I have a repository which will be cloned.
I go to directory of the repository and type the following command to get the branches.
hg branches
As the reuslt I get the
blank 0:4d82003d3fc7
And also I get the size of the repository using
du -sh ./
It prints
312M ./
This repository containes the following.
ls -a
. .. dummy .hg .hglf
Now when I clone it using this command
hg clone /path/libname -r blank
I get the new repository, the size of which is only 52 kbts and it containes
. .. dummy .hg .hglf
I also clone it without -r blank option
hg clone /path/libname
And get the same result. I suppose if repository have 312M size, the cloned repository also should have a comparable size. Where is a problem ?
The original repository has a '.hglf' file. This indicates that (most likely) it uses 'largefiles'. Largefiles are stored on the server, and are only downloaded for a specific revision if you update to that revision. There are a few possibilities:
You are not on a revision that uses largefiles. Update to one that does and you'll see a larger size.
You don't have the 'largefiles extension' enabled. Enable it and try to clone again, you should see a difference. To enable largefiles, add to your .hgrc:
[extensions]
largefiles =
Starting with Mercurial 3.4 (not yet released as of this writing), the largefiles extension will be enabled automatically when cloning a repository with largefiles.
Related
I have read only permission to an hg repo and am trying to develop and test changes to it locally. The problem is that I am in the middle of changing dev machines and am caught in a weird/akward state across the two machines.
On my old machine I made lots of changes to the repo, locslly. I just cloned the repo on my new machine, but obviously that doesn't contain the changes from my old machine. I need a way to createe a patch/diff from my local working copy on my old machine, and then apply them to my local working copy on my new machine. The problem is that I already commited (hg commit -m "Blah") the changes on my old machine to the distributed repo on it.
What set of specific commands can I use to create a patch/diff of my old machine and then apply it to the repo on my new one?
Update
I commited all changes on my old machine and then ran hg serve, exposing http://mymachine.example.com:8000.
On my new machine, where I had made some different changes (locally) than the changes from my old machine, I ran hg pull http://mymachine.example.com:8000 and got:
myuser#mymachine:~/sandbox/eclipse/workspace/myapp$ hg pull http://mymachine.example.com:8000
pulling from http://mymachine.example.com:8000/
searching for changes
adding changesets
adding manifests
adding file changes
added 2 changesets with 16 changes to 10 files (+1 heads)
(run 'hg heads' to see heads, 'hg merge' to merge)
So I run hg merge:
myuser#mymachine:~/sandbox/eclipse/workspace/myapp$ hg merge
abort: uncommitted changes
(use 'hg status' to list changes)
What do I do now?!?
You can use:
$ hg diff > changes.patch
To create a patch file, then:
$ patch -p1 < changes.patch
To apply that patch file on your new machine.
Well, that's actually fantastic, mercurial is a distributed version control system and you do not need to go via any patch file at all: simply pull the changes from your old machine to your new machine:
hg pull URL
where URL can be any network URL or also ssh-login, e.g.
hg pull ssh://mylogin#old.maschine.box or hg pull path/to/old/repository/on/nfs/mount
`
Alternatively you can also use bundle and unbundle. They create bundles which can be imported in the new mercurial easily and keep all meta-information.
hg bundle -r XXX --base YYY > FILENAME
where YYY is a revision you know you have in your new repository. You import it into your new repo with hg unbundle FILENAME. Of course you can bundle several changesets at once by repeating the -r argument or giving a changeset range like -r X:Y.
The least comfortable method is a via diff or export:
hg export -r XXX > FILENAME or equivalent hg diff -c XXX > FILENAME where you need to import the result with patch -p1 < FILENAME or hg import FILENAME.
The easiest way is to do this is to ensure that all work on your old machine is committed. Then use this command on it from the base of your repo:
hg serve
which creates a simple http server on this repo. The monitor should state the name of the http URL it is serving.
On your new machine, just pull from that URL.
Once you've pulled your old changes you can stop the hg serve process with ^C.
The advantages of this method are that it is very quick, and that it works on just about any system. The ssh method is also quick, but it won't work unless your system is configured to use ssh.
Answer to Update
The OPs update is asking an orthogonal question about how to merge changes pulled from a server with local changes. If you haven't already done so, try to digest the information in this merge doc and this one.
Merging is for merging changesets. The error is happening because you have local changes that haven't been committed which mercurial can't merge. So the first thing to do is to commit your local changes, then you will be able to merge.
