hgbook
diff fr/ch10-hook.xml @ 1007:f4f740bb58be
merge with William and Frédéric
author | Romain PELISSE <belaran@gmail.com> |
---|---|
date | Tue Sep 15 13:43:02 2009 +0200 (2009-09-15) |
parents | 6b680d569bb4 f0110009e946 |
children |
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1.1 --- a/fr/ch10-hook.xml Sun Aug 16 04:58:01 2009 +0200 1.2 +++ b/fr/ch10-hook.xml Tue Sep 15 13:43:02 2009 +0200 1.3 @@ -1,1883 +1,1928 @@ 1.4 <!-- vim: set filetype=docbkxml shiftwidth=2 autoindent expandtab tw=77 : --> 1.5 1.6 -<chapter> 1.7 -<title>Handling repository events with hooks</title> 1.8 -<para>\label{chap:hook}</para> 1.9 - 1.10 -<para>Mercurial offers a powerful mechanism to let you perform automated 1.11 -actions in response to events that occur in a repository. In some 1.12 -cases, you can even control Mercurial's response to those events.</para> 1.13 - 1.14 -<para>The name Mercurial uses for one of these actions is a <emphasis>hook</emphasis>. 1.15 -Hooks are called <quote>triggers</quote> in some revision control systems, but 1.16 -the two names refer to the same idea.</para> 1.17 - 1.18 -<sect1> 1.19 -<title>An overview of hooks in Mercurial</title> 1.20 - 1.21 -<para>Here is a brief list of the hooks that Mercurial supports. We will 1.22 -revisit each of these hooks in more detail later, in 1.23 -section <xref linkend="sec:hook:ref"/>.</para> 1.24 - 1.25 -<itemizedlist> 1.26 -<listitem><para><literal role="hook">changegroup</literal>: This is run after a group of 1.27 - changesets has been brought into the repository from elsewhere.</para> 1.28 -</listitem> 1.29 -<listitem><para><literal role="hook">commit</literal>: This is run after a new changeset has been 1.30 - created in the local repository.</para> 1.31 -</listitem> 1.32 -<listitem><para><literal role="hook">incoming</literal>: This is run once for each new changeset 1.33 - that is brought into the repository from elsewhere. Notice the 1.34 - difference from <literal role="hook">changegroup</literal>, which is run once per 1.35 - <emphasis>group</emphasis> of changesets brought in.</para> 1.36 -</listitem> 1.37 -<listitem><para><literal role="hook">outgoing</literal>: This is run after a group of changesets 1.38 - has been transmitted from this repository.</para> 1.39 -</listitem> 1.40 -<listitem><para><literal role="hook">prechangegroup</literal>: This is run before starting to 1.41 - bring a group of changesets into the repository. 1.42 -</para> 1.43 -</listitem> 1.44 -<listitem><para><literal role="hook">precommit</literal>: Controlling. This is run before starting 1.45 - a commit. 1.46 -</para> 1.47 -</listitem> 1.48 -<listitem><para><literal role="hook">preoutgoing</literal>: Controlling. This is run before 1.49 - starting to transmit a group of changesets from this repository. 1.50 -</para> 1.51 -</listitem> 1.52 -<listitem><para><literal role="hook">pretag</literal>: Controlling. This is run before creating a tag. 1.53 -</para> 1.54 -</listitem> 1.55 -<listitem><para><literal role="hook">pretxnchangegroup</literal>: Controlling. This is run after a 1.56 - group of changesets has been brought into the local repository from 1.57 - another, but before the transaction completes that will make the 1.58 - changes permanent in the repository. 1.59 -</para> 1.60 -</listitem> 1.61 -<listitem><para><literal role="hook">pretxncommit</literal>: Controlling. This is run after a new 1.62 - changeset has been created in the local repository, but before the 1.63 - transaction completes that will make it permanent. 1.64 -</para> 1.65 -</listitem> 1.66 -<listitem><para><literal role="hook">preupdate</literal>: Controlling. This is run before starting 1.67 - an update or merge of the working directory. 1.68 -</para> 1.69 -</listitem> 1.70 -<listitem><para><literal role="hook">tag</literal>: This is run after a tag is created. 1.71 -</para> 1.72 -</listitem> 1.73 -<listitem><para><literal role="hook">update</literal>: This is run after an update or merge of the 1.74 - working directory has finished. 1.75 -</para> 1.76 -</listitem></itemizedlist> 1.77 -<para>Each of the hooks whose description begins with the word 1.78 -<quote>Controlling</quote> has the ability to determine whether an activity can 1.79 -proceed. If the hook succeeds, the activity may proceed; if it fails, 1.80 -the activity is either not permitted or undone, depending on the hook. 1.81 -</para> 1.82 - 1.83 -</sect1> 1.84 -<sect1> 1.85 -<title>Hooks and security</title> 1.86 - 1.87 -<sect2> 1.88 -<title>Hooks are run with your privileges</title> 1.89 - 1.90 -<para>When you run a Mercurial command in a repository, and the command 1.91 -causes a hook to run, that hook runs on <emphasis>your</emphasis> system, under 1.92 -<emphasis>your</emphasis> user account, with <emphasis>your</emphasis> privilege level. Since 1.93 -hooks are arbitrary pieces of executable code, you should treat them 1.94 -with an appropriate level of suspicion. Do not install a hook unless 1.95 -you are confident that you know who created it and what it does. 1.96 -</para> 1.97 - 1.98 -<para>In some cases, you may be exposed to hooks that you did not install 1.99 -yourself. If you work with Mercurial on an unfamiliar system, 1.100 -Mercurial will run hooks defined in that system's global <filename role="special"> /.hgrc</filename>\ file. 1.101 -</para> 1.102 - 1.103 -<para>If you are working with a repository owned by another user, Mercurial 1.104 -can run hooks defined in that user's repository, but it will still run 1.105 -them as <quote>you</quote>. For example, if you <command role="hg-cmd">hg pull</command> from that 1.106 -repository, and its <filename role="special">.hg/hgrc</filename> defines a local 1.107 -<literal role="hook">outgoing</literal> hook, that hook will run under your user account, even 1.108 -though you don't own that repository. 1.109 -</para> 1.110 - 1.111 -<note> 1.112 -<para> This only applies if you are pulling from a repository on a local or 1.113 - network filesystem. If you're pulling over http or ssh, any 1.114 - <literal role="hook">outgoing</literal> hook will run under whatever account is executing 1.115 - the server process, on the server. 1.116 -</para> 1.117 -</note> 1.118 - 1.119 -<para>XXX To see what hooks are defined in a repository, use the 1.120 -<command role="hg-cmd">hg config hooks</command> command. If you are working in one 1.121 -repository, but talking to another that you do not own (e.g. using 1.122 -<command role="hg-cmd">hg pull</command> or <command role="hg-cmd">hg incoming</command>), remember that it is the other 1.123 -repository's hooks you should be checking, not your own. 1.124 -</para> 1.125 - 1.126 -</sect2> 1.127 -<sect2> 1.128 -<title>Hooks do not propagate</title> 1.129 - 1.130 -<para>In Mercurial, hooks are not revision controlled, and do not propagate 1.131 -when you clone, or pull from, a repository. The reason for this is 1.132 -simple: a hook is a completely arbitrary piece of executable code. It 1.133 -runs under your user identity, with your privilege level, on your 1.134 -machine. 1.135 -</para> 1.136 - 1.137 -<para>It would be extremely reckless for any distributed revision control 1.138 -system to implement revision-controlled hooks, as this would offer an 1.139 -easily exploitable way to subvert the accounts of users of the 1.140 -revision control system. 1.141 -</para> 1.142 - 1.143 -<para>Since Mercurial does not propagate hooks, if you are collaborating 1.144 -with other people on a common project, you should not assume that they 1.145 -are using the same Mercurial hooks as you are, or that theirs are 1.146 -correctly configured. You should document the hooks you expect people 1.147 -to use. 1.148 -</para> 1.149 - 1.150 -<para>In a corporate intranet, this is somewhat easier to control, as you 1.151 -can for example provide a <quote>standard</quote> installation of Mercurial on an 1.152 -NFS filesystem, and use a site-wide <filename role="special"> /.hgrc</filename>\ file to define hooks that 1.153 -all users will see. However, this too has its limits; see below. 1.154 -</para> 1.155 - 1.156 -</sect2> 1.157 -<sect2> 1.158 -<title>Hooks can be overridden</title> 1.159 - 1.160 -<para>Mercurial allows you to override a hook definition by redefining the 1.161 -hook. You can disable it by setting its value to the empty string, or 1.162 -change its behaviour as you wish. 1.163 -</para> 1.164 - 1.165 -<para>If you deploy a system- or site-wide <filename role="special"> /.hgrc</filename>\ file that defines some 1.166 -hooks, you should thus understand that your users can disable or 1.167 -override those hooks. 1.168 -</para> 1.169 - 1.170 -</sect2> 1.171 -<sect2> 1.172 -<title>Ensuring that critical hooks are run</title> 1.173 - 1.174 -<para>Sometimes you may want to enforce a policy that you do not want others 1.175 -to be able to work around. For example, you may have a requirement 1.176 -that every changeset must pass a rigorous set of tests. Defining this 1.177 -requirement via a hook in a site-wide <filename role="special"> /.hgrc</filename>\ won't work for remote 1.178 -users on laptops, and of course local users can subvert it at will by 1.179 -overriding the hook. 1.180 -</para> 1.181 - 1.182 -<para>Instead, you can set up your policies for use of Mercurial so that 1.183 -people are expected to propagate changes through a well-known 1.184 -<quote>canonical</quote> server that you have locked down and configured 1.185 -appropriately. 1.186 -</para> 1.187 - 1.188 -<para>One way to do this is via a combination of social engineering and 1.189 -technology. Set up a restricted-access account; users can push 1.190 -changes over the network to repositories managed by this account, but 1.191 -they cannot log into the account and run normal shell commands. In 1.192 -this scenario, a user can commit a changeset that contains any old 1.193 -garbage they want. 1.194 -</para> 1.195 - 1.196 -<para>When someone pushes a changeset to the server that everyone pulls 1.197 -from, the server will test the changeset before it accepts it as 1.198 -permanent, and reject it if it fails to pass the test suite. If 1.199 -people only pull changes from this filtering server, it will serve to 1.200 -ensure that all changes that people pull have been automatically 1.201 -vetted. 1.202 -</para> 1.203 - 1.204 -</sect2> 1.205 -</sect1> 1.206 -<sect1> 1.207 -<title>Care with <literal>pretxn</literal> hooks in a shared-access repository</title> 1.208 - 1.209 -<para>If you want to use hooks to do some automated work in a repository 1.210 -that a number of people have shared access to, you need to be careful 1.211 -in how you do this. 1.212 -</para> 1.213 - 1.214 -<para>Mercurial only locks a repository when it is writing to the 1.215 -repository, and only the parts of Mercurial that write to the 1.216 -repository pay attention to locks. Write locks are necessary to 1.217 -prevent multiple simultaneous writers from scribbling on each other's 1.218 -work, corrupting the repository. 1.219 -</para> 1.220 - 1.221 -<para>Because Mercurial is careful with the order in which it reads and 1.222 -writes data, it does not need to acquire a lock when it wants to read 1.223 -data from the repository. The parts of Mercurial that read from the 1.224 -repository never pay attention to locks. This lockless reading scheme 1.225 -greatly increases performance and concurrency. 1.226 -</para> 1.227 - 1.228 -<para>With great performance comes a trade-off, though, one which has the 1.229 -potential to cause you trouble unless you're aware of it. To describe 1.230 -this requires a little detail about how Mercurial adds changesets to a 1.231 -repository and reads those changes. 1.232 -</para> 1.233 - 1.234 -<para>When Mercurial <emphasis>writes</emphasis> metadata, it writes it straight into the 1.235 -destination file. It writes file data first, then manifest data 1.236 -(which contains pointers to the new file data), then changelog data 1.237 -(which contains pointers to the new manifest data). Before the first 1.238 -write to each file, it stores a record of where the end of the file 1.239 -was in its transaction log. If the transaction must be rolled back, 1.240 -Mercurial simply truncates each file back to the size it was before the 1.241 -transaction began. 1.242 -</para> 1.243 - 1.244 -<para>When Mercurial <emphasis>reads</emphasis> metadata, it reads the changelog first, 1.245 -then everything else. Since a reader will only access parts of the 1.246 -manifest or file metadata that it can see in the changelog, it can 1.247 -never see partially written data. 1.248 -</para> 1.249 - 1.250 -<para>Some controlling hooks (<literal role="hook">pretxncommit</literal> and 1.251 -<literal role="hook">pretxnchangegroup</literal>) run when a transaction is almost complete. 1.252 -All of the metadata has been written, but Mercurial can still roll the 1.253 -transaction back and cause the newly-written data to disappear. 1.254 -</para> 1.255 - 1.256 -<para>If one of these hooks runs for long, it opens a window of time during 1.257 -which a reader can see the metadata for changesets that are not yet 1.258 -permanent, and should not be thought of as <quote>really there</quote>. The 1.259 -longer the hook runs, the longer that window is open. 1.260 -</para> 1.261 - 1.262 -<sect2> 1.263 -<title>The problem illustrated</title> 1.264 - 1.265 -<para>In principle, a good use for the <literal role="hook">pretxnchangegroup</literal> hook would 1.266 -be to automatically build and test incoming changes before they are 1.267 -accepted into a central repository. This could let you guarantee that 1.268 -nobody can push changes to this repository that <quote>break the build</quote>. 1.269 -But if a client can pull changes while they're being tested, the 1.270 -usefulness of the test is zero; an unsuspecting someone can pull 1.271 -untested changes, potentially breaking their build. 1.272 -</para> 1.273 - 1.274 -<para>The safest technological answer to this challenge is to set up such a 1.275 -<quote>gatekeeper</quote> repository as <emphasis>unidirectional</emphasis>. Let it take 1.276 -changes pushed in from the outside, but do not allow anyone to pull 1.277 -changes from it (use the <literal role="hook">preoutgoing</literal> hook to lock it down). 1.278 -Configure a <literal role="hook">changegroup</literal> hook so that if a build or test 1.279 -succeeds, the hook will push the new changes out to another repository 1.280 -that people <emphasis>can</emphasis> pull from. 1.281 -</para> 1.282 - 1.283 -<para>In practice, putting a centralised bottleneck like this in place is 1.284 -not often a good idea, and transaction visibility has nothing to do 1.285 -with the problem. As the size of a project&emdash;and the time it takes to 1.286 -build and test&emdash;grows, you rapidly run into a wall with this <quote>try 1.287 -before you buy</quote> approach, where you have more changesets to test than 1.288 -time in which to deal with them. The inevitable result is frustration 1.289 -on the part of all involved. 1.290 -</para> 1.291 - 1.292 -<para>An approach that scales better is to get people to build and test 1.293 -before they push, then run automated builds and tests centrally 1.294 -<emphasis>after</emphasis> a push, to be sure all is well. The advantage of this 1.295 -approach is that it does not impose a limit on the rate at which the 1.296 -repository can accept changes. 1.297 -</para> 1.298 - 1.299 -</sect2> 1.300 -</sect1> 1.301 -<sect1> 1.302 -<title>A short tutorial on using hooks</title> 1.303 -<para>\label{sec:hook:simple} 1.304 -</para> 1.305 - 1.306 -<para>It is easy to write a Mercurial hook. Let's start with a hook that 1.307 -runs when you finish a <command role="hg-cmd">hg commit</command>, and simply prints the hash of 1.308 -the changeset you just created. The hook is called <literal role="hook">commit</literal>. 1.309 -</para> 1.310 - 1.311 -<informalfigure> 1.312 -<para> <!-- &interaction.hook.simple.init; --> 1.313 - <caption><para>A simple hook that runs when a changeset is committed</para></caption> 1.314 - \label{ex:hook:init} 1.315 -</para> 1.316 -</informalfigure> 1.317 - 1.318 -<para>All hooks follow the pattern in example <xref linkend="ex:hook:init"/>. You add 1.319 -an entry to the <literal role="rc-hooks">hooks</literal> section of your <filename role="special"> /.hgrc</filename>. On the left 1.320 -is the name of the event to trigger on; on the right is the action to 1.321 -take. As you can see, you can run an arbitrary shell command in a 1.322 -hook. Mercurial passes extra information to the hook using 1.323 -environment variables (look for <envar>HG_NODE</envar> in the example). 1.324 -</para> 1.325 - 1.326 -<sect2> 1.327 -<title>Performing multiple actions per event</title> 1.328 - 1.329 -<para>Quite often, you will want to define more than one hook for a 1.330 -particular kind of event, as shown in example <xref linkend="ex:hook:ext"/>. 1.331 -Mercurial lets you do this by adding an <emphasis>extension</emphasis> to the end of 1.332 -a hook's name. You extend a hook's name by giving the name of the 1.333 -hook, followed by a full stop (the <quote><literal>.</literal></quote> character), followed 1.334 -by some more text of your choosing. For example, Mercurial will run 1.335 -both <literal>commit.foo</literal> and <literal>commit.bar</literal> when the 1.336 -<literal>commit</literal> event occurs. 1.337 -</para> 1.338 - 1.339 -<informalfigure> 1.340 -<para> <!-- &interaction.hook.simple.ext; --> 1.341 - <caption><para>Defining a second <literal role="hook">commit</para></caption> hook</literal> 1.342 - \label{ex:hook:ext} 1.343 -</para> 1.344 -</informalfigure> 1.345 - 1.346 -<para>To give a well-defined order of execution when there are multiple 1.347 -hooks defined for an event, Mercurial sorts hooks by extension, and 1.348 -executes the hook commands in this sorted order. In the above 1.349 -example, it will execute <literal>commit.bar</literal> before 1.350 -<literal>commit.foo</literal>, and <literal>commit</literal> before both. 1.351 -</para> 1.352 - 1.353 -<para>It is a good idea to use a somewhat descriptive extension when you 1.354 -define a new hook. This will help you to remember what the hook was 1.355 -for. If the hook fails, you'll get an error message that contains the 1.356 -hook name and extension, so using a descriptive extension could give 1.357 -you an immediate hint as to why the hook failed (see 1.358 -section <xref linkend="sec:hook:perm"/> for an example). 