(/Index)>> ||




=== Undo an '`hg add`' ===
If you have accidentally `add`ed a file, the way to undo that (changing its status from `A` back to `?`, or unknown) is '`hg revert`'. For example, if you just ran '`hg add`' and realized that you do not want files ''`foo`'' or ''`bar`'' to be tracked by Mercurial:

{{{
hg revert foo bar
}}}
If you want to revert all pendings '`add`'s, at least on Unix you can use this trick:

{{{
hg status -an0 | xargs -0 hg revert
}}}
=== Save a push URL so that you don't need to enter it each time ===
It is possible to store a default [[Push|push]] URL that will be used when you type just '`hg push`'. Edit [[.hgrc|hgrc]] and add something like:

{{{
[paths]
default-push = ssh://hg@example.com/path
}}}
=== Track changes to a repository with RSS ===
You can track changes to projects and individual files with RSS feeds from hgweb. Here are some examples:

 * https://www.mercurial-scm.org/repo/hg/rss-log/
 * https://www.mercurial-scm.org/repo/hg/rss-log/tip/mercurial/hgweb/hgweb_mod.py

=== Create links to snapshots of files and tarballs ===
If you want to create web links to [[Tag|tagged]] or [[Tip|tip]] versions of a [[Repository|repository]] or a file, you can do so like this:

 * https://www.mercurial-scm.org/repo/hg/archive/tip.tar.gz
 * https://www.mercurial-scm.org/repo/hg/archive/4.0.zip
 * https://www.mercurial-scm.org/repo/hg/raw-file/tip/COPYING
 * https://www.mercurial-scm.org/repo/hg/raw-file/4.0/COPYING

Be aware though that tarballs require some configuration to work; add this to ''`.hg/hgrc`'' of repository (or to your '`--webdir-conf`'):

{{{
[web]
allow_archive = gz zip
}}}
=== Configuring Mercurial ===
See in [[.hgrc]].

=== Abbreviate command options ===
It is possible to abbreviate command options:

{{{
hg revert --no-b
hg revert --no-backup
}}}
=== Ignore files from Emacs/XEmacs ===
Add the following to [[.hgignore]]:

{{{
syntax: glob
*~

syntax: regexp
(.*/)?\#[^/]*\#$
}}}
=== Ignore files in local working copy only ===
Add the following to the repo's ''`.hg/hgrc`'':

{{{
[ui]
ignore = /path/to/repo/.hg/hgignore
}}}
and create a new file ''`.hg/hgignore`'' beside it. This new file will be untracked, but work the same as the versioned [[.hgignore]] file for this specific working copy. (The ''`/path/to/repo`'' bit is unfortunate but necessary to make it work when invoking '`hg`' from within a subdir of the repo.)
Line 2: Line 77:
{{{
cd source
hg archive ../export
}}}
or you could simply clone the repository and remove the ''`.hg`'' folder:
Line 7: Line 87:
To export a [[Tag|tagged]] release:

{{{
cd source
hg archive -r mytag ../export-tagged
}}}
=== One liner to remove unknown files with a pattern ===
Mercurial ships with the PurgeExtension for that purpose:

{{{
hg purge -p pattern
}}}
lists the files that will be removed. Remove the '`-p`' option to really removed the matched files.

If you need finer control, you can pipe the output of '`hg st -un`' through your favorite commands.

=== Customize diff behavior ===
==== Generating color diff output ====
You can just enable the ColorExtension to colorize command outputs. It has been bundled with Mercurial since 1.1

==== Use a custom diff program ====
To get colors for pre-1.1 Mercurial, you can use the [[ExtdiffExtension|extdiff extension]] with the '`colordiff`' tool to get colorized diff output. If you've enabled the extension and have '`colordiff`' installed, the following [[.hgrc|hgrc]] snippet will create a new '`hg cdiff`' command:

{{{
[defaults]
# suppress noisy extdiff header message
cdiff = -q

[extdiff]
cmd.cdiff = colordiff
opts.cdiff = -uprN
}}}
Similarly, on OSX if you want to use '`FileMerge.app`' for your diffs, you can use the ExtdiffExtension. The provided command-line wrapper '`opendiff`' for '`FileMerge.app`' will not work directly with the extension, but you can instead use the script [[http://ssel.vub.ac.be/ssel/internal:fmdiff|fmdiff]] which wraps '`FileMerge.app`' so that it responds like the usual diff program. Once '`fmdiff`' is in your path, just add the following to your ''`.hgrc`'' file

{{{
[extensions]
hgext.extdiff =

[extdiff]
cmd.opendiff = fmdiff
}}}
and use

{{{
$ hg opendiff ...
}}}
=== Using environment variables in hgrc files ===
You can use environment variables in filenames read from hgrc files with Mercurial 1.4. This applies to paths used to enable extensions and the paths used to load ignore files:

