I'm working with another programmer and he keeps creating multiple heads in mercurial without knowing how it's happening. I can't seem to (remotely) debug the problem so I'm stuck wondering what could cause the automatic and silent creation of a second head.
hg merge fixes the problem but I'd like to stop this.
He's on a windows machine and I'm on linux and I activated the EolExtension.
We are using a central repo but it seems uninvolved.
These are probably happening when a commit is performed from a revision that is not the tip (or the last revision of whatever branch you're working on, if using multiple named branches). This creates anonymous branches which must be merged. It's not uncommon and doesn't mean anything's necessarily broken. If these commits from further up the branch are intentional, then you'll just have to get used to merging heads. In order to avoid creating multiple heads, perform hg pull -u before committing (though you may still need to do some merging or syncing).
Related
I have four devs working in four separate source folders in a mercurial repo. Why do they have to merge all the time and pollute the repo with merge changesets? It annoys them and it annoys me.
Is there a better way to do this?
Assuming the changes really don't conflict, you can use the rebase extension in lieu of merging.
First, put this in your .hgrc file:
[extensions]
rebase =
Now, instead of merging, just do hg rebase. It will "detach" your local changesets and move them to be descendants of the public tip. You can also pass various arguments to modify what gets rebased.
Again, this is not a good idea if your developers are going to encounter physical merge conflicts, or logical conflicts (e.g. Alice changed a feature in file A at the same time as Bob altered related functionality in file B). In those cases, you should probably use a real merge in order to properly represent the relevant history. hg rebase can be easily aborted if physical conflicts are encountered, but it's a good idea to check for logical conflicts by hand, since the extension cannot detect those automatically.
Your development team are committing little and often; this is just what you want so you don't want to change that habit for the sake of a clean line of commits.
#Kevin has described using the rebase extension and I agree that can work fine. However, you'll also see all the work sequence of each developer squished together in a single line of commits. If you're working on a stable code base and just submitting quick single-commit fixes then that may be fine - if you have ongoing lines of development then you might not won't want to lose the continuity of a developer's commits.
Another option is to split your repository into smaller self-contained repositories.
If your developers are always working in 4 separate folders, perhaps the contents of these folders can be modularised and stored as separate Mercurial repositories. You could then have a separate master repository that brought all these smaller repositories together within the sub-repository framework.
Mercurial is distributed, it means that if you have a central repository, every developer also has a private repository on his/her workstation, and also a working copy of course.
So now let's suppose that they make a change and commit it, i.e., to their private repository. When they want to hg push two things can happen:
either they are the first one to push a new changeset on the central server, then no merge will be required, or
either somebody else, starting from the same version, has committed and pushed before them. We can see that there is a fork here: from the same starting point Mercurial has two different directions, thus a merge is required, even if there is no conflict, because we do not want four different divergent contexts on the central server (which by the way is possible with Mercurial, they are called heads and you can force the push without merge, but you still have the divergence, no magic, and this is probably not what you want because you want to be able to checkout the sum of all the contributions..).
Now how to avoid performing merges is quite simple: you need to tell your developers to integrate others changes before committing their own changes:
$ hg pull
$ hg update
$ hg commit -m"..."
$ hg push
When the commit is made against the latest central version, no merge should be required.
If they where working on the same code, after pull and update some running of tests would be required as well to ensure that what was working in isolation still works when other developers work have been integrated. Taking others contributions frequently and pushing our own changes also frequently is called continuous integration and ensures that integration issues are discovered quickly.
Hope it'll help.
I'm fairly new to version control in teams. So far I've mostly used it solo.
I've read that the following workflow is recommended:
Commit locally, pull master, merge master into my branch, merge my
branch into master, push. Several times a week or even day
So that's what I tried to do. However, when I was done with my feature, and tried to push, tortoise hg told me, that this would create new remote heads.
hg help push tells me about two options:
Merge first: Did that
Use -f: I know enough not to do that.
I think I understand the concept of rebasing - which I don't think applies here, since I'm the only one who did anything in this commit tree. Of course I've pulled.
So my question is: How can I resolve this specific situation?
Also, recommendations for where to learn proper version control workflow would be nice. Everything I find tells me what the commands are, but I've failed to find clear instructions on when to use them.
I've added a picture of the project. Commit 147 was mine, and I could push it just fine. All oher commits are also made by me.
hg reports a "head" for every named branch. In your screenshot, you are needing to push rev 154, which is the head of your kjeld branch. It is an outgoing changeset because you are pushing rev 155 and you must therefore push 155's entire history as well. Others will get that branch when they pull your changes and will have a head on their version of kjeld (note that it will most likely not be numbered 154 since those numbers are repo specific). You will be fine though since that head is a close-branch changeset so it will not appear in their default list for hg heads and hg branches.