1.359 -</para> 1.360 - 1.361 -</sect2> 1.362 -<sect2> 1.363 -<title>Controlling whether an activity can proceed</title> 1.364 -<para>\label{sec:hook:perm} 1.365 -</para> 1.366 - 1.367 -<para>In our earlier examples, we used the <literal role="hook">commit</literal> hook, which is 1.368 -run after a commit has completed. This is one of several Mercurial 1.369 -hooks that run after an activity finishes. Such hooks have no way of 1.370 -influencing the activity itself. 1.371 -</para> 1.372 - 1.373 -<para>Mercurial defines a number of events that occur before an activity 1.374 -starts; or after it starts, but before it finishes. Hooks that 1.375 -trigger on these events have the added ability to choose whether the 1.376 -activity can continue, or will abort. 1.377 -</para> 1.378 - 1.379 -<para>The <literal role="hook">pretxncommit</literal> hook runs after a commit has all but 1.380 -completed. In other words, the metadata representing the changeset 1.381 -has been written out to disk, but the transaction has not yet been 1.382 -allowed to complete. The <literal role="hook">pretxncommit</literal> hook has the ability to 1.383 -decide whether the transaction can complete, or must be rolled back. 1.384 -</para> 1.385 - 1.386 -<para>If the <literal role="hook">pretxncommit</literal> hook exits with a status code of zero, the 1.387 -transaction is allowed to complete; the commit finishes; and the 1.388 -<literal role="hook">commit</literal> hook is run. If the <literal role="hook">pretxncommit</literal> hook exits with 1.389 -a non-zero status code, the transaction is rolled back; the metadata 1.390 -representing the changeset is erased; and the <literal role="hook">commit</literal> hook is 1.391 -not run. 1.392 -</para> 1.393 - 1.394 -<informalfigure> 1.395 -<para> <!-- &interaction.hook.simple.pretxncommit; --> 1.396 - <caption><para>Using the <literal role="hook">pretxncommit</para></caption> hook to control commits</literal> 1.397 - \label{ex:hook:pretxncommit} 1.398 -</para> 1.399 -</informalfigure> 1.400 - 1.401 -<para>The hook in example <xref linkend="ex:hook:pretxncommit"/> checks that a commit 1.402 -comment contains a bug ID. If it does, the commit can complete. If 1.403 -not, the commit is rolled back. 1.404 -</para> 1.405 - 1.406 -</sect2> 1.407 -</sect1> 1.408 -<sect1> 1.409 -<title>Writing your own hooks</title> 1.410 - 1.411 -<para>When you are writing a hook, you might find it useful to run Mercurial 1.412 -either with the <option role="hg-opt-global">-v</option> option, or the <envar role="rc-item-ui">verbose</envar> config 1.413 -item set to <quote>true</quote>. When you do so, Mercurial will print a message 1.414 -before it calls each hook. 1.415 -</para> 1.416 - 1.417 -<sect2> 1.418 -<title>Choosing how your hook should run</title> 1.419 -<para>\label{sec:hook:lang} 1.420 -</para> 1.421 - 1.422 -<para>You can write a hook either as a normal program&emdash;typically a shell 1.423 -script&emdash;or as a Python function that is executed within the Mercurial 1.424 -process. 1.425 -</para> 1.426 - 1.427 -<para>Writing a hook as an external program has the advantage that it 1.428 -requires no knowledge of Mercurial's internals. You can call normal 1.429 -Mercurial commands to get any added information you need. The 1.430 -trade-off is that external hooks are slower than in-process hooks. 1.431 -</para> 1.432 - 1.433 -<para>An in-process Python hook has complete access to the Mercurial API, 1.434 -and does not <quote>shell out</quote> to another process, so it is inherently 1.435 -faster than an external hook. It is also easier to obtain much of the 1.436 -information that a hook requires by using the Mercurial API than by 1.437 -running Mercurial commands. 1.438 -</para> 1.439 - 1.440 -<para>If you are comfortable with Python, or require high performance, 1.441 -writing your hooks in Python may be a good choice. However, when you 1.442 -have a straightforward hook to write and you don't need to care about 1.443 -performance (probably the majority of hooks), a shell script is 1.444 -perfectly fine. 1.445 -</para> 1.446 - 1.447 -</sect2> 1.448 -<sect2> 1.449 -<title>Hook parameters</title> 1.450 -<para>\label{sec:hook:param} 1.451 -</para> 1.452 - 1.453 -<para>Mercurial calls each hook with a set of well-defined parameters. In 1.454 -Python, a parameter is passed as a keyword argument to your hook 1.455 -function. For an external program, a parameter is passed as an 1.456 -environment variable. 1.457 -</para> 1.458 - 1.459 -<para>Whether your hook is written in Python or as a shell script, the 1.460 -hook-specific parameter names and values will be the same. A boolean 1.461 -parameter will be represented as a boolean value in Python, but as the 1.462 -number 1 (for <quote>true</quote>) or 0 (for <quote>false</quote>) as an environment 1.463 -variable for an external hook. If a hook parameter is named 1.464 -<literal>foo</literal>, the keyword argument for a Python hook will also be 1.465 -named <literal>foo</literal>, while the environment variable for an external 1.466 -hook will be named <literal>HG_FOO</literal>. 1.467 -</para> 1.468 - 1.469 -</sect2> 1.470 -<sect2> 1.471 -<title>Hook return values and activity control</title> 1.472 - 1.473 -<para>A hook that executes successfully must exit with a status of zero if 1.474 -external, or return boolean <quote>false</quote> if in-process. Failure is 1.475 -indicated with a non-zero exit status from an external hook, or an 1.476 -in-process hook returning boolean <quote>true</quote>. If an in-process hook 1.477 -raises an exception, the hook is considered to have failed. 1.478 -</para> 1.479 - 1.480 -<para>For a hook that controls whether an activity can proceed, zero/false 1.481 -means <quote>allow</quote>, while non-zero/true/exception means <quote>deny</quote>. 1.482 -</para> 1.483 - 1.484 -</sect2> 1.485 -<sect2> 1.486 -<title>Writing an external hook</title> 1.487 - 1.488 -<para>When you define an external hook in your <filename role="special"> /.hgrc</filename>\ and the hook is run, 1.489 -its value is passed to your shell, which interprets it. This means 1.490 -that you can use normal shell constructs in the body of the hook. 1.491 -</para> 1.492 - 1.493 -<para>An executable hook is always run with its current directory set to a 1.494 -repository's root directory. 1.495 -</para> 1.496 - 1.497 -<para>Each hook parameter is passed in as an environment variable; the name 1.498 -is upper-cased, and prefixed with the string <quote><literal>HG_</literal></quote>. 1.499 -</para> 1.500 - 1.501 -<para>With the exception of hook parameters, Mercurial does not set or 1.502 -modify any environment variables when running a hook. This is useful 1.503 -to remember if you are writing a site-wide hook that may be run by a 1.504 -number of different users with differing environment variables set. 1.505 -In multi-user situations, you should not rely on environment variables 1.506 -being set to the values you have in your environment when testing the 1.507 -hook. 1.508 -</para> 1.509 - 1.510 -</sect2> 1.511 -<sect2> 1.512 -<title>Telling Mercurial to use an in-process hook</title> 1.513 - 1.514 -<para>The <filename role="special"> /.hgrc</filename>\ syntax for defining an in-process hook is slightly 1.515 -different than for an executable hook. The value of the hook must 1.516 -start with the text <quote><literal>python:</literal></quote>, and continue with the 1.517 -fully-qualified name of a callable object to use as the hook's value. 1.518 -</para> 1.519 - 1.520 -<para>The module in which a hook lives is automatically imported when a hook 1.521 -is run. So long as you have the module name and <envar>PYTHONPATH</envar> 1.522 -right, it should <quote>just work</quote>. 1.523 -</para> 1.524 - 1.525 -<para>The following <filename role="special"> /.hgrc</filename>\ example snippet illustrates the syntax and 1.526 -meaning of the notions we just described. 1.527 -</para> 1.528 -<programlisting> 1.529 -<para> [hooks] 1.530 - commit.example = python:mymodule.submodule.myhook 1.531 -</para> 1.532 -</programlisting> 1.533 -<para>When Mercurial runs the <literal>commit.example</literal> hook, it imports 1.534 -<literal>mymodule.submodule</literal>, looks for the callable object named 1.535 -<literal>myhook</literal>, and calls it. 1.536 -</para> 1.537 - 1.538 -</sect2> 1.539 -<sect2> 1.540 -<title>Writing an in-process hook</title> 1.541 - 1.542 -<para>The simplest in-process hook does nothing, but illustrates the basic 1.543 -shape of the hook API: 1.544 -</para> 1.545 -<programlisting> 1.546 -<para> def myhook(ui, repo, **kwargs): 1.547 - pass 1.548 -</para> 1.549 -</programlisting> 1.550 -<para>The first argument to a Python hook is always a 1.551 -<literal role="py-mod-mercurial.ui">ui</literal> object. The second is a repository object; 1.552 -at the moment, it is always an instance of 1.553 -<literal role="py-mod-mercurial.localrepo">localrepository</literal>. Following these two 1.554 -arguments are other keyword arguments. Which ones are passed in 1.555 -depends on the hook being called, but a hook can ignore arguments it 1.556 -doesn't care about by dropping them into a keyword argument dict, as 1.557 -with <literal>**kwargs</literal> above. 1.558 -</para> 1.559 - 1.560 -</sect2> 1.561 -</sect1> 1.562 -<sect1> 1.563 -<title>Some hook examples</title> 1.564 - 1.565 -<sect2> 1.566 -<title>Writing meaningful commit messages</title> 1.567 - 1.568 -<para>It's hard to imagine a useful commit message being very short. The 1.569 -simple <literal role="hook">pretxncommit</literal> hook of figure <xref linkend="ex:hook:msglen.go"/> 1.570 -will prevent you from committing a changeset with a message that is 1.571 -less than ten bytes long. 1.572 -</para> 1.573 - 1.574 -<informalfigure> 1.575 -<para> <!-- &interaction.hook.msglen.go; --> 1.576 - <caption><para>A hook that forbids overly short commit messages</para></caption> 1.577 - \label{ex:hook:msglen.go} 1.578 -</para> 1.579 -</informalfigure> 1.580 - 1.581 -</sect2> 1.582 -<sect2> 1.583 -<title>Checking for trailing whitespace</title> 1.584 - 1.585 -<para>An interesting use of a commit-related hook is to help you to write 1.586 -cleaner code. A simple example of <quote>cleaner code</quote> is the dictum that 1.587 -a change should not add any new lines of text that contain <quote>trailing 1.588 -whitespace</quote>. Trailing whitespace is a series of space and tab 1.589 -characters at the end of a line of text. In most cases, trailing 1.590 -whitespace is unnecessary, invisible noise, but it is occasionally 1.591 -problematic, and people often prefer to get rid of it. 1.592 -</para> 1.593 - 1.594 -<para>You can use either the <literal role="hook">precommit</literal> or <literal role="hook">pretxncommit</literal> hook to 1.595 -tell whether you have a trailing whitespace problem. If you use the 1.596 -<literal role="hook">precommit</literal> hook, the hook will not know which files you are 1.597 -committing, so it will have to check every modified file in the 1.598 -repository for trailing white space. If you want to commit a change 1.599 -to just the file <filename>foo</filename>, but the file <filename>bar</filename> contains 1.600 -trailing whitespace, doing a check in the <literal role="hook">precommit</literal> hook will 1.601 -prevent you from committing <filename>foo</filename> due to the problem with 1.602 -<filename>bar</filename>. This doesn't seem right. 1.603 -</para> 1.604 - 1.605 -<para>Should you choose the <literal role="hook">pretxncommit</literal> hook, the check won't occur 1.606 -until just before the transaction for the commit completes. This will 1.607 -allow you to check for problems only the exact files that are being 1.608 -committed. However, if you entered the commit message interactively 1.609 -and the hook fails, the transaction will roll back; you'll have to 1.610 -re-enter the commit message after you fix the trailing whitespace and 1.611 -run <command role="hg-cmd">hg commit</command> again. 1.612 -</para> 1.613 - 1.614 -<informalfigure> 1.615 -<para> <!-- &interaction.hook.ws.simple; --> 1.616 - <caption><para>A simple hook that checks for trailing whitespace</para></caption> 1.617 - \label{ex:hook:ws.simple} 1.618 -</para> 1.619 -</informalfigure> 1.620 - 1.621 -<para>Figure <xref linkend="ex:hook:ws.simple"/> introduces a simple <literal role="hook">pretxncommit</literal> 1.622 -hook that checks for trailing whitespace. This hook is short, but not 1.623 -very helpful. It exits with an error status if a change adds a line 1.624 -with trailing whitespace to any file, but does not print any 1.625 -information that might help us to identify the offending file or 1.626 -line. It also has the nice property of not paying attention to 1.627 -unmodified lines; only lines that introduce new trailing whitespace 1.628 -cause problems. 1.629 -</para> 1.630 - 1.631 -<informalfigure> 1.632 -<para> <!-- &interaction.hook.ws.better; --> 1.633 - <caption><para>A better trailing whitespace hook</para></caption> 1.634 - \label{ex:hook:ws.better} 1.635 -</para> 1.636 -</informalfigure> 1.637 - 1.638 -<para>The example of figure <xref linkend="ex:hook:ws.better"/> is much more complex, 1.639 -but also more useful. It parses a unified diff to see if any lines 1.640 -add trailing whitespace, and prints the name of the file and the line 1.641 -number of each such occurrence. Even better, if the change adds 1.642 -trailing whitespace, this hook saves the commit comment and prints the 1.643 -name of the save file before exiting and telling Mercurial to roll the 1.644 -transaction back, so you can use 1.645 -<command role="hg-cmd">hg commit <option role="hg-opt-commit">-l</option> <emphasis>filename</emphasis></command> to reuse the 1.646 -saved commit message once you've corrected the problem. 1.647 -</para> 1.648 - 1.649 -<para>As a final aside, note in figure <xref linkend="ex:hook:ws.better"/> the use of 1.650 -<command>perl</command>'s in-place editing feature to get rid of trailing 1.651 -whitespace from a file. This is concise and useful enough that I will 1.652 -reproduce it here. 1.653 -</para> 1.654 -<programlisting> 1.655 -<para> perl -pi -e 's,\textbackslash{}s+$,,' filename 1.656 -</para> 1.657 -</programlisting> 1.658 - 1.659 -</sect2> 1.660 -</sect1> 1.661 -<sect1> 1.662 -<title>Bundled hooks</title> 1.663 - 1.664 -<para>Mercurial ships with several bundled hooks. You can find them in the 1.665 -<filename class="directory">hgext</filename> directory of a Mercurial source tree. If you are 1.666 -using a Mercurial binary package, the hooks will be located in the 1.667 -<filename class="directory">hgext</filename> directory of wherever your package installer put 1.668 -Mercurial. 1.669 -</para> 1.670 - 1.671 -<sect2> 1.672 -<title><literal role="hg-ext">acl</literal>&emdash;access control for parts of a repository</title> 1.673 - 1.674 -<para>The <literal role="hg-ext">acl</literal> extension lets you control which remote users are 1.675 -allowed to push changesets to a networked server. You can protect any 1.676 -portion of a repository (including the entire repo), so that a 1.677 -specific remote user can push changes that do not affect the protected 1.678 -portion. 1.679 -</para> 1.680 - 1.681 -<para>This extension implements access control based on the identity of the 1.682 -user performing a push, <emphasis>not</emphasis> on who committed the changesets 1.683 -they're pushing. It makes sense to use this hook only if you have a 1.684 -locked-down server environment that authenticates remote users, and 1.685 -you want to be sure that only specific users are allowed to push 1.686 -changes to that server. 1.687 -</para> 1.688 - 1.689 -<sect3> 1.690 -<title>Configuring the <literal role="hook">acl</literal> hook</title> 1.691 - 1.692 -<para>In order to manage incoming changesets, the <literal role="hg-ext">acl</literal> hook must be 1.693 -used as a <literal role="hook">pretxnchangegroup</literal> hook. This lets it see which files 1.694 -are modified by each incoming changeset, and roll back a group of 1.695 -changesets if they modify <quote>forbidden</quote> files. Example: 1.696 -</para> 1.697 -<programlisting> 1.698 -<para> [hooks] 1.699 - pretxnchangegroup.acl = python:hgext.acl.hook 1.700 -</para> 1.701 -</programlisting> 1.702 - 1.703 -<para>The <literal role="hg-ext">acl</literal> extension is configured using three sections. 1.704 -</para> 1.705 - 1.706 -<para>The <literal role="rc-acl">acl</literal> section has only one entry, <envar role="rc-item-acl">sources</envar>, 1.707 -which lists the sources of incoming changesets that the hook should 1.708 -pay attention to. You don't normally need to configure this section. 1.709 -</para> 1.710 -<itemizedlist> 1.711 -<listitem><para><envar role="rc-item-acl">serve</envar>: Control incoming changesets that are arriving 1.712 - from a remote repository over http or ssh. This is the default 1.713 - value of <envar role="rc-item-acl">sources</envar>, and usually the only setting you'll 1.714 - need for this configuration item. 1.715 -</para> 1.716 -</listitem> 1.717 -<listitem><para><envar role="rc-item-acl">pull</envar>: Control incoming changesets that are 1.718 - arriving via a pull from a local repository. 1.719 -</para> 1.720 -</listitem> 1.721 -<listitem><para><envar role="rc-item-acl">push</envar>: Control incoming changesets that are 1.722 - arriving via a push from a local repository. 1.723 -</para> 1.724 -</listitem> 1.725 -<listitem><para><envar role="rc-item-acl">bundle</envar>: Control incoming changesets that are 1.726 - arriving from another repository via a bundle. 1.727 -</para> 1.728 -</listitem></itemizedlist> 1.729 - 1.730 -<para>The <literal role="rc-acl.allow">acl.allow</literal> section controls the users that are allowed to 1.731 -add changesets to the repository. If this section is not present, all 1.732 -users that are not explicitly denied are allowed. If this section is 1.733 -present, all users that are not explicitly allowed are denied (so an 1.734 -empty section means that all users are denied). 