{{{
[extensions]
foo = $MYEXTENSIONS/foo.py

[ui]
ignore = $MYIGNORE
}}}
=== Using Vim as the filemerge program ===
The Vim text editor provides a [[http://vimdoc.sourceforge.net/htmldoc/diff.html|graphical diff feature]]. To resolve Mercurial merge conflicts using Vim, add the below to your ''`.hgrc`'' file:

{{{
[merge-patterns]
** = filemerge

[merge-tools]
filemerge.executable = gvim
filemerge.args = -d $local $other
filemerge.checkchanged = true
filemerge.gui = true
}}}
=== Using RCS merge as the filemerge program ===
The '`merge`' program supplied with '`RCS`' gives more complete conflict markers than the default install if you give it the `-A` option. For your ''`.hgrc`'':

{{{
[merge-tools]
filemerge.executable = /usr/bin/merge
filemerge.args = -A $local $base $other
}}}
See also MergingManuallyInEditor.

=== hg diff does not support -foo option like gnu diff does ===
I use the following bash function to put the diff options I like most

{{{
hgdi ()
{
  for i in `hg status -marn "$@"`
  do
    diff -ubwd <(hg cat "$i") "$i"
  done
}
}}}
You can also use the ExtdiffExtension to call GNU '`diff`' from Mercurial.

=== Handling binary files ===
As stated in BinaryFiles, you need to have a tool which manages binary merge. Newer versions of Joachim Eibl's [[http://kdiff3.sourceforge.net/|KDiff3]] program (using Qt 4, known on Windows as '`kdiff3-QT4.exe`') recognize binary files. Pressing "cancel" and "do not save" leaves you with the version of the file you have currently in the filesystem. See also on CvsConcepts.

=== Diagnose "abort: Error" messages ===
I get a cryptic "abort: Error" message while pushing to my server. This is not enough info to figure out the problem. I tried '`hg -v --debug push`' but I still don't get anything more informative. What can I do?

 * disable cgitb in hgweb on the server
 * run with '`--debug --traceback`' on the client
 * check the error logs on the server

=== Removing the working directory of a repository ===
If you forgot to specify {{{-U}}} on 'hg clone', doing

{{{
hg update null
}}}
will remove everything from the [[WorkingDirectory|working directory]] of the [[Repository|repository]]. See also [[Update|update]]. ~-([[https://www.mercurial-scm.org/pipermail/mercurial/2008-March/018332.html|reference]])-~

=== Setting the default context for diff to something larger ===
'`hg diff`' outputs 3 lines of context per default (see '`hg help diff`'). To change the default to for example 8 lines, add

{{{
[defaults]
diff = --unified 8
}}}
to the defaults section of your [[.hgrc]]. However, this only affects the diff command itself. ~-(Bts:issue1076)-~

=== Find repositories with GNU find ===
Users with access to GNU find may find these one-liners useful for managing all their repositories at once. They can of course be added to shell scripts to do more interesting things.

Print a list of directories which have repositories (a directory called ''`.hg`'' exists):

{{{
find ~/ -name ".hg" -type d -execdir pwd \;
}}}
Print a list of tracked files too:

{{{
find ~/ -name ".hg" -type d -printf "\t" -execdir pwd \; -execdir hg status -c -m -a -d \; -printf "\n"
}}}
=== Change temporary directory used on remote when pushing ===
See description of a [[Hook#tmpdirhook|hook for changing tmp directory]] on remote when pushing.

<<Anchor(mergemineortheir)>>

=== Keep "My" or "Their" files when doing a merge ===
Occasionally you want to merge two heads, but you want to throw away all changes from one of the heads, a so-called dummy merge. The {{{internal:local}}} and {{{internal:other}}} merge tools look like they do that, but only work if both branches have changed the content of the file. If the '`other`' branch changes the file and '`local`' does not, a merge using the {{{internal:local}}} tool will include that change, and vice versa. File renames, attribute changes and files added also suffer from this problem.

So to safely merge `X` into the current revision without letting ''any'' of the changes from `X` come through, do:

{{{
hg -y merge --tool=internal:fail X
hg revert --all --rev .
hg resolve -a -m
}}}
This will ensure that only changes from the current working copy parent revision are committed when you commit the merge.

Using {{{internal:fail}}} will fail the merge - this is useful if you want to prevent Mercurial from starting a merge tool after a merge with conflicts. The `-y` option causes any questions that may come up to be answered in the affirmative, which is harmless since any changes will be reverted in the next step.

=== Split a subdirectory into a separate project ===
Use ConvertExtension with --filemap option.

=== Use an extension only for one call (without editing hgrc) ===
You can enable an [[UsingExtensions|extension]] only for this call of '`hg`' by setting '`--config`'.

