diff -r f47ed78ab17b -r 67b59d1657cf docs/user-guide.rst --- a/docs/user-guide.rst Tue Jul 25 15:17:17 2017 +0200 +++ b/docs/user-guide.rst Wed Sep 27 01:07:22 2017 +0200 @@ -26,17 +26,17 @@ (``rebase``, ``histedit``, etc.), and also by the ``evolve`` extension. Specifically, ``evolve`` adds a number of commands that can be used to modify history: ``amend``, ``uncommit``, ``prune``, -``fold``, and ``evolve``. Generally speaking, changesets remain in -*draft* phase until they are pushed to another repository, at which -point they enter *public* phase. :: +``fold``, and ``evolve``. :: $ hg commit -m 'implement feature X' $ hg phase -r . 1: draft -(Strictly speaking, changesets only become public when they are pushed -to a *publishing* repository. But all repositories are publishing by -default; you have to explicitly configure repositories to be +Generally speaking, changesets remain in *draft* phase until they are +pushed to another repository, at which point they enter the *public* +phase. (Strictly speaking, changesets only become public when they are +pushed to a *publishing* repository. But all repositories are publishing +by default; you have to explicitly configure repositories to be *non-publishing*. Non-publishing repositories are an advanced topic which we'll see when we get to `sharing mutable history`_.) @@ -60,7 +60,8 @@ to create a new, amended changeset. The drawback of doing this with vanilla Mercurial is that your original, flawed, changeset is removed from the repository. This is *unsafe* history editing. It's probably -not too serious if all you did was fix a syntax error, but still. +not too serious if all you did was fix a syntax error, but for deeper +changes there can be more serious consequences to unsafe history editing. .. figure:: figures/figure-ug01.svg @@ -70,8 +71,9 @@ (Incidentally, Mercurial's traditional history modification mechanism isn't *really* unsafe: any changeset(s) removed from the repository are kept in a backup directory, so you can manually restore them later -if you change your mind. But it's awkward and inconvenient compared to -the features provided by ``evolve`` and changeset obsolescence.) +if you change your mind. However, this mechanism is very awkward and +inconvenient compared to the features provided by ``evolve`` and +changeset obsolescence.) Life with ``evolve`` (basic usage) ---------------------------------- @@ -99,7 +101,7 @@ pass ``-m`` or ``-l``.) Under the hood, though, things are quite different. Mercurial has -simply marked the old changeset *obsolete*, replacing it with a new +simply marked the old changeset as *obsolete*, replacing it with a new one. We'll explore what this means in detail later, after working through a few more examples. @@ -192,7 +194,7 @@ and fold them:: - $ hg fold -m 'fix bug 64' -r 7:: + $ hg fold -m 'fix bug 64' -r 7:: --exact 3 changesets folded 1 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved @@ -214,7 +216,7 @@ When you have the ``evolve`` extension enabled, all history modification uses the same underlying mechanism: the original changesets are marked *obsolete* and replaced by zero or more -*successors*. The obsolete changesets are the *precursors* of their +*successors*. The obsolete changesets are the *predecessors* of their successors. This applies equally to built-in commands (``commit --amend``), commands added by ``evolve`` (``amend``, ``prune``, ``uncommit``, ``fold``), and commands provided by other extensions @@ -232,7 +234,7 @@ Consider Example 2, amending a changeset with ``evolve``. We saw above that you can do this using the exact same command-line syntax as core Mercurial, namely ``hg commit --amend``. But the implementation is -quite different, and Figure 2 shows how. +quite different, as Figure 2 shows. .. figure:: figures/figure-ug02.svg @@ -243,8 +245,8 @@ versions of Mercurial will not create them.) In this case, the obsolete changesets are also *hidden*. That is the -usual end state for obsolete changesets. But many scenarios result in -obsolete changesets that are still visible, which indicates your +usual end state for obsolete changesets. However, many scenarios result +in obsolete changesets that are still visible, which indicates your history modification work is not yet done. We'll see examples of that later, when we cover advanced usage. @@ -287,7 +289,7 @@ ``prune`` (example 4 above) is the simplest history modification command provided by ``evolve``. All it does is mark the specified changeset(s) obsolete, with no successor/precursor relationships -involved. (If the working directory parent was one of the obsolete +involved. (If the working directory parent was one of the obsoleted changesets, ``prune`` updates back to a suitable ancestor.) .. figure:: figures/figure-ug03.svg @@ -299,11 +301,8 @@ In one sense, ``uncommit`` is a simplified version of ``amend``. Like ``amend``, it obsoletes one changeset and leaves it with a single -successor. Unlike ``amend``, there is no ugly "temporary amend commit" -cluttering up the repository. - -In another sense, ``uncommit`` is the inverse of ``amend``: ``amend`` -takes any