One way to avoid your current issue is to use bookmarks to temporarily note what that head represents e.g. issue-45, big-feature-2, etc. and only push when merged into mainline development.
For us, we set up a "private" repo for each dev on the server where they store/backup work in progress. It is expected that there are multiple heads, dead branches, and other gunk in these "private" repos. The dev repo, however, only ever has a single head and must pass the build and build tests.
In response to your comment about your "private" branch: When you push your tip you will also push your branch named kjeld. Others who want to work on that code must pull it to get the tip of your development. It will not be a "private" branch.
I made some changes to a file and committed it. (In fact there were several commits).
Then I wanted to revert to the earlier version and lose all those changes.
I did something like:
hg update -r nnn where nnn was the reversion number of the changeset I wanted to go back to.
That worked. I was happy.
Then, later, I had to push my local repository to the remote. But when I did hg push I got a message about there being two heads on this branch and one of them not being known to the remote repositiory. It suggested I merge before pushing. (I think).
I googled this and found a page that suggested I do "hg merge". I did that. Now the resultant file is back to where I started. I.e. it contains all the changes I wanted to throw away.
Where did i go wrong?
EDIT:
I have found this post Mercurial — revert back to old version and continue from there
where it says:
If later you commit, you will effectively create a new branch. Then
you might continue working only on this branch or eventually merge the
existing one into it.
That sounds like my case. Something went wrong at the merging stage it seems. Was I on the wrong branch when I did "hg merge"?
You're past this point now but if it happens again, and it's just a single file you want to revert then consider:
hg revert --rev REVISION_YOU_LIKED path/to/just/one/file.txt
That doesn't update you whole repository to a different revision, and it doesn't create any commits. It just takes a single file in your working directory and makes it look like it used to. After doing that you can just commit and you're set.
That's not the way to go if you want to undo all the changes you've made to all files, but for reverting a single file use revert and avoid multiple heads and merging entirely.
No, nothing went wrong at the merge stage – Mercurial did exactly what you asked it to...
What merge means is that you take the changes on your current branch, and the changes on the 'other' branch, and you merge them. Since your original changes were in the 'other' branch, Mercurial carefully merged them back into your current branch.
What you needed to do was to discard the 'other' branch. There are various ways of doing that. The Mercurial help pages discuss the various techniques, but there are pointers in other SO questions: see for example Discard a local branch in Mercurial before it is pushed and Remove experimental branch.
(Edit) Afterthought: the reason you got a warning about there being two heads on the branch is because having two heads is often a temporary situation, so pushing them to a remote repository is something you don't want to do accidentally. Resolutions are (i) you did mean to push them, so use --force to create two heads in the remote repository; (ii) ooops!, you meant to merge them before pushing, so do that; or (iii) ooops!, you'd abandoned the 'other' one, so get rid of it. Your case was (iii).
I'm looking for a simple way to pull in additional commits after rebasing or a good reason to tell someone not to rebase.
Essentially we have a project, crons. I make changes to this frequently, and the maintainer of the project pulls in changes when I request it and rebases every time.
This is usually okay, but it can lead to problems in two scenarios:
Releasing from two branches simultaneously
Having to release an additional commit afterwards.
For example, I commit revision 1000. Maintainer pulls and rebases to create revision 1000', but at around the same time I realize a horrible mistake and create revision 1001 (child of 1000). Since 1000 doesn't exist in the target branch, this creates an unusable merge, and the maintainer usually laughs at me and tells me to try again (which requires me getting a fresh checkout of the main branch at 1000' and creating and importing a patch manually from the other checkout). I'm sure you can see how the same problem could occur with me trying to release from two separate branches simultaneously as well.
Anyway, once the main branch has 1000', is there anything that can be done to pull in 1001 without having to merge the same changes again? Or does rebasing ruin this? Regardless is there anything I can say to get Maintainer to stop rebasing? Is he using it incorrectly?
Tell your maintainer to stop being a jacka**.
Rebasing is something that should only be done by you, the one that created the changesets you want to rebase, and not done to changesets that are:
already shared with someone else
gotten from someone else
Your maintainer probably wants a non-distributed version control system, like Subversion, where changesets follows a straight line, instead of the branchy nature of a DVCS. In that respect, the choice of Mercurial is wrong, or the usage of Mercurial is wrong.
Also note that rebasing is one way of changing history, and since Mercurial discourages that (changing history), rebasing is only available as an extension, not available "out of the box" of a vanilla Mercurial configuration.