This enables the [[MqExtension|mq extension]] and calls its strip command to remove revision 111:

{{{
hg --config extensions.hgext.mq= strip 111
}}}
=== Convert a repo with mixed line endings to LF only ===
Enable the Win32TextExtension with encoding only.

Snippet of hgrc:

{{{
[extensions]
hgext.win32text=

#encode only => only LF in repo
[encode]
** = cleverencode:
[decode]
#** = cleverdecode:
}}}
Update the working directory. To force the update to all files do '`hg update null`' first and then '`hg update [rev]`'. The line endings in the working directory are still the same as in the repo.

Commit the changes. All the line endings are converted to LF before committing. To see the changes in the working dir do '`hg update null`' and '`hg update [tip]`' again.

(To convert all the line endings to CRLF, enable decode only).

=== Log all csets that would be merged (emulate '`hg incoming`' for merges) ===
Say you are considering merging from `source` to `dest` and you want to know which changesets will be involved, i.e. what's in `source` that's not in `dest`. In graph terms, you want to see all the ancestors of `source` (including `source` itself) that are not also ancestors of `dest`. (If `source` is already an ancestor of `dest`, then there is nothing to merge.)

This command will work on all versions of Mercurial, although it's slow with large repositories:

{{{
hg log -r 0::source --prune dest
}}}
(To omit merge csets, add `-M`.)

A faster way, using a command alias, assuming the source and dest are named branches:

{{{
[alias]
mlog = log -r "children(ancestor($1,$2)):: and branch($1)"
}}}

and then

{{{
hg mlog source dest
}}}

In Mercurial 1.4, '`merge`' grew a '`--preview`' option that was intended to do the same thing more conveniently. The 1.4 version of '`merge --preview`' doesn't actually show all the changesets that will be merged, but that bug was fixed in 1.5. So if you are using Mercurial 1.5 or later, you can get the same answer faster with

{{{
hg update dest
hg merge --preview source
}}}
(There is no way to omit merges with '`merge --preview`'.)

=== Import all patches in a mbox file ===
The '`hg import`' command only accepts a single patch, but the '`formail`' tool (comes with `procmail`) can be used to split them:

{{{
formail -s hg import - < yourmailbox.mbox
}}}
This imports all emails with patches, skips those that don't, and works with inline or attachment patches.

=== Avoid merging autogenerated (binary) files (PDF) ===
Usecase: Writing in LaTeX, but always having an up to date pdf in the working dir.

There are two main options:

1. Not merging pdfs (UNTESTED):

For this you just choose a merge tool for pdfs which simply keeps either your or the other version.

Edit your ''`.hg/hgrc`'' to include the following section:

{{{
[merge-patterns]
**.pdf = internal:local #keep my files
**.pdf = internal:other #keep their files
}}}
(you should only use one of the lines)

This way all PDFs will always be either at your revision or the other revision and you won't have (real) merges.

- MergeToolConfiguration

2. Creating pdfs on the fly

This assumes that you always want to have the PDFs you can use, but that you don't need to track them - only their contents (and those are defined in the tex files).

For this you add an update hook which crates the pdf whenever you update to a revision.

Edit your ''`.hg/hgrc`'' to include the hooks section with an update hook:

{{{
[hooks]
update.create_pdfs = latex your_tex_file.tex
}}}
To make this still a bit easier, you can use a versioned script which creates all pdf. that way you can just call the script and don't need to worry about editing the .hg/hgrc when you add text files or change the call.

I use a python script for platform compatibility:

''`parse_latex.py`'':

{{{#!python
#!/usr/bin/env python
from subprocess import call
for i in ("file1.tex", "file2.tex"):
  call(["latex", i])
}}}
''`.hg/hgrc`'':

{{{
[hooks]
update.create = ./parse_latex.py
}}}
- http://hgbook.red-bean.com/read/handling-repository-events-with-hooks.html

=== Specify Explicit Ssh Connection Timeouts ===
If in an unattended script you want to explicitly timeout connection attempts in the case of a misbehaving server or network you can do:

{{{
hg push --ssh "/path/to/ssh -o ConnectTimeout=10"
}}}
Where the value for {{{ConnectTimeout}}} is in seconds. {{{ConnectionAttempts}}} is also available to specify a number of retries (default is none).