1.735 -</para> 1.736 - 1.737 -<para>The <literal role="rc-acl.deny">acl.deny</literal> section determines which users are denied 1.738 -from adding changesets to the repository. If this section is not 1.739 -present or is empty, no users are denied. 1.740 -</para> 1.741 - 1.742 -<para>The syntaxes for the <literal role="rc-acl.allow">acl.allow</literal> and <literal role="rc-acl.deny">acl.deny</literal> 1.743 -sections are identical. On the left of each entry is a glob pattern 1.744 -that matches files or directories, relative to the root of the 1.745 -repository; on the right, a user name. 1.746 -</para> 1.747 - 1.748 -<para>In the following example, the user <literal>docwriter</literal> can only push 1.749 -changes to the <filename class="directory">docs</filename> subtree of the repository, while 1.750 -<literal>intern</literal> can push changes to any file or directory except 1.751 -<filename class="directory">source/sensitive</filename>. 1.752 -</para> 1.753 -<programlisting> 1.754 -<para> [acl.allow] 1.755 - docs/** = docwriter 1.756 -</para> 1.757 - 1.758 -<para> [acl.deny] 1.759 - source/sensitive/** = intern 1.760 -</para> 1.761 -</programlisting> 1.762 - 1.763 -</sect3> 1.764 -<sect3> 1.765 -<title>Testing and troubleshooting</title> 1.766 - 1.767 -<para>If you want to test the <literal role="hg-ext">acl</literal> hook, run it with Mercurial's 1.768 -debugging output enabled. Since you'll probably be running it on a 1.769 -server where it's not convenient (or sometimes possible) to pass in 1.770 -the <option role="hg-opt-global">--debug</option> option, don't forget that you can enable 1.771 -debugging output in your <filename role="special"> /.hgrc</filename>: 1.772 -</para> 1.773 -<programlisting> 1.774 -<para> [ui] 1.775 - debug = true 1.776 -</para> 1.777 -</programlisting> 1.778 -<para>With this enabled, the <literal role="hg-ext">acl</literal> hook will print enough information 1.779 -to let you figure out why it is allowing or forbidding pushes from 1.780 -specific users. 1.781 -</para> 1.782 - 1.783 -</sect3> 1.784 -</sect2> 1.785 -<sect2> 1.786 -<title><literal role="hg-ext">bugzilla</literal>&emdash;integration with Bugzilla</title> 1.787 - 1.788 -<para>The <literal role="hg-ext">bugzilla</literal> extension adds a comment to a Bugzilla bug 1.789 -whenever it finds a reference to that bug ID in a commit comment. You 1.790 -can install this hook on a shared server, so that any time a remote 1.791 -user pushes changes to this server, the hook gets run. 1.792 -</para> 1.793 - 1.794 -<para>It adds a comment to the bug that looks like this (you can configure 1.795 -the contents of the comment&emdash;see below): 1.796 -</para> 1.797 -<programlisting> 1.798 -<para> Changeset aad8b264143a, made by Joe User <joe.user@domain.com> in 1.799 - the frobnitz repository, refers to this bug. 1.800 -</para> 1.801 - 1.802 -<para> For complete details, see 1.803 - http://hg.domain.com/frobnitz?cmd=changeset;node=aad8b264143a 1.804 -</para> 1.805 - 1.806 -<para> Changeset description: 1.807 - Fix bug 10483 by guarding against some NULL pointers 1.808 -</para> 1.809 -</programlisting> 1.810 -<para>The value of this hook is that it automates the process of updating a 1.811 -bug any time a changeset refers to it. If you configure the hook 1.812 -properly, it makes it easy for people to browse straight from a 1.813 -Bugzilla bug to a changeset that refers to that bug. 1.814 -</para> 1.815 - 1.816 -<para>You can use the code in this hook as a starting point for some more 1.817 -exotic Bugzilla integration recipes. Here are a few possibilities: 1.818 -</para> 1.819 -<itemizedlist> 1.820 -<listitem><para>Require that every changeset pushed to the server have a valid 1.821 - bug ID in its commit comment. In this case, you'd want to configure 1.822 - the hook as a <literal role="hook">pretxncommit</literal> hook. This would allow the hook 1.823 - to reject changes that didn't contain bug IDs. 1.824 -</para> 1.825 -</listitem> 1.826 -<listitem><para>Allow incoming changesets to automatically modify the 1.827 - <emphasis>state</emphasis> of a bug, as well as simply adding a comment. For 1.828 - example, the hook could recognise the string <quote>fixed bug 31337</quote> as 1.829 - indicating that it should update the state of bug 31337 to 1.830 - <quote>requires testing</quote>. 1.831 -</para> 1.832 -</listitem></itemizedlist> 1.833 - 1.834 -<sect3> 1.835 -<title>Configuring the <literal role="hook">bugzilla</literal> hook</title> 1.836 -<para>\label{sec:hook:bugzilla:config} 1.837 -</para> 1.838 - 1.839 -<para>You should configure this hook in your server's <filename role="special"> /.hgrc</filename>\ as an 1.840 -<literal role="hook">incoming</literal> hook, for example as follows: 1.841 -</para> 1.842 -<programlisting> 1.843 -<para> [hooks] 1.844 - incoming.bugzilla = python:hgext.bugzilla.hook 1.845 -</para> 1.846 -</programlisting> 1.847 - 1.848 -<para>Because of the specialised nature of this hook, and because Bugzilla 1.849 -was not written with this kind of integration in mind, configuring 1.850 -this hook is a somewhat involved process. 1.851 -</para> 1.852 - 1.853 -<para>Before you begin, you must install the MySQL bindings for Python on 1.854 -the host(s) where you'll be running the hook. If this is not 1.855 -available as a binary package for your system, you can download it 1.856 -from <citation>web:mysql-python</citation>. 1.857 -</para> 1.858 - 1.859 -<para>Configuration information for this hook lives in the 1.860 -<literal role="rc-bugzilla">bugzilla</literal> section of your <filename role="special"> /.hgrc</filename>. 1.861 -</para> 1.862 -<itemizedlist> 1.863 -<listitem><para><envar role="rc-item-bugzilla">version</envar>: The version of Bugzilla installed on 1.864 - the server. The database schema that Bugzilla uses changes 1.865 - occasionally, so this hook has to know exactly which schema to use. 1.866 - At the moment, the only version supported is <literal>2.16</literal>. 1.867 -</para> 1.868 -</listitem> 1.869 -<listitem><para><envar role="rc-item-bugzilla">host</envar>: The hostname of the MySQL server that 1.870 - stores your Bugzilla data. The database must be configured to allow 1.871 - connections from whatever host you are running the <literal role="hook">bugzilla</literal> 1.872 - hook on. 1.873 -</para> 1.874 -</listitem> 1.875 -<listitem><para><envar role="rc-item-bugzilla">user</envar>: The username with which to connect to 1.876 - the MySQL server. The database must be configured to allow this 1.877 - user to connect from whatever host you are running the 1.878 - <literal role="hook">bugzilla</literal> hook on. This user must be able to access and 1.879 - modify Bugzilla tables. The default value of this item is 1.880 - <literal>bugs</literal>, which is the standard name of the Bugzilla user in a 1.881 - MySQL database. 1.882 -</para> 1.883 -</listitem> 1.884 -<listitem><para><envar role="rc-item-bugzilla">password</envar>: The MySQL password for the user you 1.885 - configured above. This is stored as plain text, so you should make 1.886 - sure that unauthorised users cannot read the <filename role="special"> /.hgrc</filename>\ file where you 1.887 - store this information. 1.888 -</para> 1.889 -</listitem> 1.890 -<listitem><para><envar role="rc-item-bugzilla">db</envar>: The name of the Bugzilla database on the 1.891 - MySQL server. The default value of this item is <literal>bugs</literal>, 1.892 - which is the standard name of the MySQL database where Bugzilla 1.893 - stores its data. 1.894 -</para> 1.895 -</listitem> 1.896 -<listitem><para><envar role="rc-item-bugzilla">notify</envar>: If you want Bugzilla to send out a 1.897 - notification email to subscribers after this hook has added a 1.898 - comment to a bug, you will need this hook to run a command whenever 1.899 - it updates the database. The command to run depends on where you 1.900 - have installed Bugzilla, but it will typically look something like 1.901 - this, if you have Bugzilla installed in 1.902 - <filename class="directory">/var/www/html/bugzilla</filename>: 1.903 -</para> 1.904 -</listitem><programlisting> 1.905 -<listitem><para> cd /var/www/html/bugzilla && ./processmail %s nobody@nowhere.com 1.906 -</para> 1.907 -</listitem></programlisting> 1.908 -<listitem><para> The Bugzilla <literal>processmail</literal> program expects to be given a 1.909 - bug ID (the hook replaces <quote><literal>%s</literal></quote> with the bug ID) and an 1.910 - email address. It also expects to be able to write to some files in 1.911 - the directory that it runs in. If Bugzilla and this hook are not 1.912 - installed on the same machine, you will need to find a way to run 1.913 - <literal>processmail</literal> on the server where Bugzilla is installed. 1.914 -</para> 1.915 -</listitem></itemizedlist> 1.916 - 1.917 -</sect3> 1.918 -<sect3> 1.919 -<title>Mapping committer names to Bugzilla user names</title> 1.920 - 1.921 -<para>By default, the <literal role="hg-ext">bugzilla</literal> hook tries to use the email address 1.922 -of a changeset's committer as the Bugzilla user name with which to 1.923 -update a bug. If this does not suit your needs, you can map committer 1.924 -email addresses to Bugzilla user names using a <literal role="rc-usermap">usermap</literal> 1.925 -section. 1.926 -</para> 1.927 - 1.928 -<para>Each item in the <literal role="rc-usermap">usermap</literal> section contains an email address 1.929 -on the left, and a Bugzilla user name on the right. 1.930 -</para> 1.931 -<programlisting> 1.932 -<para> [usermap] 1.933 - jane.user@example.com = jane 1.934 -</para> 1.935 -</programlisting> 1.936 -<para>You can either keep the <literal role="rc-usermap">usermap</literal> data in a normal <filename role="special"> /.hgrc</filename>, or 1.937 -tell the <literal role="hg-ext">bugzilla</literal> hook to read the information from an 1.938 -external <filename>usermap</filename> file. In the latter case, you can store 1.939 -<filename>usermap</filename> data by itself in (for example) a user-modifiable 1.940 -repository. This makes it possible to let your users maintain their 1.941 -own <envar role="rc-item-bugzilla">usermap</envar> entries. The main <filename role="special"> /.hgrc</filename>\ file might 1.942 -look like this: 1.943 -</para> 1.944 -<programlisting> 1.945 -<para> # regular hgrc file refers to external usermap file 1.946 - [bugzilla] 1.947 - usermap = /home/hg/repos/userdata/bugzilla-usermap.conf 1.948 -</para> 1.949 -</programlisting> 1.950 -<para>While the <filename>usermap</filename> file that it refers to might look like 1.951 -this: 1.952 -</para> 1.953 -<programlisting> 1.954 -<para> # bugzilla-usermap.conf - inside a hg repository 1.955 - [usermap] 1.956 - stephanie@example.com = steph 1.957 -</para> 1.958 -</programlisting> 1.959 - 1.960 -</sect3> 1.961 -<sect3> 1.962 -<title>Configuring the text that gets added to a bug</title> 1.963 - 1.964 -<para>You can configure the text that this hook adds as a comment; you 1.965 -specify it in the form of a Mercurial template. Several <filename role="special"> /.hgrc</filename>\ 1.966 -entries (still in the <literal role="rc-bugzilla">bugzilla</literal> section) control this 1.967 -behaviour. 1.968 -</para> 1.969 -<itemizedlist> 1.970 -<listitem><para><literal>strip</literal>: The number of leading path elements to strip 1.971 - from a repository's path name to construct a partial path for a URL. 1.972 - For example, if the repositories on your server live under 1.973 - <filename class="directory">/home/hg/repos</filename>, and you have a repository whose path is 1.974 - <filename class="directory">/home/hg/repos/app/tests</filename>, then setting <literal>strip</literal> to 1.975 - <literal>4</literal> will give a partial path of <filename class="directory">app/tests</filename>. The 1.976 - hook will make this partial path available when expanding a 1.977 - template, as <literal>webroot</literal>. 1.978 -</para> 1.979 -</listitem> 1.980 -<listitem><para><literal>template</literal>: The text of the template to use. In addition 1.981 - to the usual changeset-related variables, this template can use 1.982 - <literal>hgweb</literal> (the value of the <literal>hgweb</literal> configuration item 1.983 - above) and <literal>webroot</literal> (the path constructed using 1.984 - <literal>strip</literal> above). 1.985 -</para> 1.986 -</listitem></itemizedlist> 1.987 - 1.988 -<para>In addition, you can add a <envar role="rc-item-web">baseurl</envar> item to the 1.989 -<literal role="rc-web">web</literal> section of your <filename role="special"> /.hgrc</filename>. The <literal role="hg-ext">bugzilla</literal> hook will 1.990 -make this available when expanding a template, as the base string to 1.991 -use when constructing a URL that will let users browse from a Bugzilla 1.992 -comment to view a changeset. Example: 1.993 -</para> 1.994 -<programlisting> 1.995 -<para> [web] 1.996 - baseurl = http://hg.domain.com/ 1.997 -</para> 1.998 -</programlisting> 1.999 - 1.1000 -<para>Here is an example set of <literal role="hg-ext">bugzilla</literal> hook config information. 1.1001 -</para> 1.1002 -<programlisting> 1.1003 -<para> [bugzilla] 1.1004 - host = bugzilla.example.com 1.1005 - password = mypassword 1.1006 - version = 2.16 1.1007 - # server-side repos live in /home/hg/repos, so strip 4 leading 1.1008 - # separators 1.1009 - strip = 4 1.1010 - hgweb = http://hg.example.com/ 1.1011 - usermap = /home/hg/repos/notify/bugzilla.conf 1.1012 - template = Changeset {node|short}, made by {author} in the {webroot} 1.1013 - repo, refers to this bug.\\nFor complete details, see 1.1014 - {hgweb}{webroot}?cmd=changeset;node={node|short}\\nChangeset 1.1015 - description:\\n\\t{desc|tabindent} 1.1016 -</para> 1.1017 -</programlisting> 1.1018 - 1.1019 -</sect3> 1.1020 -<sect3> 1.1021 -<title>Testing and troubleshooting</title> 1.1022 - 1.1023 -<para>The most common problems with configuring the <literal role="hg-ext">bugzilla</literal> hook 1.1024 -relate to running Bugzilla's <filename>processmail</filename> script and mapping 1.1025 -committer names to user names. 1.1026 -</para> 1.1027 - 1.1028 -<para>Recall from section <xref linkend="sec:hook:bugzilla:config"/> above that the user 1.1029 -that runs the Mercurial process on the server is also the one that 1.1030 -will run the <filename>processmail</filename> script. The 1.1031 -<filename>processmail</filename> script sometimes causes Bugzilla to write to 1.1032 -files in its configuration directory, and Bugzilla's configuration 1.1033 -files are usually owned by the user that your web server runs under. 1.1034 -</para> 1.1035 - 1.1036 -<para>You can cause <filename>processmail</filename> to be run with the suitable 1.1037 -user's identity using the <command>sudo</command> command. Here is an example 1.1038 -entry for a <filename>sudoers</filename> file. 1.1039 -</para> 1.1040 -<programlisting> 1.1041 -<para> hg_user = (httpd_user) NOPASSWD: /var/www/html/bugzilla/processmail-wrapper %s 1.1042 -</para> 1.1043 -</programlisting> 1.1044 -<para>This allows the <literal>hg_user</literal> user to run a 1.1045 -<filename>processmail-wrapper</filename> program under the identity of 1.1046 -<literal>httpd_user</literal>. 1.1047 -</para> 1.1048 - 1.1049 -<para>This indirection through a wrapper script is necessary, because 1.1050 -<filename>processmail</filename> expects to be run with its current directory 1.1051 -set to wherever you installed Bugzilla; you can't specify that kind of 1.1052 -constraint in a <filename>sudoers</filename> file. The contents of the wrapper 1.1053 -script are simple: 1.1054 -</para> 1.1055 -<programlisting> 1.1056 -<para> #!/bin/sh 1.1057 - cd `dirname $0` && ./processmail "$1" nobody@example.com 1.1058 -</para> 1.1059 -</programlisting> 1.1060 -<para>It doesn't seem to matter what email address you pass to 1.1061 -<filename>processmail</filename>. 1.1062 -</para> 1.1063 - 1.1064 -<para>If your <literal role="rc-usermap">usermap</literal> is not set up correctly, users will see an 1.1065 -error message from the <literal role="hg-ext">bugzilla</literal> hook when they push changes 1.1066 -to the server. The error message will look like this: 1.1067 -</para> 1.1068 -<programlisting> 1.1069 -<para> cannot find bugzilla user id for john.q.public@example.com 1.1070 -</para> 1.1071 -</programlisting> 1.1072 -<para>What this means is that the committer's address, 1.1073 -<literal>john.q.public@example.com</literal>, is not a valid Bugzilla user name, 1.1074 -nor does it have an entry in your <literal role="rc-usermap">usermap</literal> that maps it to 1.1075 -a valid Bugzilla user name. 1.1076 -</para> 1.1077 - 1.1078 -</sect3> 1.1079 -</sect2> 1.1080 -<sect2> 1.1081 -<title><literal role="hg-ext">notify</literal>&emdash;send email notifications</title> 1.1082 - 1.1083 -<para>Although Mercurial's built-in web server provides RSS feeds of changes 1.1084 -in every repository, many people prefer to receive change 1.1085 -notifications via email. The <literal role="hg-ext">notify</literal> hook lets you send out 1.1086 -notifications to a set of email addresses whenever changesets arrive 1.1087 -that those subscribers are interested in. 1.1088 -</para> 1.1089 - 1.1090 -<para>As with the <literal role="hg-ext">bugzilla</literal> hook, the <literal role="hg-ext">notify</literal> hook is 1.1091 -template-driven, so you can customise the contents of the notification 1.1092 -messages that it sends. 1.1093 -</para> 1.1094 - 1.1095 -<para>By default, the <literal role="hg-ext">notify</literal> hook includes a diff of every changeset 1.1096 -that it sends out; you can limit the size of the diff, or turn this 1.1097 -feature off entirely. It is useful for letting subscribers review 1.1098 -changes immediately, rather than clicking to follow a URL. 1.1099 -</para> 1.1100 - 1.1101 -<sect3> 1.1102 -<title>Configuring the <literal role="hg-ext">notify</literal> hook</title> 1.1103 - 1.1104 -<para>You can set up the <literal role="hg-ext">notify</literal> hook to send one email message per 1.1105 -incoming changeset, or one per incoming group of changesets (all those 1.1106 -that arrived in a single pull or push). 