Difference between revisions of "Mercurial"From Globulation2
Revision as of 15:28, 21 August 2010
ContentsBrowsing the Project RepositoryAt http://hg.globulation2.org/ you can browse through the repository. Tools
Getting a Copy of the Mercurial RepositoryNo matter if you want to contribute with write access or just want to get a read only copy of glob2, you should cd to a directory where you have write permissions and run hg clone: cd ~/my_hg_repositories hg clone http://hg.globulation2.org/glob2-new glob2 cd glob2 The same can be achieved using HGE or tortoise-HG. Which revision to useHaving cloned the repository you now have all the history of glob2 at hands. According to your intents you now might want to choose different revisions to jump to and start working on them. Pick from the subsections what most fits your intents: The playerIf you want to play against others you need the same major version of glob2 as they have. If they have betaX.4 you should pick some betaX version. You get the latest version in the betaX release candidate branch using the tip of betaX-rc. To get there issue hg update betaX-rc In rare occasions this version might not work. To get a version that was tagged for being released, check the output of hg tags for lines matching betaX.y and update to the highest y: hg update betaX.y The testerIf you want to test the latest not yet released version of glob2 you should update to the tip of the latest release candidate (-rc) branch: hg update betaY-rc or if a feature freeze was not yet decided on, you can also test the latest version of the default branch: hg update default The bug fixerYou might have started as a tester but now want to actually touch code. Now it is getting slightly more complicated. Having found a bug and a solution to it means applying the fix to the right revision. As bugs often are not only bugs of not yet released features but also express in years old versions you should fix the oldest relevant version. If on the download page beta4 is still promoted, you should fix this and merge your changes up to beta5 and finally to default. In hg this is pretty easy to do: hg update beta4-rc do your changes to the code .... hg commit -m"fixed bug xy ..." hg update beta5-rc hg merge beta4-rc hg commit -m"merge" hg update default hg merge beta5-rc hg commit -m"merge" Depending on how important the bug-fix was you might now want to directly tag the new versions: hg tag beta4-rc beta4.X hg tag beta5-rc beta5.Y The mini-features guyIf you have a new small feature to contribute, you do this in "default": hg update default do your changes to the code ... hg commit -m"implemented mini-feature xy" The big-features guyIf you have a new big feature to contribute, you do this in a separate branch starting at "default": hg update default hg branch fooFeature work on your feature with a series of change code hg commit -m"changed this and that" but while you work on your feature don't miss to get in sync with the changing "default" by doing as follows: hg pull hg merge -r default hg commit -m"merge" once your feature is ready to be used in the game just like other features, merge it into default: hg update default hg merge fooFeature hg commit -m"merged" Publishing chanesAll the above was read only from the point of view of the main glob2-repository. If you have changes worth sharing you must make them public. Easiest is to pick one of the free mercurial hosters. Member access is performed using the Mercurial over HTTPS method. Access can be given by providing User:Nct with a username and password by emailing him at stephane [at] magnenat [dot] net. When you have commited changes locally (hg commit --message="what you have changed"), you can push the changes to the server using: hg push -r branch https://hg.globulation2.org/glob2-new/ (change "-r branch" to the branch you wish to commit to, for example "-r default") Mercurial NewbiesIf you've never used Mercurial, you should read some documentation about it; a useful URL is http://www.selenic.com/mercurial/wiki/index.cgi/QuickStart. Using Mercurial is not complex but you have to understand what is going on. The best way to start is to ask a friend to show you the way, or pop onto the glob2 development IRC channel and ask there. A quick overview of MercurialBasically you have to know that there is not total order on a mercurial repository. Each revision except the initial revision has at least one parent. Different revisions can have the same parent(s). A revision will have more than one parent, if and only if it is a merge of those parents. If two or more revisions share a parent, we have infact different branches in the repository. The new mercurial feature allows to give a revision a sticky tag that is past to almost all its children. Exeptions are merges. If you merge branch A into branch B, this revision will belong to branch B. So when you merge the default branch into a development branch, the result will belong to the development branch. This is good because you can keep track of approved changes, during your development now and then.
Branches might have names, unless you give them a name.Their names don't have to be unique but it is strengthy recommended to don't use an already given name branch to another. So multiple branches were supported all the time. The new feature just allows to name them. You can put the branchname everywhere you can put a revision number. So all commands that have '-r' or '-rev' option accept a branchname too. Mercurial will then search the latest revision in that branch and path its number to the command. (At least that's what I think it does.)
If every branch (named or not) has the same "latest revision", our repository will have exactly 1 head. Otherwise we will have more heads and mercurial will suppose that we merge the heads. But most of the time this would be inappropriate, and we shouldn't do it. The latest revision is always called tip, and mercurial defaults to think that we want to work on it. This is also very sad, if it does belong to an other branch. I really recomment that you only pull the branch you want to use. You can do this, because the clone and pull commands have a '-r' option. I pull the whole repository on my computer and than pull the branches that I want to work on, from that local repository to different working repositories. I suggest everyone should do this. So there is one incoming repository, one or more working repository and one outgoing repository locally on my computer. Our "trunk" or default branch is called "default". You can try everything with mercurial locally before pushing to the remote repository. hg log hg diff hg branches hg heads hg tags hg incoming hg outgoing hg status are very helpful to get information. Try "hg help" for details. hg serve //and browsing to localhost:8000 is very good for a graphical overview of the repository structure. If you prefer using a GUI tool, go for Tortoise-HG. And you definitely have to set up a merge tool for those case when you have to merge manually. Branching of should look like this:
hg revert --all -r <revision from which you want to branch of> hg branch <branchname> hg commit -m "message"
Using -r/--rev (or 'clone src#rev dest') implies --pull, even for local source. repositories. hg clone -r <branchname> <location of the repository> <name that you want your repository to have>
'Ppulling is implicitly engage when -r option is set within the clone command. hg pull -r <branchname> <location of the repository> | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||