=== Fake A Commit Message Template In VIM ===
Presumably this can be done with any scriptable editor. Place this in your ''`~/.hgrc`'':

{{{
editor = /usr/bin/vim -c "r ~/.hgtemplate"
}}}
Create a template in ''`~/.hgtemplate`''. Example:

{{{
Bug: XXXX
Reviewed by: XXXX
}}}
=== Prevent a push that would create multiple heads ===
In many Mercurial work flows, teams may have a `stable` or `master` tree that is supposed to have only one head. While a plain '`hg push`' will warn you if you're going to create new heads, that is merely a warning on the client side intended to help/remind users that they may have forgotten to merge first. However, '`hg push -f`' will let you do a push that does create new heads (this is also very common usage for sharing changes via "working" or "review" or ... Mercurial repos). The only way to protect a repo from multiple heads is by using a hook that runs in the repo-to-be-protected. There are several existing hooks that do that which may be useful to copy and adapt: [[http://hg.netbeans.org/nb-hooks/file/tip/forbid_2head.py|Netbeans]], [[http://hg.mozilla.org/users/bsmedberg_mozilla.com/hghooks/file/tip/mozhghooks/single_head_per_branch.py|Mozilla]], [[http://davidherron.com/blog/topics/961-forbidding-multiple-heads-shared-mercurial-repository|David Herron's (bash) hook]], [[https://bitbucket.org/dgc/headcount/|the Headcount hook]], [[https://bitbucket.org/haard/autohook|autohook]].

=== Check If One revision Is A Descendant Of Another ===
{{{
function isKid() {
  if [ $(hg debugancestor $1 $2 | cut -d : -f 1) == "$1" ] ; then
    echo $2 is a decendent of $1;
  else
   echo $2 is NOT a descendent of $1;
  fi
}
}}}
Example:

{{{
$ isKid 70 72
72 is a decendent of 70

$ isKid 72 70
70 is NOT a descendent of 72
}}}
=== Merge or rebase with uncommitted changes ===
It is not possible to merge or rebase when there are uncommited local changes in the working copy. Some recommend using the shelve extension or mq to handle that, but there is an even easier way. First put your local changes in a patch file, then revert the changes in the working copy.

{{{
hg diff > somefile # save local changes

hg revert -a # nuke 'em
}}}
Now you can do your merge or rebase in your clean working copy.

When you're done you reapply the changes again:

{{{
hg import --no-commit somefile
}}}
Originally described by [[http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.mercurial.general/19704/focus=19725|Matt on the users list]].

=== Remove files that are matched by .hgignore but were added in error ===
If there are only a few files they can easily `hg remove`ed manually. If many files were already added to the repository before e.g. ''`.hgignore`'' is changed then the following trick might help.

The files matched in ''`.hgignore`'' already added to the repository will not show in a '`hg status -i`' since only files not already in the repository are ignored. Solution is to have a temporary pristine repository to find all ignored files:

{{{
hg clone source temp
cd temp
rm -rf .hg
hg init
}}}
In ''`temp/`'' we have now a tree of all files in the ''`source/`'' repository but not being added to the newly created empty repository.

{{{
hg status -i
}}}
will show now all files ignored by ''`.hgignore`'' but in the original repository. This list can be massaged in a editor to create a bunch of '`hg remove`' lines. This can be further automated by using

{{{
cd temp
hg status -in0 | xargs -0 hg --cwd ../source remove
}}}
Explanation: '`hg status -in0` 'produces a zero delimited list of all ignored files without the `I` prefix. This list is consumed by '`xargs -0`' calling '`hg remove`' in the original repository ('`--cwd ../source`').

The directory ''`temp`'' can then be discarded.

This trick was the idea of MartinGeisler on #mercurial

=== Check for tabs or trailing whitespace before commit ===
Check out the [[https://bitbucket.org/marcusl/ml-hgext/src/tip/checkfiles.py|checkfiles extension]] which installs a hook to do just that.

Given --verbose, it also points out where on each line tabs or trailing whitespace is.

The file extensions to check is configurable in your hgrc, as well as a list specific files to exclude from the check.

=== Restore file history after file move without rename ===

Steps:
 1. Update your working directory to before you did the rename
 2. Do an actual "hg rename" which will create a new head
 3. Merge that new head into the revision where you did the "manual" rename (not the head revision!)
 4. Then finally merge the head revision into this merge result.

Advice:
 1. Make a clone first and work on that, just in case!
 2. After finishing the steps, use a file compare tool to check that the original and the clone are identical
 3. Check the file history of any moved file to make sure it is now restored


=== View differences between a feature branch and latest ancestor of default ===
 1. hg update feature_branch
 2. hg diff -r 'ancestor(default,.)'

=== list files which might be affected by a merge ===

{{{
hg diff -r "ancestor(.,other) -r . --stat | cut -d "|" -f 1 | sed "s/ *$//" > /tmp/1
hg diff -r "ancestor(.,other) -r other --stat | cut -d "|" -f 1 | sed "s/ *$//" > /tmp/2
comm -12 <(sort /tmp/1) <(sort /tmp/2)
}}}

=== Beware of plain copying a Repo from Windows to Linux ===
In some cases, when no hg upstream server is present, one may copy e.g. an existing repository from Windows to Linux. However, Mercurial is sensitive to permissions. Any file that has been copied over from e.g. an NTFS drive gets its Executable attrribute set. Mercurial then treats such files as completely "new" in TortoiseHg (file view window, but 'M'-tagged) or via hg stat (however, a hg diff sees no difference between files in repo without 'x'-attribute and with 'x'-attribute in the workspace.
A workaround is to update to tip (without backing up). This yields the desired state of all files.