1.1107 -</para> 1.1108 -<programlisting> 1.1109 -<para> [hooks] 1.1110 - # send one email per group of changes 1.1111 - changegroup.notify = python:hgext.notify.hook 1.1112 - # send one email per change 1.1113 - incoming.notify = python:hgext.notify.hook 1.1114 -</para> 1.1115 -</programlisting> 1.1116 - 1.1117 -<para>Configuration information for this hook lives in the 1.1118 -<literal role="rc-notify">notify</literal> section of a <filename role="special"> /.hgrc</filename>\ file. 1.1119 -</para> 1.1120 -<itemizedlist> 1.1121 -<listitem><para><envar role="rc-item-notify">test</envar>: By default, this hook does not send out 1.1122 - email at all; instead, it prints the message that it <emphasis>would</emphasis> 1.1123 - send. Set this item to <literal>false</literal> to allow email to be sent. 1.1124 - The reason that sending of email is turned off by default is that it 1.1125 - takes several tries to configure this extension exactly as you would 1.1126 - like, and it would be bad form to spam subscribers with a number of 1.1127 - <quote>broken</quote> notifications while you debug your configuration. 1.1128 -</para> 1.1129 -</listitem> 1.1130 -<listitem><para><envar role="rc-item-notify">config</envar>: The path to a configuration file that 1.1131 - contains subscription information. This is kept separate from the 1.1132 - main <filename role="special"> /.hgrc</filename>\ so that you can maintain it in a repository of its own. 1.1133 - People can then clone that repository, update their subscriptions, 1.1134 - and push the changes back to your server. 1.1135 -</para> 1.1136 -</listitem> 1.1137 -<listitem><para><envar role="rc-item-notify">strip</envar>: The number of leading path separator 1.1138 - characters to strip from a repository's path, when deciding whether 1.1139 - a repository has subscribers. For example, if the repositories on 1.1140 - your server live in <filename class="directory">/home/hg/repos</filename>, and <literal role="hg-ext">notify</literal> is 1.1141 - considering a repository named <filename class="directory">/home/hg/repos/shared/test</filename>, 1.1142 - setting <envar role="rc-item-notify">strip</envar> to <literal>4</literal> will cause 1.1143 - <literal role="hg-ext">notify</literal> to trim the path it considers down to 1.1144 - <filename class="directory">shared/test</filename>, and it will match subscribers against that. 1.1145 -</para> 1.1146 -</listitem> 1.1147 -<listitem><para><envar role="rc-item-notify">template</envar>: The template text to use when sending 1.1148 - messages. This specifies both the contents of the message header 1.1149 - and its body. 1.1150 -</para> 1.1151 -</listitem> 1.1152 -<listitem><para><envar role="rc-item-notify">maxdiff</envar>: The maximum number of lines of diff 1.1153 - data to append to the end of a message. If a diff is longer than 1.1154 - this, it is truncated. By default, this is set to 300. Set this to 1.1155 - <literal>0</literal> to omit diffs from notification emails. 1.1156 -</para> 1.1157 -</listitem> 1.1158 -<listitem><para><envar role="rc-item-notify">sources</envar>: A list of sources of changesets to 1.1159 - consider. This lets you limit <literal role="hg-ext">notify</literal> to only sending out 1.1160 - email about changes that remote users pushed into this repository 1.1161 - via a server, for example. See section <xref linkend="sec:hook:sources"/> for 1.1162 - the sources you can specify here. 1.1163 -</para> 1.1164 -</listitem></itemizedlist> 1.1165 - 1.1166 -<para>If you set the <envar role="rc-item-web">baseurl</envar> item in the <literal role="rc-web">web</literal> 1.1167 -section, you can use it in a template; it will be available as 1.1168 -<literal>webroot</literal>. 1.1169 -</para> 1.1170 - 1.1171 -<para>Here is an example set of <literal role="hg-ext">notify</literal> configuration information. 1.1172 -</para> 1.1173 -<programlisting> 1.1174 -<para> [notify] 1.1175 - # really send email 1.1176 - test = false 1.1177 - # subscriber data lives in the notify repo 1.1178 - config = /home/hg/repos/notify/notify.conf 1.1179 - # repos live in /home/hg/repos on server, so strip 4 "/" chars 1.1180 - strip = 4 1.1181 - template = X-Hg-Repo: {webroot} 1.1182 - Subject: {webroot}: {desc|firstline|strip} 1.1183 - From: {author} 1.1184 -</para> 1.1185 - 1.1186 -<para> changeset {node|short} in {root} 1.1187 - details: {baseurl}{webroot}?cmd=changeset;node={node|short} 1.1188 - description: 1.1189 - {desc|tabindent|strip} 1.1190 -</para> 1.1191 - 1.1192 -<para> [web] 1.1193 - baseurl = http://hg.example.com/ 1.1194 -</para> 1.1195 -</programlisting> 1.1196 - 1.1197 -<para>This will produce a message that looks like the following: 1.1198 -</para> 1.1199 -<programlisting> 1.1200 -<para> X-Hg-Repo: tests/slave 1.1201 - Subject: tests/slave: Handle error case when slave has no buffers 1.1202 - Date: Wed, 2 Aug 2006 15:25:46 -0700 (PDT) 1.1203 -</para> 1.1204 - 1.1205 -<para> changeset 3cba9bfe74b5 in /home/hg/repos/tests/slave 1.1206 - details: http://hg.example.com/tests/slave?cmd=changeset;node=3cba9bfe74b5 1.1207 - description: 1.1208 - Handle error case when slave has no buffers 1.1209 - diffs (54 lines): 1.1210 -</para> 1.1211 - 1.1212 -<para> diff -r 9d95df7cf2ad -r 3cba9bfe74b5 include/tests.h 1.1213 - &emdash; a/include/tests.h Wed Aug 02 15:19:52 2006 -0700 1.1214 - +++ b/include/tests.h Wed Aug 02 15:25:26 2006 -0700 1.1215 - @@ -212,6 +212,15 @@ static __inline__ void test_headers(void *h) 1.1216 - [...snip...] 1.1217 -</para> 1.1218 -</programlisting> 1.1219 - 1.1220 -</sect3> 1.1221 -<sect3> 1.1222 -<title>Testing and troubleshooting</title> 1.1223 - 1.1224 -<para>Do not forget that by default, the <literal role="hg-ext">notify</literal> extension \emph{will 1.1225 - not send any mail} until you explicitly configure it to do so, by 1.1226 -setting <envar role="rc-item-notify">test</envar> to <literal>false</literal>. Until you do that, 1.1227 -it simply prints the message it <emphasis>would</emphasis> send. 1.1228 -</para> 1.1229 - 1.1230 -</sect3> 1.1231 -</sect2> 1.1232 -</sect1> 1.1233 -<sect1> 1.1234 -<title>Information for writers of hooks</title> 1.1235 -<para>\label{sec:hook:ref} 1.1236 -</para> 1.1237 - 1.1238 -<sect2> 1.1239 -<title>In-process hook execution</title> 1.1240 - 1.1241 -<para>An in-process hook is called with arguments of the following form: 1.1242 -</para> 1.1243 -<programlisting> 1.1244 -<para> def myhook(ui, repo, **kwargs): 1.1245 - pass 1.1246 -</para> 1.1247 -</programlisting> 1.1248 -<para>The <literal>ui</literal> parameter is a <literal role="py-mod-mercurial.ui">ui</literal> object. 1.1249 -The <literal>repo</literal> parameter is a 1.1250 -<literal role="py-mod-mercurial.localrepo">localrepository</literal> object. The 1.1251 -names and values of the <literal>**kwargs</literal> parameters depend on the 1.1252 -hook being invoked, with the following common features: 1.1253 -</para> 1.1254 -<itemizedlist> 1.1255 -<listitem><para>If a parameter is named <literal>node</literal> or 1.1256 - <literal>parent<emphasis>N</emphasis></literal>, it will contain a hexadecimal changeset ID. 1.1257 - The empty string is used to represent <quote>null changeset ID</quote> instead 1.1258 - of a string of zeroes. 1.1259 -</para> 1.1260 -</listitem> 1.1261 -<listitem><para>If a parameter is named <literal>url</literal>, it will contain the URL of 1.1262 - a remote repository, if that can be determined. 1.1263 -</para> 1.1264 -</listitem> 1.1265 -<listitem><para>Boolean-valued parameters are represented as Python 1.1266 - <literal>bool</literal> objects. 1.1267 -</para> 1.1268 -</listitem></itemizedlist> 1.1269 - 1.1270 -<para>An in-process hook is called without a change to the process's working 1.1271 -directory (unlike external hooks, which are run in the root of the 1.1272 -repository). It must not change the process's working directory, or 1.1273 -it will cause any calls it makes into the Mercurial API to fail. 1.1274 -</para> 1.1275 - 1.1276 -<para>If a hook returns a boolean <quote>false</quote> value, it is considered to have 1.1277 -succeeded. If it returns a boolean <quote>true</quote> value or raises an 1.1278 -exception, it is considered to have failed. A useful way to think of 1.1279 -the calling convention is <quote>tell me if you fail</quote>. 1.1280 -</para> 1.1281 - 1.1282 -<para>Note that changeset IDs are passed into Python hooks as hexadecimal 1.1283 -strings, not the binary hashes that Mercurial's APIs normally use. To 1.1284 -convert a hash from hex to binary, use the 1.1285 -\pymodfunc{mercurial.node}{bin} function. 1.1286 -</para> 1.1287 - 1.1288 -</sect2> 1.1289 -<sect2> 1.1290 -<title>External hook execution</title> 1.1291 - 1.1292 -<para>An external hook is passed to the shell of the user running Mercurial. 1.1293 -Features of that shell, such as variable substitution and command 1.1294 -redirection, are available. The hook is run in the root directory of 1.1295 -the repository (unlike in-process hooks, which are run in the same 1.1296 -directory that Mercurial was run in). 1.1297 -</para> 1.1298 - 1.1299 -<para>Hook parameters are passed to the hook as environment variables. Each 1.1300 -environment variable's name is converted in upper case and prefixed 1.1301 -with the string <quote><literal>HG_</literal></quote>. For example, if the name of a 1.1302 -parameter is <quote><literal>node</literal></quote>, the name of the environment variable 1.1303 -representing that parameter will be <quote><literal>HG_NODE</literal></quote>. 1.1304 -</para> 1.1305 - 1.1306 -<para>A boolean parameter is represented as the string <quote><literal>1</literal></quote> for 1.1307 -<quote>true</quote>, <quote><literal>0</literal></quote> for <quote>false</quote>. If an environment variable is 1.1308 -named <envar>HG_NODE</envar>, <envar>HG_PARENT1</envar> or <envar>HG_PARENT2</envar>, it 1.1309 -contains a changeset ID represented as a hexadecimal string. The 1.1310 -empty string is used to represent <quote>null changeset ID</quote> instead of a 1.1311 -string of zeroes. If an environment variable is named 1.1312 -<envar>HG_URL</envar>, it will contain the URL of a remote repository, if 1.1313 -that can be determined. 1.1314 -</para> 1.1315 - 1.1316 -<para>If a hook exits with a status of zero, it is considered to have 1.1317 -succeeded. If it exits with a non-zero status, it is considered to 1.1318 -have failed. 1.1319 -</para> 1.1320 - 1.1321 -</sect2> 1.1322 -<sect2> 1.1323 -<title>Finding out where changesets come from</title> 1.1324 - 1.1325 -<para>A hook that involves the transfer of changesets between a local 1.1326 -repository and another may be able to find out information about the 1.1327 -<quote>far side</quote>. Mercurial knows <emphasis>how</emphasis> changes are being 1.1328 -transferred, and in many cases <emphasis>where</emphasis> they are being transferred 1.1329 -to or from. 1.1330 -</para> 1.1331 - 1.1332 -<sect3> 1.1333 -<title>Sources of changesets</title> 1.1334 -<para>\label{sec:hook:sources} 1.1335 -</para> 1.1336 - 1.1337 -<para>Mercurial will tell a hook what means are, or were, used to transfer 1.1338 -changesets between repositories. This is provided by Mercurial in a 1.1339 -Python parameter named <literal>source</literal>, or an environment variable named 1.1340 -<envar>HG_SOURCE</envar>. 1.1341 -</para> 1.1342 - 1.1343 -<itemizedlist> 1.1344 -<listitem><para><literal>serve</literal>: Changesets are transferred to or from a remote 1.1345 - repository over http or ssh. 1.1346 -</para> 1.1347 -</listitem> 1.1348 -<listitem><para><literal>pull</literal>: Changesets are being transferred via a pull from 1.1349 - one repository into another. 1.1350 -</para> 1.1351 -</listitem> 1.1352 -<listitem><para><literal>push</literal>: Changesets are being transferred via a push from 1.1353 - one repository into another. 1.1354 -</para> 1.1355 -</listitem> 1.1356 -<listitem><para><literal>bundle</literal>: Changesets are being transferred to or from a 1.1357 - bundle. 1.1358 -</para> 1.1359 -</listitem></itemizedlist> 1.1360 - 1.1361 -</sect3> 1.1362 -<sect3> 1.1363 -<title>Where changes are going&emdash;remote repository URLs</title> 1.1364 -<para>\label{sec:hook:url} 1.1365 -</para> 1.1366 - 1.1367 -<para>When possible, Mercurial will tell a hook the location of the <quote>far 1.1368 -side</quote> of an activity that transfers changeset data between 1.1369 -repositories. This is provided by Mercurial in a Python parameter 1.1370 -named <literal>url</literal>, or an environment variable named <envar>HG_URL</envar>. 1.1371 -</para> 1.1372 - 1.1373 -<para>This information is not always known. If a hook is invoked in a 1.1374 -repository that is being served via http or ssh, Mercurial cannot tell 1.1375 -where the remote repository is, but it may know where the client is 1.1376 -connecting from. In such cases, the URL will take one of the 1.1377 -following forms: 1.1378 -</para> 1.1379 -<itemizedlist> 1.1380 -<listitem><para><literal>remote:ssh:<emphasis>ip-address</emphasis></literal>&emdash;remote ssh client, at 1.1381 - the given IP address. 1.1382 -</para> 1.1383 -</listitem> 1.1384 -<listitem><para><literal>remote:http:<emphasis>ip-address</emphasis></literal>&emdash;remote http client, at 1.1385 - the given IP address. If the client is using SSL, this will be of 1.1386 - the form <literal>remote:https:<emphasis>ip-address</emphasis></literal>. 1.1387 -</para> 1.1388 -</listitem> 1.1389 -<listitem><para>Empty&emdash;no information could be discovered about the remote 1.1390 - client. 1.1391 -</para> 1.1392 -</listitem></itemizedlist> 1.1393 - 1.1394 -</sect3> 1.1395 -</sect2> 1.1396 -</sect1> 1.1397 -<sect1> 1.1398 -<title>Hook reference</title> 1.1399 - 1.1400 -<sect2> 1.1401 -<title><literal role="hook">changegroup</literal>&emdash;after remote changesets added</title> 1.1402 -<para>\label{sec:hook:changegroup} 1.1403 -</para> 1.1404 - 1.1405 -<para>This hook is run after a group of pre-existing changesets has been 1.1406 -added to the repository, for example via a <command role="hg-cmd">hg pull</command> or 1.1407 -<command role="hg-cmd">hg unbundle</command>. This hook is run once per operation that added one 1.1408 -or more changesets. This is in contrast to the <literal role="hook">incoming</literal> hook, 1.1409 -which is run once per changeset, regardless of whether the changesets 1.1410 -arrive in a group. 1.1411 -</para> 1.1412 - 1.1413 -<para>Some possible uses for this hook include kicking off an automated 1.1414 -build or test of the added changesets, updating a bug database, or 1.1415 -notifying subscribers that a repository contains new changes. 1.1416 -</para> 1.1417 - 1.1418 -<para>Parameters to this hook: 1.1419 -</para> 1.1420 -<itemizedlist> 1.1421 -<listitem><para><literal>node</literal>: A changeset ID. The changeset ID of the first 1.1422 - changeset in the group that was added. All changesets between this 1.1423 - and \index{tags!<literal>tip</literal>}<literal>tip</literal>, inclusive, were added by 1.1424 - a single <command role="hg-cmd">hg pull</command>, <command role="hg-cmd">hg push</command> or <command role="hg-cmd">hg unbundle</command>. 1.1425 -</para> 1.1426 -</listitem> 1.1427 -<listitem><para><literal>source</literal>: A string. The source of these changes. See 1.1428 - section <xref linkend="sec:hook:sources"/> for details. 1.1429 -</para> 1.1430 -</listitem> 1.1431 -<listitem><para><literal>url</literal>: A URL. The location of the remote repository, if 1.1432 - known. See section <xref linkend="sec:hook:url"/> for more information. 1.1433 -</para> 1.1434 -</listitem></itemizedlist> 1.1435 - 1.1436 -<para>See also: <literal role="hook">incoming</literal> (section <xref linkend="sec:hook:incoming"/>), 1.1437 -<literal role="hook">prechangegroup</literal> (section <xref linkend="sec:hook:prechangegroup"/>), 1.1438 -<literal role="hook">pretxnchangegroup</literal> (section <xref linkend="sec:hook:pretxnchangegroup"/>) 1.1439 -</para> 1.1440 - 1.1441 -</sect2> 1.1442 -<sect2> 1.1443 -<title><literal role="hook">commit</literal>&emdash;after a new changeset is created</title> 1.1444 -<para>\label{sec:hook:commit} 1.1445 -</para> 1.1446 - 1.1447 -<para>This hook is run after a new changeset has been created. 1.1448 -</para> 1.1449 - 1.1450 -<para>Parameters to this hook: 1.1451 -</para> 1.1452 -<itemizedlist> 1.1453 -<listitem><para><literal>node</literal>: A changeset ID. The changeset ID of the newly 1.1454 - committed changeset. 1.1455 -</para> 1.1456 -</listitem> 1.1457 -<listitem><para><literal>parent1</literal>: A changeset ID. The changeset ID of the first 1.1458 - parent of the newly committed changeset. 1.1459 -</para> 1.1460 -</listitem> 1.1461 -<listitem><para><literal>parent2</literal>: A changeset ID. The changeset ID of the second 1.1462 - parent of the newly committed changeset. 1.1463 -</para> 1.1464 -</listitem></itemizedlist> 1.1465 - 1.1466 -<para>See also: <literal role="hook">precommit</literal> (section <xref linkend="sec:hook:precommit"/>), 1.1467 -<literal role="hook">pretxncommit</literal> (section <xref linkend="sec:hook:pretxncommit"/>) 1.1468 -</para> 1.1469 - 1.1470 -</sect2> 1.1471 -<sect2> 1.1472 -<title><literal role="hook">incoming</literal>&emdash;after one remote changeset is added</title> 1.1473 -<para>\label{sec:hook:incoming} 1.1474 -</para> 1.1475 - 1.1476 -<para>This hook is run after a pre-existing changeset has been added to the 1.1477 -repository, for example via a <command role="hg-cmd">hg push</command>. If a group of changesets 1.1478 -was added in a single operation, this hook is called once for each 1.1479 -added changeset. 1.1480 -</para> 1.1481 - 1.1482 -<para>You can use this hook for the same purposes as the <literal role="hook">changegroup</literal> 1.1483 -hook (section <xref linkend="sec:hook:changegroup"/>); it's simply more convenient 1.1484 -sometimes to run a hook once per group of changesets, while other 1.1485 -times it's handier once per changeset. 1.1486 -</para> 1.1487 - 1.1488 -<para>Parameters to this hook: 1.1489 -</para> 1.1490 -<itemizedlist> 1.1491 -<listitem><para><literal>node</literal>: A changeset ID. The ID of the newly added 1.1492 - changeset. 1.1493 -</para> 1.1494 -</listitem> 1.1495 -<listitem><para><literal>source</literal>: A string. The source of these changes. See 1.1496 - section <xref linkend="sec:hook:sources"/> for details. 1.1497 -</para> 1.1498 -</listitem> 1.1499 -<listitem><para><literal>url</literal>: A URL. The location of the remote repository, if 1.1500 - known. See section <xref linkend="sec:hook:url"/> for more information. 