So to answer your question: No, since your maintainer insists on breaking the nature of a DVCS, the tools will fight against you (and him), and you're going to have a hard time getting the tools to cooperate with you.
Tell your maintainer to embrace how a DVCS really works. Now, he may still insist on not accepting new branches or heads in his repository, and insist on you pulling and merging before pushing back a single head to his repository, but that's OK.
Rebasing shared changesets, however, is not.
If you really want to use rebasing, the correct way to do it is like this:
You pull the latest changes from some source repository
You commit a lot of changesets locally, fixing bugs, adding new features, whatnot
You then try to push, gets told that this will create new heads in the target repository. This tells you that there are new changesets in the target repository that you did not get when you last pulled, because they have been added after that
Instead, you pull, this will add a new head in your local repository. Now you have the head that was created from your new changesets, and the head that was retrieved from the source repository created by others.
You then rebase your changesets on top of the ones you got from the source repository, in essence moving your changesets in the history to appear that you started your work from the latest changeset in the current source repository
You then attempt a new push, succeeding
The end result is that the target repository, and your own repository, will have a more linear changeset history, instead of a branch and then a merge.
However, since multiple branches is perfectly fine in a DVCS, you don't have to go through all of this. You can just merge, and continue working. This is how a DVCS is supposed to work. Rebasing is just an extra tool you can use if you really want to.
I have accidentally pushed a branch to a repo. Is there anyway I could alter the repo ( and remove the branch )? Closing it is not a solution.
You got a couple of options, none of them easy, and none of them will leave you with a "phew, saved by the bell" feeling afterwards.
The only real way to fix this problem is to try to avoid it in the first place.
Having said that, let's explore the options here:
Eradicate the changesets
Introduce further changesets that "undo" the changes
The first option, to eradicate the changesets, is hard. Since you pushed the changesets to your central repository, you need direct access to the repositories on that server.
If this is a server where you don't have direct access to the repositories, only through a web interface, or through push/pull/clone, then your option is to hope that the web interface have methods for eradicating those changesets, otherwise go to option 2.
In order to get rid of the changesets, you can either make a new clone of the repository with the changesets, and specify options that stop just shy of introducing the changesets you want to get rid of, or you can use the MQ extension and strip the offending changesets out.
Either is good, but personally I like the clone option.
However, this option hinges on the fact that any and all developers that are using the central repository either:
Have not already pulled the offending changesets from the central repository.
Or are prepared to get rid of said changesets locally as well.
For instance, you could instruct all your developers to kill their local clones, and reclone a fresh copy after you have stripped away the changesets in the central repository.
Here's the important part:
If you cannot get all developers to help with this, you should drop this line of thought and go to option 2 instead
Why? Because now you have two problems:
You need to introduce barriers that ensure no developers can push the same changesets onto the server again, after you got rid of them. Note that relying on the warning by the server to prevent new branches being pushed is perhaps not good enough, as developers might have branches of their own they want to push, and thus not notice that they'll be pushing yours as well.
Any work any developer has done based on any of the offending changesets must either be rebased to a new place, or eradicated as well.
In short, this will give you lots of extra work. I would not do this unless the offending changesets were super-critial to get rid of.
Option 2, on the other hand, comes with its own problems, but is a bit easier to carry out.
Basically you use the hg backout command to introduce a new changeset that reverses the modifications done by the offending changesets, and commit and push that.
The problem here is that if at some point you really want to introduce those changesets, you will have to fight a bit with Mercurial in order to get the merges right.
However, there will be no more work for your fellow developers. The next time they pull, they'll get your correction changeset as well.
Let me just restate this option in different words:
Instead of getting rid of the changesets, keep them, but introduce another changeset that reverses the changes.
Neither option is good, both will generate some extra work.
We've ran into a similar problem once, when we had to remove a branch from the server repo from which all devs regularly pull. Backout wasn't an option because the problematic branch had already been pulled by everyone.
We stripped (hg strip from the MQ extension) the branch in the server repo. From now on, if a developer tried to push, he had a message “push creates new remote branches”, even though they didn't actually created any. We created a batch file with the strip command, distributed it among the devs and explained the “new remote branches” is a signal to run the batch file.
This approach takes some time and effort before everybody gets rid of the branch, but it works.
If the 'backout' option described in Jason's comment above doesn't do it for you, you can remake the repo up until the point of your mistaken push using hg convert, which (despite its name) also works with hg.
eg hg convert -r before-mistaken-push /path/to/original /path/to/new
You might have to play with the usebranchnames and clonebranches settings.