But before you merge, I strongly recommend that you are merging what you think you are merging. Either ensure there are only 2 heads, or specify which head you are merging with. When merging, you have to be at one of the heads you wish to merge; it's usually better to be at the head with the most changes since the common ancestor because the diffs are simpler.
After you've merged, don't forget to commit the merge. :-)
I deleted one of the files that was in my repository locally (just at the file system level, not using hg remove). I now want to get that file back from the repository to my local directory. When I do hg status, it knows that the file is locally deleted, but there are no changes to be commited which is what I would expect.
$ hg revert your-file
will restore it.
Edit: see http://www.selenic.com/mercurial/hg.1.html#revert
The following will revert all deleted files in the current repo:
hg status -nd0|xargs -0 hg revert
cd to your dir and do "hg revert ." to restore all files or used any appropriate mask like *.java, etc.. This will effect only the current dir (not sure about subdirs).
Following is the scenario: I have a remote Mercurial repository at ssh://remotehost//dir/repo and I am able to clone it to a local host "pandora" in directory /home/user/localrepo/.
Now, I have a superset of this remote repository, where I add my own testing framework, but do not want to merge to the main depot until I am certain it works. So I clone this "local" repo to /home/user/workingdir/ but when I issue the command to do so
$ hg clone /home/user/localrepo/
only the repository folder gets copied none of the files get copied.
I'm not sure what you mean when you say that "only the repo folders gets copied". So there's two things you can try :
Try to do a hg update in your new clone.
List the directory in /home/user/workingdir and if there is a directory name localrepo in it, this is actually your repository. To clone in the current directory, you must do hg clone /home/user/localrepo .
This sounds odd but try a few things:
First in the local repo that you cloned from do a
hg status -A
are all the files that you think should be in there in there? If not are you at the tip of the repo.
You can see what revision you are at with
hg parent
If you want to just go to the tip do hg update
If there still aren't any files listed in the repo do the same to check the one on the server.
If there aren't any files on the server you will need to add all of the files you want mercurial to track, mercurial doesn't automagically start tracking files in the repo location.
(Use hg add --all to add all of the file in the entire directory tree under the repo location.)
If there are files in the local repo, check the testing area and make sure that it is on the proper changeset.
I am familiar with TFS and Vault, but having just started using Mercurial I seem to be getting into a bit of a mess.
Heres what I (think) I've done:
-Created a central repository on bitbucket.org
-On my desktop PC, cloned repository from bitbucket, added files, commit them, push them to bitbucket
-On my laptop, cloned repository from bitbucket, pulled files, added more files, commit them, push them to bitbucket
I've continued to add, edit etc on the different computers.
Now I've noticed that some files from each computer are not in the bitbucket repository, and therefore only in the local repository. No amount of pulling and pushing seems to get it into the bitbucket repository.
What is the most likely thing I've done wrong?
Is there a way to 'force' by changes up to the bitbucket repository?
Did they get into your local repository? I suspect not, i.e. they were new files that were not added to the commit. Use hg add to add them to the changeset before committing or whatever the equivalent is for whatever mercurial interface you're using.
Edit:
Here's the help from Mercurial:
C:\Users\Bert>hg add --help
hg add [OPTION]... [FILE]...
add the specified files on the next commit
Schedule files to be version controlled and added to the repository.
The files will be added to the repository at the next commit. To undo an
add before that, see "hg forget".
If no names are given, add all files to the repository.
...
See Mercurial: The Definitive Guide (a.k.a. the hg "red book") for more info:
http://hgbook.red-bean.com/read/mercurial-in-daily-use.html
Telling Mercurial which files to track
Mercurial does not work with files in your repository unless you tell it to manage them. The hg status command will tell you which files Mercurial doesn't know about; it uses a “?” to display such files.
To tell Mercurial to track a file, use the hg add command. Once you have added a file, the entry in the output of hg status for that file changes from “?” to “A”.
$ hg init add-example
$ cd add-example
$ echo a > myfile.txt
$ hg status
? myfile.txt
$ hg add myfile.txt
$ hg status
A myfile.txt
$ hg commit -m 'Added one file'
$ hg status
use "hg -v help add" to show global options
I have come across a problem that I "think" can only be resolved using patches.
I cloned a project from our main repository, made quite a few changes (updates, deletion of files & directory and additions) to it. These changes are not even committed. The problem is, project from the main repository has been deleted/removed and recreated as a new project (name is same, all the directory structures everything is same as before). I cloned that project again from the main repository and would like to transfer all my uncommitted changes to it.
I am still exploring the hg patch to resolve that. It would be helpful if someone could confirm that creating and adding a patch IS the right approach to this, any resources explaining the process would be of great help.