1.1501 -</para> 1.1502 -</listitem></itemizedlist> 1.1503 - 1.1504 -<para>See also: <literal role="hook">changegroup</literal> (section <xref linkend="sec:hook:changegroup"/>) <literal role="hook">prechangegroup</literal> (section <xref linkend="sec:hook:prechangegroup"/>), <literal role="hook">pretxnchangegroup</literal> (section <xref linkend="sec:hook:pretxnchangegroup"/>) 1.1505 -</para> 1.1506 - 1.1507 -</sect2> 1.1508 -<sect2> 1.1509 -<title><literal role="hook">outgoing</literal>&emdash;after changesets are propagated</title> 1.1510 -<para>\label{sec:hook:outgoing} 1.1511 -</para> 1.1512 - 1.1513 -<para>This hook is run after a group of changesets has been propagated out 1.1514 -of this repository, for example by a <command role="hg-cmd">hg push</command> or <command role="hg-cmd">hg bundle</command> 1.1515 -command. 1.1516 -</para> 1.1517 - 1.1518 -<para>One possible use for this hook is to notify administrators that 1.1519 -changes have been pulled. 1.1520 -</para> 1.1521 - 1.1522 -<para>Parameters to this hook: 1.1523 -</para> 1.1524 -<itemizedlist> 1.1525 -<listitem><para><literal>node</literal>: A changeset ID. The changeset ID of the first 1.1526 - changeset of the group that was sent. 1.1527 -</para> 1.1528 -</listitem> 1.1529 -<listitem><para><literal>source</literal>: A string. The source of the of the operation 1.1530 - (see section <xref linkend="sec:hook:sources"/>). If a remote client pulled 1.1531 - changes from this repository, <literal>source</literal> will be 1.1532 - <literal>serve</literal>. If the client that obtained changes from this 1.1533 - repository was local, <literal>source</literal> will be <literal>bundle</literal>, 1.1534 - <literal>pull</literal>, or <literal>push</literal>, depending on the operation the 1.1535 - client performed. 1.1536 -</para> 1.1537 -</listitem> 1.1538 -<listitem><para><literal>url</literal>: A URL. The location of the remote repository, if 1.1539 - known. See section <xref linkend="sec:hook:url"/> for more information. 1.1540 -</para> 1.1541 -</listitem></itemizedlist> 1.1542 - 1.1543 -<para>See also: <literal role="hook">preoutgoing</literal> (section <xref linkend="sec:hook:preoutgoing"/>) 1.1544 -</para> 1.1545 - 1.1546 -</sect2> 1.1547 -<sect2> 1.1548 -<title><literal role="hook">prechangegroup</literal>&emdash;before starting to add remote changesets</title> 1.1549 -<para>\label{sec:hook:prechangegroup} 1.1550 -</para> 1.1551 - 1.1552 -<para>This controlling hook is run before Mercurial begins to add a group of 1.1553 -changesets from another repository. 1.1554 -</para> 1.1555 - 1.1556 -<para>This hook does not have any information about the changesets to be 1.1557 -added, because it is run before transmission of those changesets is 1.1558 -allowed to begin. If this hook fails, the changesets will not be 1.1559 -transmitted. 1.1560 -</para> 1.1561 - 1.1562 -<para>One use for this hook is to prevent external changes from being added 1.1563 -to a repository. For example, you could use this to <quote>freeze</quote> a 1.1564 -server-hosted branch temporarily or permanently so that users cannot 1.1565 -push to it, while still allowing a local administrator to modify the 1.1566 -repository. 1.1567 -</para> 1.1568 - 1.1569 -<para>Parameters to this hook: 1.1570 -</para> 1.1571 -<itemizedlist> 1.1572 -<listitem><para><literal>source</literal>: A string. The source of these changes. See 1.1573 - section <xref linkend="sec:hook:sources"/> for details. 1.1574 -</para> 1.1575 -</listitem> 1.1576 -<listitem><para><literal>url</literal>: A URL. The location of the remote repository, if 1.1577 - known. See section <xref linkend="sec:hook:url"/> for more information. 1.1578 -</para> 1.1579 -</listitem></itemizedlist> 1.1580 - 1.1581 -<para>See also: <literal role="hook">changegroup</literal> (section <xref linkend="sec:hook:changegroup"/>), 1.1582 -<literal role="hook">incoming</literal> (section <xref linkend="sec:hook:incoming"/>), , 1.1583 -<literal role="hook">pretxnchangegroup</literal> (section <xref linkend="sec:hook:pretxnchangegroup"/>) 1.1584 -</para> 1.1585 - 1.1586 -</sect2> 1.1587 -<sect2> 1.1588 -<title><literal role="hook">precommit</literal>&emdash;before starting to commit a changeset</title> 1.1589 -<para>\label{sec:hook:precommit} 1.1590 -</para> 1.1591 - 1.1592 -<para>This hook is run before Mercurial begins to commit a new changeset. 1.1593 -It is run before Mercurial has any of the metadata for the commit, 1.1594 -such as the files to be committed, the commit message, or the commit 1.1595 -date. 1.1596 -</para> 1.1597 - 1.1598 -<para>One use for this hook is to disable the ability to commit new 1.1599 -changesets, while still allowing incoming changesets. Another is to 1.1600 -run a build or test, and only allow the commit to begin if the build 1.1601 -or test succeeds. 1.1602 -</para> 1.1603 - 1.1604 -<para>Parameters to this hook: 1.1605 -</para> 1.1606 -<itemizedlist> 1.1607 -<listitem><para><literal>parent1</literal>: A changeset ID. The changeset ID of the first 1.1608 - parent of the working directory. 1.1609 -</para> 1.1610 -</listitem> 1.1611 -<listitem><para><literal>parent2</literal>: A changeset ID. The changeset ID of the second 1.1612 - parent of the working directory. 1.1613 -</para> 1.1614 -</listitem></itemizedlist> 1.1615 -<para>If the commit proceeds, the parents of the working directory will 1.1616 -become the parents of the new changeset. 1.1617 -</para> 1.1618 - 1.1619 -<para>See also: <literal role="hook">commit</literal> (section <xref linkend="sec:hook:commit"/>), 1.1620 -<literal role="hook">pretxncommit</literal> (section <xref linkend="sec:hook:pretxncommit"/>) 1.1621 -</para> 1.1622 - 1.1623 -</sect2> 1.1624 -<sect2> 1.1625 -<title><literal role="hook">preoutgoing</literal>&emdash;before starting to propagate changesets</title> 1.1626 -<para>\label{sec:hook:preoutgoing} 1.1627 -</para> 1.1628 - 1.1629 -<para>This hook is invoked before Mercurial knows the identities of the 1.1630 -changesets to be transmitted. 1.1631 -</para> 1.1632 - 1.1633 -<para>One use for this hook is to prevent changes from being transmitted to 1.1634 -another repository. 1.1635 -</para> 1.1636 - 1.1637 -<para>Parameters to this hook: 1.1638 -</para> 1.1639 -<itemizedlist> 1.1640 -<listitem><para><literal>source</literal>: A string. The source of the operation that is 1.1641 - attempting to obtain changes from this repository (see 1.1642 - section <xref linkend="sec:hook:sources"/>). See the documentation for the 1.1643 - <literal>source</literal> parameter to the <literal role="hook">outgoing</literal> hook, in 1.1644 - section <xref linkend="sec:hook:outgoing"/>, for possible values of this 1.1645 - parameter. 1.1646 -</para> 1.1647 -</listitem> 1.1648 -<listitem><para><literal>url</literal>: A URL. The location of the remote repository, if 1.1649 - known. See section <xref linkend="sec:hook:url"/> for more information. 1.1650 -</para> 1.1651 -</listitem></itemizedlist> 1.1652 - 1.1653 -<para>See also: <literal role="hook">outgoing</literal> (section <xref linkend="sec:hook:outgoing"/>) 1.1654 -</para> 1.1655 - 1.1656 -</sect2> 1.1657 -<sect2> 1.1658 -<title><literal role="hook">pretag</literal>&emdash;before tagging a changeset</title> 1.1659 -<para>\label{sec:hook:pretag} 1.1660 -</para> 1.1661 - 1.1662 -<para>This controlling hook is run before a tag is created. If the hook 1.1663 -succeeds, creation of the tag proceeds. If the hook fails, the tag is 1.1664 -not created. 1.1665 -</para> 1.1666 - 1.1667 -<para>Parameters to this hook: 1.1668 -</para> 1.1669 -<itemizedlist> 1.1670 -<listitem><para><literal>local</literal>: A boolean. Whether the tag is local to this 1.1671 - repository instance (i.e. stored in <filename role="special">.hg/localtags</filename>) or 1.1672 - managed by Mercurial (stored in <filename role="special">.hgtags</filename>). 1.1673 -</para> 1.1674 -</listitem> 1.1675 -<listitem><para><literal>node</literal>: A changeset ID. The ID of the changeset to be tagged. 1.1676 -</para> 1.1677 -</listitem> 1.1678 -<listitem><para><literal>tag</literal>: A string. The name of the tag to be created. 1.1679 -</para> 1.1680 -</listitem></itemizedlist> 1.1681 - 1.1682 -<para>If the tag to be created is revision-controlled, the <literal role="hook">precommit</literal> 1.1683 -and <literal role="hook">pretxncommit</literal> hooks (sections <xref linkend="sec:hook:commit"/> 1.1684 -and <xref linkend="sec:hook:pretxncommit"/>) will also be run. 1.1685 -</para> 1.1686 - 1.1687 -<para>See also: <literal role="hook">tag</literal> (section <xref linkend="sec:hook:tag"/>) 1.1688 -</para> 1.1689 - 1.1690 -<para>\subsection{<literal role="hook">pretxnchangegroup</literal>&emdash;before completing addition of 1.1691 - remote changesets} 1.1692 -\label{sec:hook:pretxnchangegroup} 1.1693 -</para> 1.1694 - 1.1695 -<para>This controlling hook is run before a transaction&emdash;that manages the 1.1696 -addition of a group of new changesets from outside the 1.1697 -repository&emdash;completes. If the hook succeeds, the transaction 1.1698 -completes, and all of the changesets become permanent within this 1.1699 -repository. If the hook fails, the transaction is rolled back, and 1.1700 -the data for the changesets is erased. 1.1701 -</para> 1.1702 - 1.1703 -<para>This hook can access the metadata associated with the almost-added 1.1704 -changesets, but it should not do anything permanent with this data. 1.1705 -It must also not modify the working directory. 1.1706 -</para> 1.1707 - 1.1708 -<para>While this hook is running, if other Mercurial processes access this 1.1709 -repository, they will be able to see the almost-added changesets as if 1.1710 -they are permanent. This may lead to race conditions if you do not 1.1711 -take steps to avoid them. 1.1712 -</para> 1.1713 - 1.1714 -<para>This hook can be used to automatically vet a group of changesets. If 1.1715 -the hook fails, all of the changesets are <quote>rejected</quote> when the 1.1716 -transaction rolls back. 1.1717 -</para> 1.1718 - 1.1719 -<para>Parameters to this hook: 1.1720 -</para> 1.1721 -<itemizedlist> 1.1722 -<listitem><para><literal>node</literal>: A changeset ID. The changeset ID of the first 1.1723 - changeset in the group that was added. All changesets between this 1.1724 - and \index{tags!<literal>tip</literal>}<literal>tip</literal>, inclusive, were added by 1.1725 - a single <command role="hg-cmd">hg pull</command>, <command role="hg-cmd">hg push</command> or <command role="hg-cmd">hg unbundle</command>. 1.1726 -</para> 1.1727 -</listitem> 1.1728 -<listitem><para><literal>source</literal>: A string. The source of these changes. See 1.1729 - section <xref linkend="sec:hook:sources"/> for details. 1.1730 -</para> 1.1731 -</listitem> 1.1732 -<listitem><para><literal>url</literal>: A URL. The location of the remote repository, if 1.1733 - known. See section <xref linkend="sec:hook:url"/> for more information. 1.1734 -</para> 1.1735 -</listitem></itemizedlist> 1.1736 - 1.1737 -<para>See also: <literal role="hook">changegroup</literal> (section <xref linkend="sec:hook:changegroup"/>), 1.1738 -<literal role="hook">incoming</literal> (section <xref linkend="sec:hook:incoming"/>), 1.1739 -<literal role="hook">prechangegroup</literal> (section <xref linkend="sec:hook:prechangegroup"/>) 1.1740 -</para> 1.1741 - 1.1742 -</sect2> 1.1743 -<sect2> 1.1744 -<title><literal role="hook">pretxncommit</literal>&emdash;before completing commit of new changeset</title> 1.1745 -<para>\label{sec:hook:pretxncommit} 1.1746 -</para> 1.1747 - 1.1748 -<para>This controlling hook is run before a transaction&emdash;that manages a new 1.1749 -commit&emdash;completes. If the hook succeeds, the transaction completes 1.1750 -and the changeset becomes permanent within this repository. If the 1.1751 -hook fails, the transaction is rolled back, and the commit data is 1.1752 -erased. 1.1753 -</para> 1.1754 - 1.1755 -<para>This hook can access the metadata associated with the almost-new 1.1756 -changeset, but it should not do anything permanent with this data. It 1.1757 -must also not modify the working directory. 1.1758 -</para> 1.1759 - 1.1760 -<para>While this hook is running, if other Mercurial processes access this 1.1761 -repository, they will be able to see the almost-new changeset as if it 1.1762 -is permanent. This may lead to race conditions if you do not take 1.1763 -steps to avoid them. 1.1764 -</para> 1.1765 - 1.1766 -<para>Parameters to this hook: 1.1767 -</para> 1.1768 -<itemizedlist> 1.1769 -<listitem><para><literal>node</literal>: A changeset ID. The changeset ID of the newly 1.1770 - committed changeset. 1.1771 -</para> 1.1772 -</listitem> 1.1773 -<listitem><para><literal>parent1</literal>: A changeset ID. The changeset ID of the first 1.1774 - parent of the newly committed changeset. 1.1775 -</para> 1.1776 -</listitem> 1.1777 -<listitem><para><literal>parent2</literal>: A changeset ID. The changeset ID of the second 1.1778 - parent of the newly committed changeset. 1.1779 -</para> 1.1780 -</listitem></itemizedlist> 1.1781 - 1.1782 -<para>See also: <literal role="hook">precommit</literal> (section <xref linkend="sec:hook:precommit"/>) 1.1783 -</para> 1.1784 - 1.1785 -</sect2> 1.1786 -<sect2> 1.1787 -<title><literal role="hook">preupdate</literal>&emdash;before updating or merging working directory</title> 1.1788 -<para>\label{sec:hook:preupdate} 1.1789 -</para> 1.1790 - 1.1791 -<para>This controlling hook is run before an update or merge of the working 1.1792 -directory begins. It is run only if Mercurial's normal pre-update 1.1793 -checks determine that the update or merge can proceed. If the hook 1.1794 -succeeds, the update or merge may proceed; if it fails, the update or 1.1795 -merge does not start. 1.1796 -</para> 1.1797 - 1.1798 -<para>Parameters to this hook: 1.1799 -</para> 1.1800 -<itemizedlist> 1.1801 -<listitem><para><literal>parent1</literal>: A changeset ID. The ID of the parent that the 1.1802 - working directory is to be updated to. If the working directory is 1.1803 - being merged, it will not change this parent. 1.1804 -</para> 1.1805 -</listitem> 1.1806 -<listitem><para><literal>parent2</literal>: A changeset ID. Only set if the working 1.1807 - directory is being merged. The ID of the revision that the working 1.1808 - directory is being merged with. 1.1809 -</para> 1.1810 -</listitem></itemizedlist> 1.1811 - 1.1812 -<para>See also: <literal role="hook">update</literal> (section <xref linkend="sec:hook:update"/>) 1.1813 -</para> 1.1814 - 1.1815 -</sect2> 1.1816 -<sect2> 1.1817 -<title><literal role="hook">tag</literal>&emdash;after tagging a changeset</title> 1.1818 -<para>\label{sec:hook:tag} 1.1819 -</para> 1.1820 - 1.1821 -<para>This hook is run after a tag has been created. 1.1822 -</para> 1.1823 - 1.1824 -<para>Parameters to this hook: 1.1825 -</para> 1.1826 -<itemizedlist> 1.1827 -<listitem><para><literal>local</literal>: A boolean. Whether the new tag is local to this 1.1828 - repository instance (i.e. stored in <filename role="special">.hg/localtags</filename>) or 1.1829 - managed by Mercurial (stored in <filename role="special">.hgtags</filename>). 1.1830 -</para> 1.1831 -</listitem> 1.1832 -<listitem><para><literal>node</literal>: A changeset ID. The ID of the changeset that was 1.1833 - tagged. 1.1834 -</para> 1.1835 -</listitem> 1.1836 -<listitem><para><literal>tag</literal>: A string. The name of the tag that was created. 1.1837 -</para> 1.1838 -</listitem></itemizedlist> 1.1839 - 1.1840 -<para>If the created tag is revision-controlled, the <literal role="hook">commit</literal> hook 1.1841 -(section <xref linkend="sec:hook:commit"/>) is run before this hook. 1.1842 -</para> 1.1843 - 1.1844 -<para>See also: <literal role="hook">pretag</literal> (section <xref linkend="sec:hook:pretag"/>) 1.1845 -</para> 1.1846 - 1.1847 -</sect2> 1.1848 -<sect2> 1.1849 -<title><literal role="hook">update</literal>&emdash;after updating or merging working directory</title> 1.1850 -<para>\label{sec:hook:update} 1.1851 -</para> 1.1852 - 1.1853 -<para>This hook is run after an update or merge of the working directory 1.1854 -completes. Since a merge can fail (if the external <command>hgmerge</command> 1.1855 -command fails to resolve conflicts in a file), this hook communicates 1.1856 -whether the update or merge completed cleanly. 1.1857 -</para> 1.1858 - 1.1859 -<itemizedlist> 1.1860 -<listitem><para><literal>error</literal>: A boolean. Indicates whether the update or 1.1861 - merge completed successfully. 1.1862 -</para> 1.1863 -</listitem> 1.1864 -<listitem><para><literal>parent1</literal>: A changeset ID. The ID of the parent that the 1.1865 - working directory was updated to. If the working directory was 1.1866 - merged, it will not have changed this parent. 1.1867 -</para> 1.1868 -</listitem> 1.1869 -<listitem><para><literal>parent2</literal>: A changeset ID. Only set if the working 1.1870 - directory was merged. The ID of the revision that the working 1.1871 - directory was merged with. 1.1872 -</para> 1.1873 -</listitem></itemizedlist> 1.1874 - 1.1875 -<para>See also: <literal role="hook">preupdate</literal> (section <xref linkend="sec:hook:preupdate"/>) 1.1876 -</para> 1.1877 - 1.1878 -</sect2> 1.1879 -</sect1> 1.1880 +<chapter id="chap:hook"> 1.1881 + <?dbhtml filename="handling-repository-events-with-hooks.html"?> 1.1882 + <title>Handling repository events with hooks</title> 1.1883 + 1.1884 + <para id="x_1e6">Mercurial offers a powerful mechanism to let you perform 1.1885 + automated actions in response to events that occur in a 1.1886 + repository. In some cases, you can even control Mercurial's 1.1887 + response to those events.</para> 1.1888 + 1.1889 + <para id="x_1e7">The name Mercurial uses for one of these actions is a 1.1890 + <emphasis>hook</emphasis>. Hooks are called 1.1891 + <quote>triggers</quote> in some revision control systems, but the 1.1892 + two names refer to the same idea.</para> 1.1893 + 1.1894 + <sect1> 1.1895 + <title>An overview of hooks in Mercurial</title> 1.1896 + 1.1897 + <para id="x_1e8">Here is a brief list of the hooks that Mercurial 1.1898 + supports. We will revisit each of these hooks in more detail 1.1899 + later, in <xref linkend="sec:hook:ref"/>.