stack: order the adjective of changeset
The new order give more interesting result:
* base current
* base unstable
* current unstable
It seems more harmonious this way. Base seems the most core and immutable
adjective describing the element. Then current is a volatile but important one.
Finally, unstable is less information than current, so it goes last.
=============================
Mutable History For Mercurial
=============================
Evolve Extension
=================
This package supplies the ``evolve`` extension for Mercurial,
**The full implementation of the changeset evolution concept is still in
progress.** Please subscribe to the `evolve-testers mailing list
<https://www.mercurial-scm.org/mailman/listinfo/evolve-testers>`_ to stay up to
date with changes.
This extension:
* enables the “changeset evolution” feature of Mercurial core,
* provides a set of commands to mutate your history,
* issues several warning messages when troubles from some mutable appears in
your repository,
* provides an ``hg evolve`` command to deal with such "troubles",
* improves performance of obsolescence marker exchanges and discovery during
push and pull.
Documentation
-------------
We recommend reading the documentation first. An online version is
available here:
https://www.mercurial-scm.org/doc/evolution/
How to Install
==============
Using Pip
---------
You can install the latest evolution version usin pip::
$ pip install --user hg-evolve
Then just enable it in you hgrc::
$ hg config --edit # adds the two line below:
[extensions]
evolve =
From Source
-----------
To install a local version from source::
$ hg clone https://www.mercurial-scm.org/repo/evolve/
$ cd evolve
$ pip install --user .
Then just enable it in you hgrc::
$ hg config --edit # adds the two line below:
[extensions]
evolve =
Documentation lives in ``doc/``.
Server Only Setup
=================
It is possible to enable a smaller subset of the extensions aimed at server
serving repository. It skips the additions of the new commands and local UI
messages that might add performance overheads. To use the server only
extension, install the package and use::
$ hg config --edit # adds the two line below:
[extensions]
evolve.serveronly =
How to Contribute
=================
Bugs are to be reported on the mercurial's bug tracker (component: `evolution`_):
.. _evolution: https://bz.mercurial-scm.org/buglist.cgi?component=evolution&query_format=advanced&resolution=---
Please use the patchbomb extension to send email to `mercurial devel
<https://www.mercurial-scm.org/mailman/listinfo/mercurial-devel>`_. Please make
sure to use the evolve-ext flag when doing so. You can use a command like
this::
$ hg email --to mercurial-devel@mercurial-scm.org --flag evolve-ext --rev '<your patches>'
For guidelines on the patch description, see the `official Mercurial guideline`_.
.. _`official Mercurial guideline`: https://mercurial-scm.org/wiki/ContributingChanges#Patch_descriptions
Please don't forget to update and run the tests when you fix a bug or
add a feature. To run the tests, you need a working copy of Mercurial,
say in $HGSRC::
$ cd tests
$ python $HGSRC/tests/run-tests.py
Branch policy
-------------
The evolve test are highly impacted by changes in core. To deal with this, we use named branches.
There are two main branches: "stable" and "default". Tests on these branch are
supposed to pass with the corresponding "default" and "stable" branch from core
Mercurial. The documentation is built from the tip of stable.
In addition, we have compatibility branches to check tests on older version of
Mercurial. They are the "mercurial-x.y" branches. They are used to apply
expected test change only, no code change should happen there.