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This page documents some ways to use Mercurial. Because the software is flexible, there's no "right way", but some methods are more scalable than others. This page documents some ways to use Mercurial. Because the software is flexible, there's no "right way", but some methods are more scalable than others. These are a few tips for creating a scaleable workflow.
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 * How to write good ChangeSetComments
 * RepositoryNaming is important, because you'll probably have lots of them
First, [[Merge|merge]] often! This makes merging easier for everyone and you
find out about conflicts (which are often rooted in incompatible
design decisions) earlier.
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=== Ways to collaborate === Second, don't hesitate to use multiple trees locally. Mercurial makes
this fast and light-weight. Typical usage is to have an incoming tree,
an outgoing tree, and a separate tree for each area being worked on.

The incoming tree is best maintained as a pristine copy of the
upstream [[Repository|repository]]. This works as a cache so that you don't have to
[[Pull|pull]] multiple copies over the network. No need to check files out here
as you won't be changing them.

The outgoing tree contains all the changes you intend for merge into
upstream. Publish this tree with {{{hg serve}}} or hgweb.cgi or use
{{{hg push}}}
to [[Push|push]] it to another publicly available repository.

Then, for each feature you work on, create a new tree. [[Commit]] early
and commit often, merge with incoming regularly, and once you're
satisfied with your feature, pull the changes into your outgoing tree.

=== Other ways to collaborate ===
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|| ControlledPractice || good || medium || hierarchical development ||

=== See also ===
 * How to write good ChangeSetComments
 * RepositoryNaming is important, because you'll probably have lots of them
 * [[Clone]]
 * MultipleCommitters

----
Question: Do you know which is the one HG takes itself?

 . Answer: Quote from [[ContributingChanges]]: ''"Mercurial development process resembles the one described in KernelPractice"''

Question: What is the way to have ''commits'' go onto a backed-up drive? If my working computer is laptop with a safe `/samba` share?

 . Answer: Create a clone on this drive and push to it.
----
CategoryHowTo

Mercurial working practices

This page documents some ways to use Mercurial. Because the software is flexible, there's no "right way", but some methods are more scalable than others. These are a few tips for creating a scaleable workflow.

First, merge often! This makes merging easier for everyone and you find out about conflicts (which are often rooted in incompatible design decisions) earlier.

Second, don't hesitate to use multiple trees locally. Mercurial makes this fast and light-weight. Typical usage is to have an incoming tree, an outgoing tree, and a separate tree for each area being worked on.

The incoming tree is best maintained as a pristine copy of the upstream repository. This works as a cache so that you don't have to pull multiple copies over the network. No need to check files out here as you won't be changing them.

The outgoing tree contains all the changes you intend for merge into upstream. Publish this tree with hg serve or hgweb.cgi or use hg push to push it to another publicly available repository.

Then, for each feature you work on, create a new tree. Commit early and commit often, merge with incoming regularly, and once you're satisfied with your feature, pull the changes into your outgoing tree.

Other ways to collaborate

Name

Scalability

Overhead

Description

CvsLikePractice

poor

low

keep things simple, use a few central repositories

KernelPractice

good

medium

distributed, semi-hierarchical development

ControlledPractice

good

medium

hierarchical development

See also


Question: Do you know which is the one HG takes itself?

Question: What is the way to have commits go onto a backed-up drive? If my working computer is laptop with a safe /samba share?

  • Answer: Create a clone on this drive and push to it.


CategoryHowTo

WorkingPractices (last edited 2013-08-31 09:38:15 by rcl)