</para> 1.1900 + 1.1901 + <para id="x_1f6">Each of the hooks whose description begins with the word 1.1902 + <quote>Controlling</quote> has the ability to determine whether 1.1903 + an activity can proceed. If the hook succeeds, the activity may 1.1904 + proceed; if it fails, the activity is either not permitted or 1.1905 + undone, depending on the hook.</para> 1.1906 + 1.1907 + <itemizedlist> 1.1908 + <listitem><para id="x_1e9"><literal role="hook">changegroup</literal>: This 1.1909 + is run after a group of changesets has been brought into the 1.1910 + repository from elsewhere.</para> 1.1911 + </listitem> 1.1912 + <listitem><para id="x_1ea"><literal role="hook">commit</literal>: This is 1.1913 + run after a new changeset has been created in the local 1.1914 + repository.</para> 1.1915 + </listitem> 1.1916 + <listitem><para id="x_1eb"><literal role="hook">incoming</literal>: This is 1.1917 + run once for each new changeset that is brought into the 1.1918 + repository from elsewhere. Notice the difference from 1.1919 + <literal role="hook">changegroup</literal>, which is run 1.1920 + once per <emphasis>group</emphasis> of changesets brought 1.1921 + in.</para> 1.1922 + </listitem> 1.1923 + <listitem><para id="x_1ec"><literal role="hook">outgoing</literal>: This is 1.1924 + run after a group of changesets has been transmitted from 1.1925 + this repository.</para> 1.1926 + </listitem> 1.1927 + <listitem><para id="x_1ed"><literal role="hook">prechangegroup</literal>: 1.1928 + This is run before starting to bring a group of changesets 1.1929 + into the repository. 1.1930 + </para> 1.1931 + </listitem> 1.1932 + <listitem><para id="x_1ee"><literal role="hook">precommit</literal>: 1.1933 + Controlling. This is run before starting a commit. 1.1934 + </para> 1.1935 + </listitem> 1.1936 + <listitem><para id="x_1ef"><literal role="hook">preoutgoing</literal>: 1.1937 + Controlling. This is run before starting to transmit a group 1.1938 + of changesets from this repository. 1.1939 + </para> 1.1940 + </listitem> 1.1941 + <listitem><para id="x_1f0"><literal role="hook">pretag</literal>: 1.1942 + Controlling. This is run before creating a tag. 1.1943 + </para> 1.1944 + </listitem> 1.1945 + <listitem><para id="x_1f1"><literal 1.1946 + role="hook">pretxnchangegroup</literal>: Controlling. This 1.1947 + is run after a group of changesets has been brought into the 1.1948 + local repository from another, but before the transaction 1.1949 + completes that will make the changes permanent in the 1.1950 + repository. 1.1951 + </para> 1.1952 + </listitem> 1.1953 + <listitem><para id="x_1f2"><literal role="hook">pretxncommit</literal>: 1.1954 + Controlling. This is run after a new changeset has been 1.1955 + created in the local repository, but before the transaction 1.1956 + completes that will make it permanent. 1.1957 + </para> 1.1958 + </listitem> 1.1959 + <listitem><para id="x_1f3"><literal role="hook">preupdate</literal>: 1.1960 + Controlling. This is run before starting an update or merge 1.1961 + of the working directory. 1.1962 + </para> 1.1963 + </listitem> 1.1964 + <listitem><para id="x_1f4"><literal role="hook">tag</literal>: This is run 1.1965 + after a tag is created. 1.1966 + </para> 1.1967 + </listitem> 1.1968 + <listitem><para id="x_1f5"><literal role="hook">update</literal>: This is 1.1969 + run after an update or merge of the working directory has 1.1970 + finished. 1.1971 + </para> 1.1972 + </listitem></itemizedlist> 1.1973 + 1.1974 + </sect1> 1.1975 + <sect1> 1.1976 + <title>Hooks and security</title> 1.1977 + 1.1978 + <sect2> 1.1979 + <title>Hooks are run with your privileges</title> 1.1980 + 1.1981 + <para id="x_1f7">When you run a Mercurial command in a repository, and the 1.1982 + command causes a hook to run, that hook runs on 1.1983 + <emphasis>your</emphasis> system, under 1.1984 + <emphasis>your</emphasis> user account, with 1.1985 + <emphasis>your</emphasis> privilege level. Since hooks are 1.1986 + arbitrary pieces of executable code, you should treat them 1.1987 + with an appropriate level of suspicion. Do not install a hook 1.1988 + unless you are confident that you know who created it and what 1.1989 + it does. 1.1990 + </para> 1.1991 + 1.1992 + <para id="x_1f8">In some cases, you may be exposed to hooks that you did 1.1993 + not install yourself. If you work with Mercurial on an 1.1994 + unfamiliar system, Mercurial will run hooks defined in that 1.1995 + system's global <filename role="special">~/.hgrc</filename> 1.1996 + file. 1.1997 + </para> 1.1998 + 1.1999 + <para id="x_1f9">If you are working with a repository owned by another 1.2000 + user, Mercurial can run hooks defined in that user's 1.2001 + repository, but it will still run them as <quote>you</quote>. 1.2002 + For example, if you <command role="hg-cmd">hg pull</command> 1.2003 + from that repository, and its <filename 1.2004 + role="special">.hg/hgrc</filename> defines a local <literal 1.2005 + role="hook">outgoing</literal> hook, that hook will run 1.2006 + under your user account, even though you don't own that 1.2007 + repository. 1.2008 + </para> 1.2009 + 1.2010 + <note> 1.2011 + <para id="x_1fa"> This only applies if you are pulling from a repository 1.2012 + on a local or network filesystem. If you're pulling over 1.2013 + http or ssh, any <literal role="hook">outgoing</literal> 1.2014 + hook will run under whatever account is executing the server 1.2015 + process, on the server. 1.2016 + </para> 1.2017 + </note> 1.2018 + 1.2019 + <para id="x_1fb">To see what hooks are defined in a repository, 1.2020 + use the <command role="hg-cmd">hg showconfig hooks</command> 1.2021 + command. If you are working in one repository, but talking to 1.2022 + another that you do not own (e.g. using <command 1.2023 + role="hg-cmd">hg pull</command> or <command role="hg-cmd">hg 1.2024 + incoming</command>), remember that it is the other 1.2025 + repository's hooks you should be checking, not your own. 1.2026 + </para> 1.2027 + </sect2> 1.2028 + 1.2029 + <sect2> 1.2030 + <title>Hooks do not propagate</title> 1.2031 + 1.2032 + <para id="x_1fc">In Mercurial, hooks are not revision controlled, and do 1.2033 + not propagate when you clone, or pull from, a repository. The 1.2034 + reason for this is simple: a hook is a completely arbitrary 1.2035 + piece of executable code. It runs under your user identity, 1.2036 + with your privilege level, on your machine. 1.2037 + </para> 1.2038 + 1.2039 + <para id="x_1fd">It would be extremely reckless for any distributed 1.2040 + revision control system to implement revision-controlled 1.2041 + hooks, as this would offer an easily exploitable way to 1.2042 + subvert the accounts of users of the revision control system. 1.2043 + </para> 1.2044 + 1.2045 + <para id="x_1fe">Since Mercurial does not propagate hooks, if you are 1.2046 + collaborating with other people on a common project, you 1.2047 + should not assume that they are using the same Mercurial hooks 1.2048 + as you are, or that theirs are correctly configured. You 1.2049 + should document the hooks you expect people to use. 1.2050 + </para> 1.2051 + 1.2052 + <para id="x_1ff">In a corporate intranet, this is somewhat easier to 1.2053 + control, as you can for example provide a 1.2054 + <quote>standard</quote> installation of Mercurial on an NFS 1.2055 + filesystem, and use a site-wide <filename role="special">~/.hgrc</filename> file to define hooks that all users will 1.2056 + see. However, this too has its limits; see below. 1.2057 + </para> 1.2058 + </sect2> 1.2059 + 1.2060 + <sect2> 1.2061 + <title>Hooks can be overridden</title> 1.2062 + 1.2063 + <para id="x_200">Mercurial allows you to override a hook definition by 1.2064 + redefining the hook. You can disable it by setting its value 1.2065 + to the empty string, or change its behavior as you wish. 1.2066 + </para> 1.2067 + 1.2068 + <para id="x_201">If you deploy a system- or site-wide <filename 1.2069 + role="special">~/.hgrc</filename> file that defines some 1.2070 + hooks, you should thus understand that your users can disable 1.2071 + or override those hooks. 1.2072 + </para> 1.2073 + </sect2> 1.2074 + 1.2075 + <sect2> 1.2076 + <title>Ensuring that critical hooks are run</title> 1.2077 + 1.2078 + <para id="x_202">Sometimes you may want to enforce a policy that you do not 1.2079 + want others to be able to work around. For example, you may 1.2080 + have a requirement that every changeset must pass a rigorous 1.2081 + set of tests. Defining this requirement via a hook in a 1.2082 + site-wide <filename role="special">~/.hgrc</filename> won't 1.2083 + work for remote users on laptops, and of course local users 1.2084 + can subvert it at will by overriding the hook. 1.2085 + </para> 1.2086 + 1.2087 + <para id="x_203">Instead, you can set up your policies for use of Mercurial 1.2088 + so that people are expected to propagate changes through a 1.2089 + well-known <quote>canonical</quote> server that you have 1.2090 + locked down and configured appropriately. 1.2091 + </para> 1.2092 + 1.2093 + <para id="x_204">One way to do this is via a combination of social 1.2094 + engineering and technology. Set up a restricted-access 1.2095 + account; users can push changes over the network to 1.2096 + repositories managed by this account, but they cannot log into 1.2097 + the account and run normal shell commands. In this scenario, 1.2098 + a user can commit a changeset that contains any old garbage 1.2099 + they want. 1.2100 + </para> 1.2101 + 1.2102 + <para id="x_205">When someone pushes a changeset to the server that 1.2103 + everyone pulls from, the server will test the changeset before 1.2104 + it accepts it as permanent, and reject it if it fails to pass 1.2105 + the test suite. If people only pull changes from this 1.2106 + filtering server, it will serve to ensure that all changes 1.2107 + that people pull have been automatically vetted. 1.2108 + </para> 1.2109 + 1.2110 + </sect2> 1.2111 + </sect1> 1.2112 + 1.2113 + <sect1 id="sec:hook:simple"> 1.2114 + <title>A short tutorial on using hooks</title> 1.2115 + 1.2116 + <para id="x_212">It is easy to write a Mercurial hook. Let's start with a 1.2117 + hook that runs when you finish a <command role="hg-cmd">hg 1.2118 + commit</command>, and simply prints the hash of the changeset 1.2119 + you just created. The hook is called <literal 1.2120 + role="hook">commit</literal>. 1.2121 + </para> 1.2122 + 1.2123 + <para id="x_213">All hooks follow the pattern in this example.</para> 1.2124 + 1.2125 +&interaction.hook.simple.init; 1.2126 + 1.2127 + <para id="x_214">You add an entry to the <literal 1.2128 + role="rc-hooks">hooks</literal> section of your <filename 1.2129 + role="special">~/.hgrc</filename>. On the left is the name of 1.2130 + the event to trigger on; on the right is the action to take. As 1.2131 + you can see, you can run an arbitrary shell command in a hook. 1.2132 + Mercurial passes extra information to the hook using environment 1.2133 + variables (look for <envar>HG_NODE</envar> in the example). 1.2134 + </para> 1.2135 + 1.2136 + <sect2> 1.2137 + <title>Performing multiple actions per event</title> 1.2138 + 1.2139 + <para id="x_215">Quite often, you will want to define more than one hook 1.2140 + for a particular kind of event, as shown below.</para> 1.2141 + 1.2142 +&interaction.hook.simple.ext; 1.2143 + 1.2144 + <para id="x_216">Mercurial lets you do this by adding an 1.2145 + <emphasis>extension</emphasis> to the end of a hook's name. 1.2146 + You extend a hook's name by giving the name of the hook, 1.2147 + followed by a full stop (the 1.2148 + <quote><literal>.</literal></quote> character), followed by 1.2149 + some more text of your choosing. For example, Mercurial will 1.2150 + run both <literal>commit.foo</literal> and 1.2151 + <literal>commit.bar</literal> when the 1.2152 + <literal>commit</literal> event occurs. 1.2153 + </para> 1.2154 + 1.2155 + <para id="x_217">To give a well-defined order of execution when there are 1.2156 + multiple hooks defined for an event, Mercurial sorts hooks by 1.2157 + extension, and executes the hook commands in this sorted 1.2158 + order. In the above example, it will execute 1.2159 + <literal>commit.bar</literal> before 1.2160 + <literal>commit.foo</literal>, and <literal>commit</literal> 1.2161 + before both. 1.2162 + </para> 1.2163 + 1.2164 + <para id="x_218">It is a good idea to use a somewhat descriptive 1.2165 + extension when you define a new hook. This will help you to 1.2166 + remember what the hook was for. If the hook fails, you'll get 1.2167 + an error message that contains the hook name and extension, so 1.2168 + using a descriptive extension could give you an immediate hint 1.2169 + as to why the hook failed (see <xref 1.2170 + linkend="sec:hook:perm"/> for an example). 1.2171 + </para> 1.2172 + 1.2173 + </sect2> 1.2174 + <sect2 id="sec:hook:perm"> 1.2175 + <title>Controlling whether an activity can proceed</title> 1.2176 + 1.2177 + <para id="x_219">In our earlier examples, we used the <literal 1.2178 + role="hook">commit</literal> hook, which is run after a 1.2179 + commit has completed. This is one of several Mercurial hooks 1.2180 + that run after an activity finishes. Such hooks have no way 1.2181 + of influencing the activity itself. 1.2182 + </para> 1.2183 + 1.2184 + <para id="x_21a">Mercurial defines a number of events that occur before an 1.2185 + activity starts; or after it starts, but before it finishes. 1.2186 + Hooks that trigger on these events have the added ability to 1.2187 + choose whether the activity can continue, or will abort. 1.2188 + </para> 1.2189 + 1.2190 + <para id="x_21b">The <literal role="hook">pretxncommit</literal> hook runs 1.2191 + after a commit has all but completed. In other words, the 1.2192 + metadata representing the changeset has been written out to 1.2193 + disk, but the transaction has not yet been allowed to 1.2194 + complete. The <literal role="hook">pretxncommit</literal> 1.2195 + hook has the ability to decide whether the transaction can 1.2196 + complete, or must be rolled back. 1.2197 + </para> 1.2198 + 1.2199 + <para id="x_21c">If the <literal role="hook">pretxncommit</literal> hook 1.2200 + exits with a status code of zero, the transaction is allowed 1.2201 + to complete; the commit finishes; and the <literal 1.2202 + role="hook">commit</literal> hook is run. If the <literal 1.2203 + role="hook">pretxncommit</literal> hook exits with a 1.2204 + non-zero status code, the transaction is rolled back; the 1.2205 + metadata representing the changeset is erased; and the 1.2206 + <literal role="hook">commit</literal> hook is not run. 1.2207 + </para> 1.2208 + 1.2209 +&interaction.hook.simple.pretxncommit; 1.2210 + 1.2211 + <para id="x_21d">The hook in the example above checks that a commit comment 1.2212 + contains a bug ID. If it does, the commit can complete. If 1.2213 + not, the commit is rolled back. 1.2214 + </para> 1.2215 + 1.2216 + </sect2> 1.2217 + </sect1> 1.2218 + <sect1> 1.2219 + <title>Writing your own hooks</title> 1.2220 + 1.2221 + <para id="x_21e">When you are writing a hook, you might find it useful to run 1.2222 + Mercurial either with the <option 1.2223 + role="hg-opt-global">-v</option> option, or the <envar 1.2224 + role="rc-item-ui">verbose</envar> config item set to 1.2225 + <quote>true</quote>. When you do so, Mercurial will print a 1.2226 + message before it calls each hook. 1.2227 + </para> 1.2228 + 1.2229 + <sect2 id="sec:hook:lang"> 1.2230 + <title>Choosing how your hook should run</title> 1.2231 + 1.2232 + <para id="x_21f">You can write a hook either as a normal 1.2233 + program&emdash;typically a shell script&emdash;or as a Python 1.2234 + function that is executed within the Mercurial process. 1.2235 + </para> 1.2236 + 1.2237 + <para id="x_220">Writing a hook as an external program has the advantage 1.2238 + that it requires no knowledge of Mercurial's internals. You 1.2239 + can call normal Mercurial commands to get any added 1.2240 + information you need. The trade-off is that external hooks 1.2241 + are slower than in-process hooks. 1.2242 + </para> 1.2243 + 1.2244 + <para id="x_221">An in-process Python hook has complete access to the 1.2245 + Mercurial API, and does not <quote>shell out</quote> to 1.2246 + another process, so it is inherently faster than an external 1.2247 + hook. It is also easier to obtain much of the information 1.2248 + that a hook requires by using the Mercurial API than by 1.2249 + running Mercurial commands. 1.2250 + </para> 1.2251 + 1.2252 + <para id="x_222">If you are comfortable with Python, or require high 1.2253 + performance, writing your hooks in Python may be a good 1.2254 + choice. However, when you have a straightforward hook to 1.2255 + write and you don't need to care about performance (probably 1.2256 + the majority of hooks), a shell script is perfectly fine. 1.2257 + </para> 1.2258 + 1.2259 + </sect2> 1.2260 + <sect2 id="sec:hook:param"> 1.2261 + <title>Hook parameters</title> 1.2262 + 1.2263 + <para id="x_223">Mercurial calls each hook with a set of well-defined 1.2264 + parameters. In Python, a parameter is passed as a keyword 1.2265 + argument to your hook function. For an external program, a 1.2266 + parameter is passed as an environment variable. 1.2267 + </para> 1.2268 + 1.2269 + <para id="x_224">Whether your hook is written in Python or as a shell 1.2270 + script, the hook-specific parameter names and values will be 1.2271 + the same. A boolean parameter will be represented as a 1.2272 + boolean value in Python, but as the number 1 (for 1.2273 + <quote>true</quote>) or 0 (for <quote>false</quote>) as an 1.2274 + environment variable for an external hook. If a hook 1.2275 + parameter is named <literal>foo</literal>, the keyword 1.2276 + argument for a Python hook will also be named 1.2277 + <literal>foo</literal>, while the environment variable for an 1.2278 + external hook will be named <literal>HG_FOO</literal>. 1.2279 + </para> 1.2280 + </sect2> 1.2281 + 1.2282 + <sect2> 1.2283 + <title>Hook return values and activity control</title> 1.2284 + 1.2285 + <para id="x_225">A hook that executes successfully must exit with a status 1.2286 + of zero if external, or return boolean <quote>false</quote> if 1.2287 + in-process. Failure is indicated with a non-zero exit status 1.2288 + from an external hook, or an in-process hook returning boolean 1.2289 + <quote>true</quote>. If an in-process hook raises an 1.2290 + exception, the hook is considered to have failed. 