Differences between revisions 26 and 40 (spanning 14 versions)
Revision 26 as of 2009-10-28 22:26:50
Size: 2966
Editor: abuehl
Comment:
Revision 40 as of 2015-10-28 15:22:27
Size: 2786
Comment:
Deletions are marked like this. Additions are marked like this.
Line 1: Line 1:
== Tutorial - Cloning a repository ==

''(This page is part 2 of 9 of the [[Tutorial]] series. Previous part is [[TutorialInstall]], next part is [[TutorialHistory]])''
== Tutorial - Cloning a Repository ==
''(This page is part of the [[Tutorial]] series. Previous part is TutorialInit, next part is TutorialHistory)''
Line 7: Line 6:
In Mercurial, we do all of our work inside a [[Repository|repository]]. A repository is a directory that contains all of the source files that we want to keep history of, along with complete histories of those source files (inside the .hg directory —
see UnderstandingMercurial).
In Mercurial, we do all of our work inside a [[Repository|repository]]. A repository is a directory that contains all of the source files that we want to keep history of, along with complete histories of those source files (inside the .hg directory see UnderstandingMercurial).
Line 12: Line 10:
To do this, we use the {{{clone}}} command.<<FootNote(http://www.selenic.com/mercurial/hg.1.html#clone)>> This makes a [[Clone|clone]] of a repository; it makes a complete copy of another repository so that we will have our own local, private one to work in. To do this, we use the {{{clone}}} command.<<FootNote([[Cmd:clone]])>> This makes a clone of a repository; it makes a complete copy of another repository so that we will have our own local, private one to work in.
Line 19: Line 17:
Line 31: Line 28:
Line 38: Line 34:

Inside the {{{my-hello}}} directory, we should find some files, together with the .hg directory, that contains
Mercurial's private data (basically the history of the repository plus various state information &mdash; see [[Repository]] for more information):
Inside the {{{my-hello}}} directory, we should find some files, together with the .hg directory, that contains Mercurial's private data (basically the history of the repository plus various state information see [[Repository]] for more information):
Line 46: Line 40:
Line 49: Line 42:
'''Note:''' in Mercurial, each repository is self-contained. When you clone a repository, the new repository becomes an exact copy of the existing one at the time of the clone, but subsequent changes in either one ''will not show up'' in the other unless you explicitly transfer them, by either [[Pull|pulling]] or [[Push|pushing]]. '''Note:''' in Mercurial, each repository is self-contained. When you clone a repository, the new repository becomes an exact copy of the existing one at the time of the clone, but subsequent changes in either one ''will not show up'' in the other unless you explicitly transfer them, by either pulling or pushing.
Line 51: Line 44:
By default, `hg clone` checks out (see [[Update]]) the [[Tip|tip]]most [[Revision|revision]] of the repository's ''default branch''
into the repository's [[WorkingDirectory|working directory]]. To see which revision is currently checked out,
we can use the [[Parent|parents]] command:<<FootNote(http://www.selenic.com/mercurial/hg.1.html#parents)>>
By default, `hg clone` checks out (see Cmd:update) the latest [[Revision|revision]] (usually referred to as the tip) of the repository's ''default branch'' into the repository's [[WorkingDirectory|working directory]]. To see which revision is currently checked out, we can use the summary command:<<FootNote([[Cmd:summary]])>>
Line 57: Line 48:
$ hg parents
changeset: 1:82e55d328c8c
tag: tip
user: mpm@selenic.com
date: Fri Aug 26 01:21:28 2005 -0700
summary: Create a makefile
$ hg summary
parent: 1:82e55d328c8c tip
 Create a makefile
branch: default
commit: (clean)
update: (current)
Line 64: Line 55:

Tutorial - Cloning a Repository

(This page is part of the Tutorial series. Previous part is TutorialInit, next part is TutorialHistory)

You have followed TutorialInstall to install Mercurial already, right? Good!

In Mercurial, we do all of our work inside a repository. A repository is a directory that contains all of the source files that we want to keep history of, along with complete histories of those source files (inside the .hg directory — see UnderstandingMercurial).

The easiest way to get started with Mercurial is to use a repository that already contains some files and some history.

To do this, we use the clone command.1 This makes a clone of a repository; it makes a complete copy of another repository so that we will have our own local, private one to work in.

Let's clone a small "hello, world" repository hosted at selenic.com:

$ hg clone http://www.selenic.com/repo/hello my-hello

If all goes well, the clone command prints this (Mercurial 1.4):

requesting all changes
adding changesets
adding manifests
adding file changes
added 2 changesets with 2 changes to 2 files
updating to branch default
2 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved

We should now find a directory called my-hello in our current directory:

$ ls
my-hello

Inside the my-hello directory, we should find some files, together with the .hg directory, that contains Mercurial's private data (basically the history of the repository plus various state information — see Repository for more information):

$ ls -a
.  ..  .hg  Makefile  hello.c

These files are exact copies of the files from the tip revision of the default branch in the repository we just cloned.

Note: in Mercurial, each repository is self-contained. When you clone a repository, the new repository becomes an exact copy of the existing one at the time of the clone, but subsequent changes in either one will not show up in the other unless you explicitly transfer them, by either pulling or pushing.

By default, hg clone checks out (see update) the latest revision (usually referred to as the tip) of the repository's default branch into the repository's working directory. To see which revision is currently checked out, we can use the summary command:2

$ cd my-hello
$ hg summary
parent: 1:82e55d328c8c tip
 Create a makefile
branch: default
commit: (clean)
update: (current)

At this point, we can start examining some of the history of our new repository, by continuing to TutorialHistory.


CategoryTutorial

TutorialClone (last edited 2015-10-28 15:22:27 by alishamsulqamar)