=== Rename a branch (with the evolve extension) ===
In normal operation a named branch is permanent. With the [[EvolveExtension]] it can be renamed by changing the first commit which used the branch name (the root). To rename from O to N:

{{{
ROOT="$(hg id -qr 'first(roots(branch('$OLD')))')"
MSG="$(hg log -r $ROOT -T '{desc}')"

hg update $ROOT
hg branch $NEW
hg commit --amend -m "$MSG"
hg evolve --all
}}}

Note that the [[EvolveExtension]] is still experimental! (more detailed version of this tip: [[http://www.draketo.de/english/mercurial/rename-branch-evolve|Renaming a Mercurial branch with the evolve extension]]).

Tips and Tricks

(see also FAQ, HOWTOs, CategoryTipsAndTricks)

Contents

  1. Undo an '`hg add`'
  2. Save a push URL so that you don't need to enter it each time
  3. Track changes to a repository with RSS
  4. Create links to snapshots of files and tarballs
  5. Configuring Mercurial
  6. Abbreviate command options
  7. Ignore files from Emacs/XEmacs
  8. Ignore files in local working copy only
  9. Make a clean copy of a source tree, like CVS export
  10. One liner to remove unknown files with a pattern
  11. Customize diff behavior
    1. Generating color diff output
    2. Use a custom diff program
  12. Using environment variables in hgrc files
  13. Using Vim as the filemerge program
  14. Using RCS merge as the filemerge program
  15. hg diff does not support -foo option like gnu diff does
  16. Handling binary files
  17. Diagnose "abort: Error" messages
  18. Removing the working directory of a repository
  19. Setting the default context for diff to something larger
  20. Find repositories with GNU find
  21. Change temporary directory used on remote when pushing
  22. Keep "My" or "Their" files when doing a merge
  23. Split a subdirectory into a separate project
  24. Use an extension only for one call (without editing hgrc)
  25. Convert a repo with mixed line endings to LF only
  26. Log all csets that would be merged (emulate '`hg incoming`' for merges)
  27. Import all patches in a mbox file
  28. Avoid merging autogenerated (binary) files (PDF)
  29. Specify Explicit Ssh Connection Timeouts
  30. Fake A Commit Message Template In VIM
  31. Prevent a push that would create multiple heads
  32. Check If One revision Is A Descendant Of Another
  33. Merge or rebase with uncommitted changes
  34. Remove files that are matched by .hgignore but were added in error
  35. Check for tabs or trailing whitespace before commit
  36. Restore file history after file move without rename
  37. View differences between a feature branch and latest ancestor of default
  38. list files which might be affected by a merge
  39. Beware of plain copying a Repo from Windows to Linux
  40. Rename a branch (with the evolve extension)

1. Undo an '`hg add`'

If you have accidentally added a file, the way to undo that (changing its status from A back to ?, or unknown) is 'hg revert'. For example, if you just ran 'hg add' and realized that you do not want files foo or bar to be tracked by Mercurial:

hg revert foo bar

If you want to revert all pendings 'add's, at least on Unix you can use this trick:

hg status -an0 | xargs -0 hg revert

2. Save a push URL so that you don't need to enter it each time

It is possible to store a default push URL that will be used when you type just 'hg push'. Edit hgrc and add something like:

[paths]
default-push = ssh://hg@example.com/path

3. Track changes to a repository with RSS

You can track changes to projects and individual files with RSS feeds from hgweb. Here are some examples:

If you want to create web links to tagged or tip versions of a repository or a file, you can do so like this:

Be aware though that tarballs require some configuration to work; add this to .hg/hgrc of repository (or to your '--webdir-conf'):

[web]
allow_archive = gz zip

5. Configuring Mercurial

See in .hgrc.

6. Abbreviate command options

It is possible to abbreviate command options:

hg revert --no-b
hg revert --no-backup

7. Ignore files from Emacs/XEmacs

Add the following to .hgignore:

syntax: glob
*~

syntax: regexp
(.*/)?\#[^/]*\#$

8. Ignore files in local working copy only

Add the following to the repo's .hg/hgrc:

[ui]
ignore = /path/to/repo/.hg/hgignore

and create a new file .hg/hgignore beside it. This new file will be untracked, but work the same as the versioned .hgignore file for this specific working copy. (The /path/to/repo bit is unfortunate but necessary to make it work when invoking 'hg' from within a subdir of the repo.)

9. Make a clean copy of a source tree, like CVS export

cd source
hg archive ../export

or you could simply clone the repository and remove the .hg folder:

hg clone source export
rm -rf export/.hg

To export a tagged release:

cd source
hg archive -r mytag ../export-tagged

10. One liner to remove unknown files with a pattern

Mercurial ships with the PurgeExtension for that purpose:

hg purge -p pattern

lists the files that will be removed. Remove the '-p' option to really removed the matched files.