1.2291 + </para> 1.2292 + 1.2293 + <para id="x_226">For a hook that controls whether an activity can proceed, 1.2294 + zero/false means <quote>allow</quote>, while 1.2295 + non-zero/true/exception means <quote>deny</quote>. 1.2296 + </para> 1.2297 + </sect2> 1.2298 + 1.2299 + <sect2> 1.2300 + <title>Writing an external hook</title> 1.2301 + 1.2302 + <para id="x_227">When you define an external hook in your <filename 1.2303 + role="special">~/.hgrc</filename> and the hook is run, its 1.2304 + value is passed to your shell, which interprets it. This 1.2305 + means that you can use normal shell constructs in the body of 1.2306 + the hook. 1.2307 + </para> 1.2308 + 1.2309 + <para id="x_228">An executable hook is always run with its current 1.2310 + directory set to a repository's root directory. 1.2311 + </para> 1.2312 + 1.2313 + <para id="x_229">Each hook parameter is passed in as an environment 1.2314 + variable; the name is upper-cased, and prefixed with the 1.2315 + string <quote><literal>HG_</literal></quote>. 1.2316 + </para> 1.2317 + 1.2318 + <para id="x_22a">With the exception of hook parameters, Mercurial does not 1.2319 + set or modify any environment variables when running a hook. 1.2320 + This is useful to remember if you are writing a site-wide hook 1.2321 + that may be run by a number of different users with differing 1.2322 + environment variables set. In multi-user situations, you 1.2323 + should not rely on environment variables being set to the 1.2324 + values you have in your environment when testing the hook. 1.2325 + </para> 1.2326 + </sect2> 1.2327 + 1.2328 + <sect2> 1.2329 + <title>Telling Mercurial to use an in-process hook</title> 1.2330 + 1.2331 + <para id="x_22b">The <filename role="special">~/.hgrc</filename> syntax 1.2332 + for defining an in-process hook is slightly different than for 1.2333 + an executable hook. The value of the hook must start with the 1.2334 + text <quote><literal>python:</literal></quote>, and continue 1.2335 + with the fully-qualified name of a callable object to use as 1.2336 + the hook's value. 1.2337 + </para> 1.2338 + 1.2339 + <para id="x_22c">The module in which a hook lives is automatically imported 1.2340 + when a hook is run. So long as you have the module name and 1.2341 + <envar>PYTHONPATH</envar> right, it should <quote>just 1.2342 + work</quote>. 1.2343 + </para> 1.2344 + 1.2345 + <para id="x_22d">The following <filename role="special">~/.hgrc</filename> 1.2346 + example snippet illustrates the syntax and meaning of the 1.2347 + notions we just described. 1.2348 + </para> 1.2349 + <programlisting>[hooks] 1.2350 +commit.example = python:mymodule.submodule.myhook</programlisting> 1.2351 + <para id="x_22e">When Mercurial runs the <literal>commit.example</literal> 1.2352 + hook, it imports <literal>mymodule.submodule</literal>, looks 1.2353 + for the callable object named <literal>myhook</literal>, and 1.2354 + calls it. 1.2355 + </para> 1.2356 + </sect2> 1.2357 + 1.2358 + <sect2> 1.2359 + <title>Writing an in-process hook</title> 1.2360 + 1.2361 + <para id="x_22f">The simplest in-process hook does nothing, but illustrates 1.2362 + the basic shape of the hook API: 1.2363 + </para> 1.2364 + <programlisting>def myhook(ui, repo, **kwargs): 1.2365 + pass</programlisting> 1.2366 + <para id="x_230">The first argument to a Python hook is always a <literal 1.2367 + role="py-mod-mercurial.ui">ui</literal> object. The second 1.2368 + is a repository object; at the moment, it is always an 1.2369 + instance of <literal 1.2370 + role="py-mod-mercurial.localrepo">localrepository</literal>. 1.2371 + Following these two arguments are other keyword arguments. 1.2372 + Which ones are passed in depends on the hook being called, but 1.2373 + a hook can ignore arguments it doesn't care about by dropping 1.2374 + them into a keyword argument dict, as with 1.2375 + <literal>**kwargs</literal> above. 1.2376 + </para> 1.2377 + 1.2378 + </sect2> 1.2379 + </sect1> 1.2380 + <sect1> 1.2381 + <title>Some hook examples</title> 1.2382 + 1.2383 + <sect2> 1.2384 + <title>Writing meaningful commit messages</title> 1.2385 + 1.2386 + <para id="x_231">It's hard to imagine a useful commit message being very 1.2387 + short. The simple <literal role="hook">pretxncommit</literal> 1.2388 + hook of the example below will prevent you from committing a 1.2389 + changeset with a message that is less than ten bytes long. 1.2390 + </para> 1.2391 + 1.2392 +&interaction.hook.msglen.go; 1.2393 + </sect2> 1.2394 + 1.2395 + <sect2> 1.2396 + <title>Checking for trailing whitespace</title> 1.2397 + 1.2398 + <para id="x_232">An interesting use of a commit-related hook is to help you 1.2399 + to write cleaner code. A simple example of <quote>cleaner 1.2400 + code</quote> is the dictum that a change should not add any 1.2401 + new lines of text that contain <quote>trailing 1.2402 + whitespace</quote>. Trailing whitespace is a series of 1.2403 + space and tab characters at the end of a line of text. In 1.2404 + most cases, trailing whitespace is unnecessary, invisible 1.2405 + noise, but it is occasionally problematic, and people often 1.2406 + prefer to get rid of it. 1.2407 + </para> 1.2408 + 1.2409 + <para id="x_233">You can use either the <literal 1.2410 + role="hook">precommit</literal> or <literal 1.2411 + role="hook">pretxncommit</literal> hook to tell whether you 1.2412 + have a trailing whitespace problem. If you use the <literal 1.2413 + role="hook">precommit</literal> hook, the hook will not know 1.2414 + which files you are committing, so it will have to check every 1.2415 + modified file in the repository for trailing white space. If 1.2416 + you want to commit a change to just the file 1.2417 + <filename>foo</filename>, but the file 1.2418 + <filename>bar</filename> contains trailing whitespace, doing a 1.2419 + check in the <literal role="hook">precommit</literal> hook 1.2420 + will prevent you from committing <filename>foo</filename> due 1.2421 + to the problem with <filename>bar</filename>. This doesn't 1.2422 + seem right. 1.2423 + </para> 1.2424 + 1.2425 + <para id="x_234">Should you choose the <literal 1.2426 + role="hook">pretxncommit</literal> hook, the check won't 1.2427 + occur until just before the transaction for the commit 1.2428 + completes. This will allow you to check for problems only the 1.2429 + exact files that are being committed. However, if you entered 1.2430 + the commit message interactively and the hook fails, the 1.2431 + transaction will roll back; you'll have to re-enter the commit 1.2432 + message after you fix the trailing whitespace and run <command 1.2433 + role="hg-cmd">hg commit</command> again. 1.2434 + </para> 1.2435 + 1.2436 + &interaction.ch09-hook.ws.simple; 1.2437 + 1.2438 + <para id="x_235">In this example, we introduce a simple <literal 1.2439 + role="hook">pretxncommit</literal> hook that checks for 1.2440 + trailing whitespace. This hook is short, but not very 1.2441 + helpful. It exits with an error status if a change adds a 1.2442 + line with trailing whitespace to any file, but does not print 1.2443 + any information that might help us to identify the offending 1.2444 + file or line. It also has the nice property of not paying 1.2445 + attention to unmodified lines; only lines that introduce new 1.2446 + trailing whitespace cause problems. 1.2447 + </para> 1.2448 + 1.2449 + &ch09-check_whitespace.py.lst; 1.2450 + 1.2451 + <para id="x_236">The above version is much more complex, but also more 1.2452 + useful. It parses a unified diff to see if any lines add 1.2453 + trailing whitespace, and prints the name of the file and the 1.2454 + line number of each such occurrence. Even better, if the 1.2455 + change adds trailing whitespace, this hook saves the commit 1.2456 + comment and prints the name of the save file before exiting 1.2457 + and telling Mercurial to roll the transaction back, so you can 1.2458 + use the <option role="hg-opt-commit">-l filename</option> 1.2459 + option to <command role="hg-cmd">hg commit</command> to reuse 1.2460 + the saved commit message once you've corrected the problem. 1.2461 + </para> 1.2462 + 1.2463 + &interaction.ch09-hook.ws.better; 1.2464 + 1.2465 + <para id="x_237">As a final aside, note in the example above the 1.2466 + use of <command>sed</command>'s in-place editing feature to 1.2467 + get rid of trailing whitespace from a file. This is concise 1.2468 + and useful enough that I will reproduce it here (using 1.2469 + <command>perl</command> for good measure).</para> 1.2470 + <programlisting>perl -pi -e 's,\s+$,,' filename</programlisting> 1.2471 + 1.2472 + </sect2> 1.2473 + </sect1> 1.2474 + <sect1> 1.2475 + <title>Bundled hooks</title> 1.2476 + 1.2477 + <para id="x_238">Mercurial ships with several bundled hooks. You can find 1.2478 + them in the <filename class="directory">hgext</filename> 1.2479 + directory of a Mercurial source tree. If you are using a 1.2480 + Mercurial binary package, the hooks will be located in the 1.2481 + <filename class="directory">hgext</filename> directory of 1.2482 + wherever your package installer put Mercurial. 1.2483 + </para> 1.2484 + 1.2485 + <sect2> 1.2486 + <title><literal role="hg-ext">acl</literal>&emdash;access 1.2487 + control for parts of a repository</title> 1.2488 + 1.2489 + <para id="x_239">The <literal role="hg-ext">acl</literal> extension lets 1.2490 + you control which remote users are allowed to push changesets 1.2491 + to a networked server. You can protect any portion of a 1.2492 + repository (including the entire repo), so that a specific 1.2493 + remote user can push changes that do not affect the protected 1.2494 + portion. 1.2495 + </para> 1.2496 + 1.2497 + <para id="x_23a">This extension implements access control based on the 1.2498 + identity of the user performing a push, 1.2499 + <emphasis>not</emphasis> on who committed the changesets 1.2500 + they're pushing. It makes sense to use this hook only if you 1.2501 + have a locked-down server environment that authenticates 1.2502 + remote users, and you want to be sure that only specific users 1.2503 + are allowed to push changes to that server. 1.2504 + </para> 1.2505 + 1.2506 + <sect3> 1.2507 + <title>Configuring the <literal role="hook">acl</literal> 1.2508 + hook</title> 1.2509 + 1.2510 + <para id="x_23b">In order to manage incoming changesets, the <literal 1.2511 + role="hg-ext">acl</literal> hook must be used as a 1.2512 + <literal role="hook">pretxnchangegroup</literal> hook. This 1.2513 + lets it see which files are modified by each incoming 1.2514 + changeset, and roll back a group of changesets if they 1.2515 + modify <quote>forbidden</quote> files. Example: 1.2516 + </para> 1.2517 + <programlisting>[hooks] 1.2518 +pretxnchangegroup.acl = python:hgext.acl.hook</programlisting> 1.2519 + 1.2520 + <para id="x_23c">The <literal role="hg-ext">acl</literal> extension is 1.2521 + configured using three sections. 1.2522 + </para> 1.2523 + 1.2524 + <para id="x_23d">The <literal role="rc-acl">acl</literal> section has 1.2525 + only one entry, <envar role="rc-item-acl">sources</envar>, 1.2526 + which lists the sources of incoming changesets that the hook 1.2527 + should pay attention to. You don't normally need to 1.2528 + configure this section. 1.2529 + </para> 1.2530 + <itemizedlist> 1.2531 + <listitem><para id="x_23e"><envar role="rc-item-acl">serve</envar>: 1.2532 + Control incoming changesets that are arriving from a 1.2533 + remote repository over http or ssh. This is the default 1.2534 + value of <envar role="rc-item-acl">sources</envar>, and 1.2535 + usually the only setting you'll need for this 1.2536 + configuration item. 1.2537 + </para> 1.2538 + </listitem> 1.2539 + <listitem><para id="x_23f"><envar role="rc-item-acl">pull</envar>: 1.2540 + Control incoming changesets that are arriving via a pull 1.2541 + from a local repository. 1.2542 + </para> 1.2543 + </listitem> 1.2544 + <listitem><para id="x_240"><envar role="rc-item-acl">push</envar>: 1.2545 + Control incoming changesets that are arriving via a push 1.2546 + from a local repository. 1.2547 + </para> 1.2548 + </listitem> 1.2549 + <listitem><para id="x_241"><envar role="rc-item-acl">bundle</envar>: 1.2550 + Control incoming changesets that are arriving from 1.2551 + another repository via a bundle. 1.2552 + </para> 1.2553 + </listitem></itemizedlist> 1.2554 + 1.2555 + <para id="x_242">The <literal role="rc-acl.allow">acl.allow</literal> 1.2556 + section controls the users that are allowed to add 1.2557 + changesets to the repository. If this section is not 1.2558 + present, all users that are not explicitly denied are 1.2559 + allowed. If this section is present, all users that are not 1.2560 + explicitly allowed are denied (so an empty section means 1.2561 + that all users are denied). 1.2562 + </para> 1.2563 + 1.2564 + <para id="x_243">The <literal role="rc-acl.deny">acl.deny</literal> 1.2565 + section determines which users are denied from adding 1.2566 + changesets to the repository. If this section is not 1.2567 + present or is empty, no users are denied. 1.2568 + </para> 1.2569 + 1.2570 + <para id="x_244">The syntaxes for the <literal 1.2571 + role="rc-acl.allow">acl.allow</literal> and <literal 1.2572 + role="rc-acl.deny">acl.deny</literal> sections are 1.2573 + identical. On the left of each entry is a glob pattern that 1.2574 + matches files or directories, relative to the root of the 1.2575 + repository; on the right, a user name. 1.2576 + </para> 1.2577 + 1.2578 + <para id="x_245">In the following example, the user 1.2579 + <literal>docwriter</literal> can only push changes to the 1.2580 + <filename class="directory">docs</filename> subtree of the 1.2581 + repository, while <literal>intern</literal> can push changes 1.2582 + to any file or directory except <filename 1.2583 + class="directory">source/sensitive</filename>. 1.2584 + </para> 1.2585 + <programlisting>[acl.allow] 1.2586 +docs/** = docwriter 1.2587 +[acl.deny] 1.2588 +source/sensitive/** = intern</programlisting> 1.2589 + 1.2590 + </sect3> 1.2591 + <sect3> 1.2592 + <title>Testing and troubleshooting</title> 1.2593 + 1.2594 + <para id="x_246">If you want to test the <literal 1.2595 + role="hg-ext">acl</literal> hook, run it with Mercurial's 1.2596 + debugging output enabled. Since you'll probably be running 1.2597 + it on a server where it's not convenient (or sometimes 1.2598 + possible) to pass in the <option 1.2599 + role="hg-opt-global">--debug</option> option, don't forget 1.2600 + that you can enable debugging output in your <filename 1.2601 + role="special">~/.hgrc</filename>: 1.2602 + </para> 1.2603 + <programlisting>[ui] 1.2604 +debug = true</programlisting> 1.2605 + <para id="x_247">With this enabled, the <literal 1.2606 + role="hg-ext">acl</literal> hook will print enough 1.2607 + information to let you figure out why it is allowing or 1.2608 + forbidding pushes from specific users. 1.2609 + </para> 1.2610 + 1.2611 + </sect3> </sect2> 1.2612 + 1.2613 + <sect2> 1.2614 + <title><literal 1.2615 + role="hg-ext">bugzilla</literal>&emdash;integration with 1.2616 + Bugzilla</title> 1.2617 + 1.2618 + <para id="x_248">The <literal role="hg-ext">bugzilla</literal> extension 1.2619 + adds a comment to a Bugzilla bug whenever it finds a reference 1.2620 + to that bug ID in a commit comment. You can install this hook 1.2621 + on a shared server, so that any time a remote user pushes 1.2622 + changes to this server, the hook gets run. 1.2623 + </para> 1.2624 + 1.2625 + <para id="x_249">It adds a comment to the bug that looks like this (you can 1.2626 + configure the contents of the comment&emdash;see below): 1.2627 + </para> 1.2628 + <programlisting>Changeset aad8b264143a, made by Joe User 1.2629 + <joe.user@domain.com> in the frobnitz repository, refers 1.2630 + to this bug. For complete details, see 1.2631 + http://hg.domain.com/frobnitz?cmd=changeset;node=aad8b264143a 1.2632 + Changeset description: Fix bug 10483 by guarding against some 1.2633 + NULL pointers</programlisting> 1.2634 + <para id="x_24a">The value of this hook is that it automates the process of 1.2635 + updating a bug any time a changeset refers to it. If you 1.2636 + configure the hook properly, it makes it easy for people to 1.2637 + browse straight from a Bugzilla bug to a changeset that refers 1.2638 + to that bug. 1.2639 + </para> 1.2640 + 1.2641 + <para id="x_24b">You can use the code in this hook as a starting point for 1.2642 + some more exotic Bugzilla integration recipes. Here are a few 1.2643 + possibilities: 1.2644 + </para> 1.2645 + <itemizedlist> 1.2646 + <listitem><para id="x_24c">Require that every changeset pushed to the 1.2647 + server have a valid bug ID in its commit comment. In this 1.2648 + case, you'd want to configure the hook as a <literal 1.2649 + role="hook">pretxncommit</literal> hook. This would 1.2650 + allow the hook to reject changes that didn't contain bug 1.2651 + IDs. 1.2652 + </para> 1.2653 + </listitem> 1.2654 + <listitem><para id="x_24d">Allow incoming changesets to automatically 1.2655 + modify the <emphasis>state</emphasis> of a bug, as well as 1.2656 + simply adding a comment. For example, the hook could 1.2657 + recognise the string <quote>fixed bug 31337</quote> as 1.2658 + indicating that it should update the state of bug 31337 to 1.2659 + <quote>requires testing</quote>. 1.2660 + </para> 1.2661 + </listitem></itemizedlist> 1.2662 + 1.2663 + <sect3 id="sec:hook:bugzilla:config"> 1.2664 + <title>Configuring the <literal role="hook">bugzilla</literal> 1.2665 + hook</title> 1.2666 + 1.2667 + <para id="x_24e">You should configure this hook in your server's 1.2668 + <filename role="special">~/.hgrc</filename> as an <literal 1.2669 + role="hook">incoming</literal> hook, for example as 1.2670 + follows: 1.2671 + </para> 1.2672 + <programlisting>[hooks] 1.2673 +incoming.bugzilla = python:hgext.bugzilla.hook</programlisting> 1.2674 + 1.2675 + <para id="x_24f">Because of the specialised nature of this hook, and 1.2676 + because Bugzilla was not written with this kind of 1.2677 + integration in mind, configuring this hook is a somewhat 1.2678 + involved process. 