You're correct — a patch is what you need to transfer the information from one repository to another (unrelated) repository. This will work since the files are the same, as you note.
So, to transfer your uncommitted changes from your old clone, you do
$ hg diff -g > uncommited.patch
$ cd ../new
$ hg import --no-commit ../old/uncomitted.patch
That will restore the information saved in the patch. This includes information about files that are added or renamed in the old clone.
The following steps can be performed with a standard Mercurial install:
Commit the changes in your local repository. Note the revision number.
Use "hg export -r REV >patch.diff" to create a patch.
Clone the new repository.
Use "hg import patch.diff" to apply the patch to the new repository.
Example
C:\>hg init example
C:\>cd example
C:\example>echo >file1
C:\example>hg ci -Am file1
adding file1
C:\example>hg clone . ..\example2
updating to branch default
1 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved
C:\example>rd /s/q .hg
C:\example>hg init
C:\example>hg ci -Am same-but-different
adding file1
At this point example and example2 have identical contents, but the repositories are unrelated to each other due to deleting and reinitializing the .hg folder.
Now make some changes and commit them in one of the repositories, then export them as a patch:
C:\example>echo >>file1
C:\example>echo >file2
C:\example>hg ci -Am changes
adding file2
C:\example>hg export -r 1 >patch.diff
Below shows that the other repository can't pull the changes, because of the reinitialization. It can, however, apply the patch successfully:
C:\example>cd ..\example2
C:\example2>hg pull
pulling from c:\example
searching for changes
abort: repository is unrelated
C:\example2>hg import ..\example\patch.diff
applying ..\example\patch.diff
I would first make copies of everything so you have a way of backtracking.
Then, in the working copy with the changes, I would first delete the .hg directory, then copy in the .hg directory from the new repo. This basically transfers all of the changed files into the new repo without the need to delete any files and directories.
You will still need to tell the repo about whether to remove any files marked as missing. You will also have to handle renames manually. If this is a small number of operations, it's easier than trying to use the patch method.
Once this is done, commit your changes and push, if necessary.
seems like what you want is patch queues. In that you have uncommitted changes, and you want to pull from the new repo before committing them....
$ hg qinit -c # initialize mq for your repo containing the uncommitted changes
$ hg qnew name_of_patch # create patch that contains your uncommitted changes
$ hg qpop # resets your working dir back to the parent changeset
no worries though, your changes are safe and sound in .hg/patches/name_of_patch to see for yourself.....
$ cat .hg/patches/name_of_patch
now pull in the new repo
$ hg pull -u http://location.of.new/repo # pull in changes from new repo update working dir
$ hg qpush # apply your uncommitted changes to new repo
If you are lucky you will have no merge conflicts and you can go ahead and commit the patch by....
$ hg qfinish -a # change all applied patches to changeset
And then if you want....
$ hg push http://location.of.new/repo
If the repos are unrelated, just init a patch repo on your new repo. and manually copy the patch in and add it to .hg/patches/series file.
assuming patch was created. clone new repo
$ hg clone http://location.of.new/repo ./new_repo
init patch repo
$ cd ./new_repo && hg qinit -c
copy patch
$ cp ../old_repo/.hg/patches/name_of_patch .hg/patches/
edit series file using an editor of some sort
$ your_favorite_editor .hg/patches/series
name_of_patch # <---put this in the series file
apply your patch to new repo
$ hg qpush
if no merge conflicts and you are convinced it works
$ hg qfinish -a
If the layout is the same, you can just copy all the files over (excluding .hg) and then use hg addrem.
Try to look into the MQ plugin, it does exactly this if I recall. I've never had a use for that though, so I can't say.
If the old repository was simply moved/cloned to a new URL then you could simply change the remote repository you talk to the new one.
If, however, it was recreated from the ground up (even with the same structure) then I don't believe Mercurial has any built-in functionality to help you here. Mercurial patches reference specific changesets which won't exist in your new repository.
You could use a merge tool to perform the diff and bring across any changes you made.
Edited To answer the question in the comment:
When you clone the repository you are taking a complete snapshot of the entire change history - along with the associated change-set IDs, etc.
Mercurial tracks changes by change-sets to the repository, rather than at the file level like Subversion.
If you clone, then you can easily push/merge into another repository that was also cloned from the same source.
If you recreated the repository then the change IDs won't match, and can't be merged in Hg.
The only option in this scenario would be to use a Merge tool which will let you see mismatches in files/folder structure.
Also: Worth pointing out http://hginit.com/ because it explains (indirectly) some of this.