If you need finer control, you can pipe the output of 'hg st -un' through your favorite commands.

11. Customize diff behavior

11.1. Generating color diff output

You can just enable the ColorExtension to colorize command outputs. It has been bundled with Mercurial since 1.1

11.2. Use a custom diff program

To get colors for pre-1.1 Mercurial, you can use the extdiff extension with the 'colordiff' tool to get colorized diff output. If you've enabled the extension and have 'colordiff' installed, the following hgrc snippet will create a new 'hg cdiff' command:

[defaults]
# suppress noisy extdiff header message
cdiff = -q

[extdiff]
cmd.cdiff = colordiff
opts.cdiff = -uprN

Similarly, on OSX if you want to use 'FileMerge.app' for your diffs, you can use the ExtdiffExtension. The provided command-line wrapper 'opendiff' for 'FileMerge.app' will not work directly with the extension, but you can instead use the script fmdiff which wraps 'FileMerge.app' so that it responds like the usual diff program. Once 'fmdiff' is in your path, just add the following to your .hgrc file

[extensions]
hgext.extdiff =

[extdiff]
cmd.opendiff = fmdiff

and use

$ hg opendiff ...

12. Using environment variables in hgrc files

You can use environment variables in filenames read from hgrc files with Mercurial 1.4. This applies to paths used to enable extensions and the paths used to load ignore files:

[extensions]
foo = $MYEXTENSIONS/foo.py

[ui]
ignore = $MYIGNORE

13. Using Vim as the filemerge program

The Vim text editor provides a graphical diff feature. To resolve Mercurial merge conflicts using Vim, add the below to your .hgrc file:

[merge-patterns]
** = filemerge

[merge-tools]
filemerge.executable = gvim
filemerge.args = -d $local $other
filemerge.checkchanged = true
filemerge.gui = true

14. Using RCS merge as the filemerge program

The 'merge' program supplied with 'RCS' gives more complete conflict markers than the default install if you give it the -A option. For your .hgrc:

[merge-tools]
filemerge.executable = /usr/bin/merge
filemerge.args = -A $local $base $other

See also MergingManuallyInEditor.

15. hg diff does not support -foo option like gnu diff does

I use the following bash function to put the diff options I like most

hgdi ()
{
  for i in `hg status -marn "$@"`
  do
    diff -ubwd <(hg cat "$i") "$i"
  done
}

You can also use the ExtdiffExtension to call GNU 'diff' from Mercurial.

16. Handling binary files

As stated in BinaryFiles, you need to have a tool which manages binary merge. Newer versions of Joachim Eibl's KDiff3 program (using Qt 4, known on Windows as 'kdiff3-QT4.exe') recognize binary files. Pressing "cancel" and "do not save" leaves you with the version of the file you have currently in the filesystem. See also on CvsConcepts.

17. Diagnose "abort: Error" messages

I get a cryptic "abort: Error" message while pushing to my server. This is not enough info to figure out the problem. I tried 'hg -v --debug push' but I still don't get anything more informative. What can I do?

  • disable cgitb in hgweb on the server
  • run with '--debug --traceback' on the client

  • check the error logs on the server

18. Removing the working directory of a repository

If you forgot to specify -U on 'hg clone', doing

hg update null

will remove everything from the working directory of the repository. See also update. (reference)

19. Setting the default context for diff to something larger

'hg diff' outputs 3 lines of context per default (see 'hg help diff'). To change the default to for example 8 lines, add

[defaults]
diff = --unified 8

to the defaults section of your .hgrc. However, this only affects the diff command itself. (issue1076)

20. Find repositories with GNU find

Users with access to GNU find may find these one-liners useful for managing all their repositories at once. They can of course be added to shell scripts to do more interesting things.

Print a list of directories which have repositories (a directory called .hg exists):

find ~/ -name ".hg" -type d -execdir pwd \;

Print a list of tracked files too:

find ~/ -name ".hg" -type d -printf "\t" -execdir pwd \; -execdir hg status -c -m -a -d \; -printf "\n"

21. Change temporary directory used on remote when pushing

See description of a hook for changing tmp directory on remote when pushing.

22. Keep "My" or "Their" files when doing a merge

Occasionally you want to merge two heads, but you want to throw away all changes from one of the heads, a so-called dummy merge. The internal:local and internal:other merge tools look like they do that, but only work if both branches have changed the content of the file. If the 'other' branch changes the file and 'local' does not, a merge using the internal:local tool will include that change, and vice versa. File renames, attribute changes and files added also suffer from this problem.

So to safely merge X into the current revision without letting any of the changes from X come through, do:

hg -y merge --tool=internal:fail X
hg revert --all --rev .
hg resolve -a -m

This will ensure that only changes from the current working copy parent revision are committed when you commit the merge.