uncommitted changes in the working dir and “adds” +successor. In another sense, ``uncommit`` is the inverse of ``amend``: +``amend`` takes any uncommitted changes in the working dir and “adds” them to the working directory's parent changeset. (In reality, of course, it creates a successor changeset, marking the original obsolete.) In contrast, ``uncommit`` takes some changes in the working @@ -341,8 +340,9 @@ changesets. Note that all hidden changesets are obsolete: hidden is a subset of -obsolete. +obsolete. This is explained in more depth in the `concepts`_ section. +.. _`concepts`: concepts.html Life with ``evolve`` (advanced usage) ------------------------------------- @@ -353,12 +353,12 @@ which is an unavoidable consequence of obsolescence. What really sets ``evolve`` apart from other history modification mechanisms is the fact that it recognizes troubles like unstable changesets and provides -a consistent way for you to get out of trouble. +a consistent way for you to get back to a stable repository. -(Incidentally, there are two other types of trouble that changesets -can get into with ``evolve``: they may be *divergent* or *bumped*. -Both of those states are more likely to occur when `sharing mutable -history`_, so we won't see them in this user guide.) +(Incidentally, there are two other types of troubles that changesets +can get into with ``evolve``: they may be *divergent* or +*bumped*. Both of those states are more likely to occur when +`sharing mutable history`_, so we won't cover them in this user guide.) .. _`sharing mutable history`: sharing.html @@ -366,8 +366,8 @@ Example 7: Amend an older changeset =================================== -Sometimes you don't notice your mistakes until after you have -committed new changesets on top of them. :: +Sometimes you don't notice a mistake until after you have committed +new changesets on top of the changeset with the mistake. :: $ hg commit -m 'fix bug 17' # rev 11 (mistake here) $ hg commit -m 'cleanup' # rev 12 @@ -402,10 +402,10 @@ descendants are *unstable*. The temporary amend commit, revision 14, is hidden because it has no non-obsolete descendants. -All non-obsolete descendants of an obsolete changeset are unstable. An -interesting consequence of this is that revision 11 is still visible, -even though it is obsolete. Obsolete changesets with non-obsolete -descendants are not hidden. +All non-obsolete descendants of an obsolete changeset are considered +unstable. An interesting consequence of this is that revision 11 is +still visible, even though it is obsolete. Obsolete changesets with +non-obsolete descendants are not hidden. The fix is to *evolve* history:: @@ -415,9 +415,8 @@ because there might be conflicts. If your amended changeset modifies a file that one of its descendants also modified, Mercurial has to fire up your merge tool to resolve the conflict. More importantly, you have -to switch contexts from "writing code" to "resolving conflicts". That -can be an expensive context switch, so Mercurial lets you decide when -to do it. +to switch from "writing code" to "resolving conflicts". That can be an +expensive context switch, so Mercurial lets you decide when to do it. The end state, after ``evolve`` finishes, is that the original revisions (11-13) are obsolete and hidden. Their successor revisions @@ -491,7 +490,7 @@ M file2.c Now your repository has unstable changesets, so you need to evolve it. -But ``hg evolve`` requires a clean working directory to resolve merge +However, ``hg evolve`` requires a clean working directory to resolve merge conflicts, so you need to decide what to do with ``file2.c``. In this case, the change to ``file2.c`` was a temporary debugging @@ -525,12 +524,12 @@ $ hg commit -u dan -d '12 0' -m 'new feature' # rev 27 (fine) As before, we update back to the flawed changeset (this time, -revision 26) and ``uncommit``, leaving uncommitted changes to +revision 26) and use ``uncommit``, leaving uncommitted changes to ``file2.c`` in the working dir:: $ hg update -q 26 1 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved - $ hg uncommit -q file2.c # obsoletes rev 26, creates rev 28 + $ hg uncommit -q file2.c # obsoletes rev 26, creates rev 28 1 new unstable changesets $ hg status M file2.c @@ -541,8 +540,8 @@ Figure 11 shows the story so far: ``uncommit`` obsoleted revision 26 and created revision 28, the successor of 26. Then we committed -revision 29, a child of 28. We still have to deal with the unstable -revision 27. +revision 29, a child of 28. We still have to deal with the revision 27, +which is an unstable changeset. .. figure:: figures/figure-ug11.svg @@ -594,7 +593,7 @@ The current implementation of ``hg touch`` is not ideal, and is likely to change in the future. Consider the history in Figure 12, where revision 27 is obsolete and the child of 26, also obsolete. If we ``hg touch 27``, that -creates a new revision which is a non-obsolete child of 26—i.e., it is +creates a new revision which is a non-obsolete child of 26—i.e., it is an unstable. It's also *divergent*, another type of trouble that we'll learn about in the `next section`_.