Using internal:fail will fail the merge - this is useful if you want to prevent Mercurial from starting a merge tool after a merge with conflicts. The -y option causes any questions that may come up to be answered in the affirmative, which is harmless since any changes will be reverted in the next step.

23. Split a subdirectory into a separate project

Use ConvertExtension with --filemap option.

24. Use an extension only for one call (without editing hgrc)

You can enable an extension only for this call of 'hg' by setting '--config'.

This enables the mq extension and calls its strip command to remove revision 111:

hg --config extensions.hgext.mq= strip 111

25. Convert a repo with mixed line endings to LF only

Enable the Win32TextExtension with encoding only.

Snippet of hgrc:

[extensions]
hgext.win32text=

#encode only => only LF in repo
[encode]
** = cleverencode:
[decode]
#** = cleverdecode:

Update the working directory. To force the update to all files do 'hg update null' first and then 'hg update [rev]'. The line endings in the working directory are still the same as in the repo.

Commit the changes. All the line endings are converted to LF before committing. To see the changes in the working dir do 'hg update null' and 'hg update [tip]' again.

(To convert all the line endings to CRLF, enable decode only).

26. Log all csets that would be merged (emulate '`hg incoming`' for merges)

Say you are considering merging from source to dest and you want to know which changesets will be involved, i.e. what's in source that's not in dest. In graph terms, you want to see all the ancestors of source (including source itself) that are not also ancestors of dest. (If source is already an ancestor of dest, then there is nothing to merge.)

This command will work on all versions of Mercurial, although it's slow with large repositories:

hg log -r 0::source --prune dest

(To omit merge csets, add -M.)

A faster way, using a command alias, assuming the source and dest are named branches:

[alias]
mlog = log -r "children(ancestor($1,$2)):: and branch($1)"

and then

hg mlog source dest

In Mercurial 1.4, 'merge' grew a '--preview' option that was intended to do the same thing more conveniently. The 1.4 version of 'merge --preview' doesn't actually show all the changesets that will be merged, but that bug was fixed in 1.5. So if you are using Mercurial 1.5 or later, you can get the same answer faster with

hg update dest
hg merge --preview source

(There is no way to omit merges with 'merge --preview'.)

27. Import all patches in a mbox file

The 'hg import' command only accepts a single patch, but the 'formail' tool (comes with procmail) can be used to split them:

formail -s hg import - < yourmailbox.mbox

This imports all emails with patches, skips those that don't, and works with inline or attachment patches.

28. Avoid merging autogenerated (binary) files (PDF)

Usecase: Writing in LaTeX, but always having an up to date pdf in the working dir.

There are two main options:

1. Not merging pdfs (UNTESTED):

For this you just choose a merge tool for pdfs which simply keeps either your or the other version.

Edit your .hg/hgrc to include the following section:

[merge-patterns]
**.pdf = internal:local #keep my files
**.pdf = internal:other #keep their files

(you should only use one of the lines)

This way all PDFs will always be either at your revision or the other revision and you won't have (real) merges.

- MergeToolConfiguration

2. Creating pdfs on the fly

This assumes that you always want to have the PDFs you can use, but that you don't need to track them - only their contents (and those are defined in the tex files).

For this you add an update hook which crates the pdf whenever you update to a revision.

Edit your .hg/hgrc to include the hooks section with an update hook:

[hooks]
update.create_pdfs = latex your_tex_file.tex

To make this still a bit easier, you can use a versioned script which creates all pdf. that way you can just call the script and don't need to worry about editing the .hg/hgrc when you add text files or change the call.

I use a python script for platform compatibility:

parse_latex.py:

   1 #!/usr/bin/env python
   2 from subprocess import call
   3 for i in ("file1.tex", "file2.tex"):
   4   call(["latex", i])

.hg/hgrc:

[hooks]
update.create = ./parse_latex.py

- http://hgbook.red-bean.com/read/handling-repository-events-with-hooks.html

29. Specify Explicit Ssh Connection Timeouts

If in an unattended script you want to explicitly timeout connection attempts in the case of a misbehaving server or network you can do:

hg push --ssh "/path/to/ssh -o ConnectTimeout=10"

Where the value for ConnectTimeout is in seconds. ConnectionAttempts is also available to specify a number of retries (default is none).

30. Fake A Commit Message Template In VIM

Presumably this can be done with any scriptable editor. Place this in your ~/.hgrc:

editor = /usr/bin/vim -c "r ~/.hgtemplate"

Create a template in ~/.hgtemplate. Example:

Bug: XXXX
Reviewed by: XXXX

31. Prevent a push that would create multiple heads

In many Mercurial work flows, teams may have a stable or master tree that is supposed to have only one head. While a plain 'hg push' will warn you if you're going to create new heads, that is merely a warning on the client side intended to help/remind users that they may have forgotten to merge first. However, 'hg push -f' will let you do a push that does create new heads (this is also very common usage for sharing changes via "working" or "review" or ... Mercurial repos). The only way to protect a repo from multiple heads is by using a hook that runs in the repo-to-be-protected. There are several existing hooks that do that which may be useful to copy and adapt: Netbeans, Mozilla, David Herron's (bash) hook, the Headcount hook, autohook.

32. Check If One revision Is A Descendant Of Another

function isKid() {
  if [ $(hg debugancestor $1 $2 | cut -d : -f 1) == "$1" ] ; then
    echo $2 is a decendent of $1;
  else
   echo $2 is NOT a descendent of $1;
  fi
}

Example:

$ isKid 70 72
72 is a decendent of 70

$ isKid 72 70
70 is NOT a descendent of 72

33. Merge or rebase with uncommitted changes

It is not possible to merge or rebase when there are uncommited local changes in the working copy. Some recommend using the shelve extension or mq to handle that, but there is an even easier way. First put your local changes in a patch file, then revert the changes in the working copy.

hg diff > somefile # save local changes

hg revert -a       # nuke 'em

Now you can do your merge or rebase in your clean working copy.

When you're done you reapply the changes again:

hg import --no-commit somefile

Originally described by Matt on the users list.

34. Remove files that are matched by .hgignore but were added in error

If there are only a few files they can easily hg removeed manually. If many files were already added to the repository before e.g. .hgignore is changed then the following trick might help.

The files matched in .hgignore already added to the repository will not show in a 'hg status -i' since only files not already in the repository are ignored. Solution is to have a temporary pristine repository to find all ignored files:

hg clone source temp
cd temp
rm -rf .hg
hg init

In temp/ we have now a tree of all files in the source/ repository but not being added to the newly created empty repository.

hg status -i

will show now all files ignored by .hgignore but in the original repository. This list can be massaged in a editor to create a bunch of 'hg remove' lines. This can be further automated by using

cd temp
hg status -in0 | xargs -0 hg --cwd ../source remove

Explanation: 'hg status -in0 'produces a zero delimited list of all ignored files without the I prefix. This list is consumed by 'xargs -0' calling 'hg remove' in the original repository ('--cwd ../source').

The directory temp can then be discarded.

This trick was the idea of MartinGeisler on #mercurial

35. Check for tabs or trailing whitespace before commit

Check out the checkfiles extension which installs a hook to do just that.

Given --verbose, it also points out where on each line tabs or trailing whitespace is.

The file extensions to check is configurable in your hgrc, as well as a list specific files to exclude from the check.

36. Restore file history after file move without rename

Steps:

  1. Update your working directory to before you did the rename
  2. Do an actual "hg rename" which will create a new head
  3. Merge that new head into the revision where you did the "manual" rename (not the head revision!)
  4. Then finally merge the head revision into this merge result.

Advice:

  1. Make a clone first and work on that, just in case!
  2. After finishing the steps, use a file compare tool to check that the original and the clone are identical
  3. Check the file history of any moved file to make sure it is now restored

37. View differences between a feature branch and latest ancestor of default

  1. hg update feature_branch
  2. hg diff -r 'ancestor(default,.)'

38. list files which might be affected by a merge

hg diff -r "ancestor(.,other) -r . --stat | cut -d "|" -f 1 | sed "s/ *$//" > /tmp/1
hg diff -r "ancestor(.,other) -r other --stat | cut -d "|" -f 1 | sed "s/ *$//" > /tmp/2
comm -12 <(sort /tmp/1) <(sort /tmp/2)

39. Beware of plain copying a Repo from Windows to Linux

In some cases, when no hg upstream server is present, one may copy e.g. an existing repository from Windows to Linux. However, Mercurial is sensitive to permissions. Any file that has been copied over from e.g. an NTFS drive gets its Executable attrribute set. Mercurial then treats such files as completely "new" in TortoiseHg (file view window, but 'M'-tagged) or via hg stat (however, a hg diff sees no difference between files in repo without 'x'-attribute and with 'x'-attribute in the workspace. A workaround is to update to tip (without backing up). This yields the desired state of all files.

40. Rename a branch (with the evolve extension)

In normal operation a named branch is permanent. With the EvolveExtension it can be renamed by changing the first commit which used the branch name (the root). To rename from O to N:

ROOT="$(hg id -qr 'first(roots(branch('$OLD')))')"
MSG="$(hg log -r $ROOT -T '{desc}')"  

hg update $ROOT
hg branch $NEW
hg commit --amend -m "$MSG"
hg evolve --all

Note that the EvolveExtension is still experimental! (more detailed version of this tip: Renaming a Mercurial branch with the evolve extension).

TipsAndTricks (last edited 2016-12-05 11:14:36 by ArneBab)