1.2679 + </para> 1.2680 + 1.2681 + <para id="x_250">Before you begin, you must install the MySQL bindings 1.2682 + for Python on the host(s) where you'll be running the hook. 1.2683 + If this is not available as a binary package for your 1.2684 + system, you can download it from 1.2685 + <citation>web:mysql-python</citation>. 1.2686 + </para> 1.2687 + 1.2688 + <para id="x_251">Configuration information for this hook lives in the 1.2689 + <literal role="rc-bugzilla">bugzilla</literal> section of 1.2690 + your <filename role="special">~/.hgrc</filename>. 1.2691 + </para> 1.2692 + <itemizedlist> 1.2693 + <listitem><para id="x_252"><envar 1.2694 + role="rc-item-bugzilla">version</envar>: The version 1.2695 + of Bugzilla installed on the server. The database 1.2696 + schema that Bugzilla uses changes occasionally, so this 1.2697 + hook has to know exactly which schema to use.</para> 1.2698 + </listitem> 1.2699 + <listitem><para id="x_253"><envar role="rc-item-bugzilla">host</envar>: 1.2700 + The hostname of the MySQL server that stores your 1.2701 + Bugzilla data. The database must be configured to allow 1.2702 + connections from whatever host you are running the 1.2703 + <literal role="hook">bugzilla</literal> hook on. 1.2704 + </para> 1.2705 + </listitem> 1.2706 + <listitem><para id="x_254"><envar role="rc-item-bugzilla">user</envar>: 1.2707 + The username with which to connect to the MySQL server. 1.2708 + The database must be configured to allow this user to 1.2709 + connect from whatever host you are running the <literal 1.2710 + role="hook">bugzilla</literal> hook on. This user 1.2711 + must be able to access and modify Bugzilla tables. The 1.2712 + default value of this item is <literal>bugs</literal>, 1.2713 + which is the standard name of the Bugzilla user in a 1.2714 + MySQL database. 1.2715 + </para> 1.2716 + </listitem> 1.2717 + <listitem><para id="x_255"><envar 1.2718 + role="rc-item-bugzilla">password</envar>: The MySQL 1.2719 + password for the user you configured above. This is 1.2720 + stored as plain text, so you should make sure that 1.2721 + unauthorised users cannot read the <filename 1.2722 + role="special">~/.hgrc</filename> file where you 1.2723 + store this information. 1.2724 + </para> 1.2725 + </listitem> 1.2726 + <listitem><para id="x_256"><envar role="rc-item-bugzilla">db</envar>: 1.2727 + The name of the Bugzilla database on the MySQL server. 1.2728 + The default value of this item is 1.2729 + <literal>bugs</literal>, which is the standard name of 1.2730 + the MySQL database where Bugzilla stores its data. 1.2731 + </para> 1.2732 + </listitem> 1.2733 + <listitem><para id="x_257"><envar 1.2734 + role="rc-item-bugzilla">notify</envar>: If you want 1.2735 + Bugzilla to send out a notification email to subscribers 1.2736 + after this hook has added a comment to a bug, you will 1.2737 + need this hook to run a command whenever it updates the 1.2738 + database. The command to run depends on where you have 1.2739 + installed Bugzilla, but it will typically look something 1.2740 + like this, if you have Bugzilla installed in <filename 1.2741 + class="directory">/var/www/html/bugzilla</filename>: 1.2742 + </para> 1.2743 + <programlisting>cd /var/www/html/bugzilla && 1.2744 + ./processmail %s nobody@nowhere.com</programlisting> 1.2745 + </listitem> 1.2746 + <listitem><para id="x_258"> The Bugzilla 1.2747 + <literal>processmail</literal> program expects to be 1.2748 + given a bug ID (the hook replaces 1.2749 + <quote><literal>%s</literal></quote> with the bug ID) 1.2750 + and an email address. It also expects to be able to 1.2751 + write to some files in the directory that it runs in. 1.2752 + If Bugzilla and this hook are not installed on the same 1.2753 + machine, you will need to find a way to run 1.2754 + <literal>processmail</literal> on the server where 1.2755 + Bugzilla is installed. 1.2756 + </para> 1.2757 + </listitem></itemizedlist> 1.2758 + 1.2759 + </sect3> 1.2760 + <sect3> 1.2761 + <title>Mapping committer names to Bugzilla user names</title> 1.2762 + 1.2763 + <para id="x_259">By default, the <literal 1.2764 + role="hg-ext">bugzilla</literal> hook tries to use the 1.2765 + email address of a changeset's committer as the Bugzilla 1.2766 + user name with which to update a bug. If this does not suit 1.2767 + your needs, you can map committer email addresses to 1.2768 + Bugzilla user names using a <literal 1.2769 + role="rc-usermap">usermap</literal> section. 1.2770 + </para> 1.2771 + 1.2772 + <para id="x_25a">Each item in the <literal 1.2773 + role="rc-usermap">usermap</literal> section contains an 1.2774 + email address on the left, and a Bugzilla user name on the 1.2775 + right. 1.2776 + </para> 1.2777 + <programlisting>[usermap] 1.2778 +jane.user@example.com = jane</programlisting> 1.2779 + <para id="x_25b">You can either keep the <literal 1.2780 + role="rc-usermap">usermap</literal> data in a normal 1.2781 + <filename role="special">~/.hgrc</filename>, or tell the 1.2782 + <literal role="hg-ext">bugzilla</literal> hook to read the 1.2783 + information from an external <filename>usermap</filename> 1.2784 + file. In the latter case, you can store 1.2785 + <filename>usermap</filename> data by itself in (for example) 1.2786 + a user-modifiable repository. This makes it possible to let 1.2787 + your users maintain their own <envar 1.2788 + role="rc-item-bugzilla">usermap</envar> entries. The main 1.2789 + <filename role="special">~/.hgrc</filename> file might look 1.2790 + like this: 1.2791 + </para> 1.2792 + <programlisting># regular hgrc file refers to external usermap file 1.2793 +[bugzilla] 1.2794 +usermap = /home/hg/repos/userdata/bugzilla-usermap.conf</programlisting> 1.2795 + <para id="x_25c">While the <filename>usermap</filename> file that it 1.2796 + refers to might look like this: 1.2797 + </para> 1.2798 + <programlisting># bugzilla-usermap.conf - inside a hg repository 1.2799 +[usermap] stephanie@example.com = steph</programlisting> 1.2800 + 1.2801 + </sect3> 1.2802 + <sect3> 1.2803 + <title>Configuring the text that gets added to a bug</title> 1.2804 + 1.2805 + <para id="x_25d">You can configure the text that this hook adds as a 1.2806 + comment; you specify it in the form of a Mercurial template. 1.2807 + Several <filename role="special">~/.hgrc</filename> entries 1.2808 + (still in the <literal role="rc-bugzilla">bugzilla</literal> 1.2809 + section) control this behavior. 1.2810 + </para> 1.2811 + <itemizedlist> 1.2812 + <listitem><para id="x_25e"><literal>strip</literal>: The number of 1.2813 + leading path elements to strip from a repository's path 1.2814 + name to construct a partial path for a URL. For example, 1.2815 + if the repositories on your server live under <filename 1.2816 + class="directory">/home/hg/repos</filename>, and you 1.2817 + have a repository whose path is <filename 1.2818 + class="directory">/home/hg/repos/app/tests</filename>, 1.2819 + then setting <literal>strip</literal> to 1.2820 + <literal>4</literal> will give a partial path of 1.2821 + <filename class="directory">app/tests</filename>. The 1.2822 + hook will make this partial path available when 1.2823 + expanding a template, as <literal>webroot</literal>. 1.2824 + </para> 1.2825 + </listitem> 1.2826 + <listitem><para id="x_25f"><literal>template</literal>: The text of the 1.2827 + template to use. In addition to the usual 1.2828 + changeset-related variables, this template can use 1.2829 + <literal>hgweb</literal> (the value of the 1.2830 + <literal>hgweb</literal> configuration item above) and 1.2831 + <literal>webroot</literal> (the path constructed using 1.2832 + <literal>strip</literal> above). 1.2833 + </para> 1.2834 + </listitem></itemizedlist> 1.2835 + 1.2836 + <para id="x_260">In addition, you can add a <envar 1.2837 + role="rc-item-web">baseurl</envar> item to the <literal 1.2838 + role="rc-web">web</literal> section of your <filename 1.2839 + role="special">~/.hgrc</filename>. The <literal 1.2840 + role="hg-ext">bugzilla</literal> hook will make this 1.2841 + available when expanding a template, as the base string to 1.2842 + use when constructing a URL that will let users browse from 1.2843 + a Bugzilla comment to view a changeset. Example: 1.2844 + </para> 1.2845 + <programlisting>[web] 1.2846 +baseurl = http://hg.domain.com/</programlisting> 1.2847 + 1.2848 + <para id="x_261">Here is an example set of <literal 1.2849 + role="hg-ext">bugzilla</literal> hook config information. 1.2850 + </para> 1.2851 + 1.2852 + &ch10-bugzilla-config.lst; 1.2853 + 1.2854 + </sect3> 1.2855 + <sect3> 1.2856 + <title>Testing and troubleshooting</title> 1.2857 + 1.2858 + <para id="x_262">The most common problems with configuring the <literal 1.2859 + role="hg-ext">bugzilla</literal> hook relate to running 1.2860 + Bugzilla's <filename>processmail</filename> script and 1.2861 + mapping committer names to user names. 1.2862 + </para> 1.2863 + 1.2864 + <para id="x_263">Recall from <xref 1.2865 + linkend="sec:hook:bugzilla:config"/> above that the user 1.2866 + that runs the Mercurial process on the server is also the 1.2867 + one that will run the <filename>processmail</filename> 1.2868 + script. The <filename>processmail</filename> script 1.2869 + sometimes causes Bugzilla to write to files in its 1.2870 + configuration directory, and Bugzilla's configuration files 1.2871 + are usually owned by the user that your web server runs 1.2872 + under. 1.2873 + </para> 1.2874 + 1.2875 + <para id="x_264">You can cause <filename>processmail</filename> to be run 1.2876 + with the suitable user's identity using the 1.2877 + <command>sudo</command> command. Here is an example entry 1.2878 + for a <filename>sudoers</filename> file. 1.2879 + </para> 1.2880 + <programlisting>hg_user = (httpd_user) 1.2881 +NOPASSWD: /var/www/html/bugzilla/processmail-wrapper %s</programlisting> 1.2882 + <para id="x_265">This allows the <literal>hg_user</literal> user to run a 1.2883 + <filename>processmail-wrapper</filename> program under the 1.2884 + identity of <literal>httpd_user</literal>. 1.2885 + </para> 1.2886 + 1.2887 + <para id="x_266">This indirection through a wrapper script is necessary, 1.2888 + because <filename>processmail</filename> expects to be run 1.2889 + with its current directory set to wherever you installed 1.2890 + Bugzilla; you can't specify that kind of constraint in a 1.2891 + <filename>sudoers</filename> file. The contents of the 1.2892 + wrapper script are simple: 1.2893 + </para> 1.2894 + <programlisting>#!/bin/sh 1.2895 +cd `dirname $0` && ./processmail "$1" nobody@example.com</programlisting> 1.2896 + <para id="x_267">It doesn't seem to matter what email address you pass to 1.2897 + <filename>processmail</filename>. 1.2898 + </para> 1.2899 + 1.2900 + <para id="x_268">If your <literal role="rc-usermap">usermap</literal> is 1.2901 + not set up correctly, users will see an error message from 1.2902 + the <literal role="hg-ext">bugzilla</literal> hook when they 1.2903 + push changes to the server. The error message will look 1.2904 + like this: 1.2905 + </para> 1.2906 + <programlisting>cannot find bugzilla user id for john.q.public@example.com</programlisting> 1.2907 + <para id="x_269">What this means is that the committer's address, 1.2908 + <literal>john.q.public@example.com</literal>, is not a valid 1.2909 + Bugzilla user name, nor does it have an entry in your 1.2910 + <literal role="rc-usermap">usermap</literal> that maps it to 1.2911 + a valid Bugzilla user name. 1.2912 + </para> 1.2913 + 1.2914 + </sect3> </sect2> 1.2915 + 1.2916 + <sect2> 1.2917 + <title><literal role="hg-ext">notify</literal>&emdash;send email 1.2918 + notifications</title> 1.2919 + 1.2920 + <para id="x_26a">Although Mercurial's built-in web server provides RSS 1.2921 + feeds of changes in every repository, many people prefer to 1.2922 + receive change notifications via email. The <literal 1.2923 + role="hg-ext">notify</literal> hook lets you send out 1.2924 + notifications to a set of email addresses whenever changesets 1.2925 + arrive that those subscribers are interested in. 1.2926 + </para> 1.2927 + 1.2928 + <para id="x_26b">As with the <literal role="hg-ext">bugzilla</literal> 1.2929 + hook, the <literal role="hg-ext">notify</literal> hook is 1.2930 + template-driven, so you can customise the contents of the 1.2931 + notification messages that it sends. 1.2932 + </para> 1.2933 + 1.2934 + <para id="x_26c">By default, the <literal role="hg-ext">notify</literal> 1.2935 + hook includes a diff of every changeset that it sends out; you 1.2936 + can limit the size of the diff, or turn this feature off 1.2937 + entirely. It is useful for letting subscribers review changes 1.2938 + immediately, rather than clicking to follow a URL. 1.2939 + </para> 1.2940 + 1.2941 + <sect3> 1.2942 + <title>Configuring the <literal role="hg-ext">notify</literal> 1.2943 + hook</title> 1.2944 + 1.2945 + <para id="x_26d">You can set up the <literal 1.2946 + role="hg-ext">notify</literal> hook to send one email 1.2947 + message per incoming changeset, or one per incoming group of 1.2948 + changesets (all those that arrived in a single pull or 1.2949 + push). 1.2950 + </para> 1.2951 + <programlisting>[hooks] 1.2952 +# send one email per group of changes 1.2953 +changegroup.notify = python:hgext.notify.hook 1.2954 +# send one email per change 1.2955 +incoming.notify = python:hgext.notify.hook</programlisting> 1.2956 + 1.2957 + <para id="x_26e">Configuration information for this hook lives in the 1.2958 + <literal role="rc-notify">notify</literal> section of a 1.2959 + <filename role="special">~/.hgrc</filename> file. 1.2960 + </para> 1.2961 + <itemizedlist> 1.2962 + <listitem><para id="x_26f"><envar role="rc-item-notify">test</envar>: 1.2963 + By default, this hook does not send out email at all; 1.2964 + instead, it prints the message that it 1.2965 + <emphasis>would</emphasis> send. Set this item to 1.2966 + <literal>false</literal> to allow email to be sent. The 1.2967 + reason that sending of email is turned off by default is 1.2968 + that it takes several tries to configure this extension 1.2969 + exactly as you would like, and it would be bad form to 1.2970 + spam subscribers with a number of <quote>broken</quote> 1.2971 + notifications while you debug your configuration. 1.2972 + </para> 1.2973 + </listitem> 1.2974 + <listitem><para id="x_270"><envar role="rc-item-notify">config</envar>: 1.2975 + The path to a configuration file that contains 1.2976 + subscription information. This is kept separate from 1.2977 + the main <filename role="special">~/.hgrc</filename> so 1.2978 + that you can maintain it in a repository of its own. 1.2979 + People can then clone that repository, update their 1.2980 + subscriptions, and push the changes back to your server. 1.2981 + </para> 1.2982 + </listitem> 1.2983 + <listitem><para id="x_271"><envar role="rc-item-notify">strip</envar>: 1.2984 + The number of leading path separator characters to strip 1.2985 + from a repository's path, when deciding whether a 1.2986 + repository has subscribers. For example, if the 1.2987 + repositories on your server live in <filename 1.2988 + class="directory">/home/hg/repos</filename>, and 1.2989 + <literal role="hg-ext">notify</literal> is considering a 1.2990 + repository named <filename 1.2991 + class="directory">/home/hg/repos/shared/test</filename>, 1.2992 + setting <envar role="rc-item-notify">strip</envar> to 1.2993 + <literal>4</literal> will cause <literal 1.2994 + role="hg-ext">notify</literal> to trim the path it 1.2995 + considers down to <filename 1.2996 + class="directory">shared/test</filename>, and it will 1.2997 + match subscribers against that. 1.2998 + </para> 1.2999 + </listitem> 1.3000 + <listitem><para id="x_272"><envar 1.3001 + role="rc-item-notify">template</envar>: The template 1.3002 + text to use when sending messages. This specifies both 1.3003 + the contents of the message header and its body. 1.3004 + </para> 1.3005 + </listitem> 1.3006 + <listitem><para id="x_273"><envar 1.3007 + role="rc-item-notify">maxdiff</envar>: The maximum 1.3008 + number of lines of diff data to append to the end of a 1.3009 + message. If a diff is longer than this, it is 1.3010 + truncated. By default, this is set to 300. Set this to 1.3011 + <literal>0</literal> to omit diffs from notification 1.3012 + emails. 1.3013 + </para> 1.3014 + </listitem> 1.3015 + <listitem><para id="x_274"><envar 1.3016 + role="rc-item-notify">sources</envar>: A list of 1.3017 + sources of changesets to consider. This lets you limit 1.3018 + <literal role="hg-ext">notify</literal> to only sending 1.3019 + out email about changes that remote users pushed into 1.3020 + this repository via a server, for example. See 1.3021 + <xref linkend="sec:hook:sources"/> for the sources you 1.3022 + can specify here. 1.3023 + </para> 1.3024 + </listitem></itemizedlist> 1.3025 + 1.3026 + <para id="x_275">If you set the <envar role="rc-item-web">baseurl</envar> 1.3027 + item in the <literal role="rc-web">web</literal> section, 1.3028 + you can use it in a template; it will be available as 1.3029 + <literal>webroot</literal>. 1.3030 + </para> 1.3031 + 1.3032 + <para id="x_276">Here is an example set of <literal 1.3033 + role="hg-ext">notify</literal> configuration information. 1.3034 + </para> 1.3035 + 1.3036 + &ch10-notify-config.lst; 1.3037 + 1.3038 + <para id="x_277">This will produce a message that looks like the 1.3039 + following: 1.3040 + </para> 1.3041 + 1.3042 + &ch10-notify-config-mail.lst; 1.3043 + 1.3044 + </sect3> 1.3045 + <sect3> 1.3046 + <title>Testing and troubleshooting</title> 1.3047 + 1.3048 + <para id="x_278">Do not forget that by default, the <literal 1.3049 + role="hg-ext">notify</literal> extension <emphasis>will not 1.3050 + send any mail</emphasis> until you explicitly configure it to do so, 1.3051 + by setting <envar role="rc-item-notify">test</envar> to 1.3052 + <literal>false</literal>. Until you do that, it simply 1.3053 + prints the message it <emphasis>would</emphasis> send. 1.3054 + </para> 1.3055 + 1.3056 + </sect3> 1.3057 + </sect2> 1.3058 + </sect1> 1.3059 + <sect1 id="sec:hook:ref"> 1.3060 + <title>Information for writers of hooks</title> 1.3061 + 1.3062 + <sect2> 1.3063 + <title>In-process hook execution</title> 1.3064 + 1.3065 + <para id="x_279">An in-process hook is called with arguments of the 1.3066 + following form: 1.3067 + </para> 1.3068 + <programlisting>def myhook(ui, repo, **kwargs): pass</programlisting> 1.3069 + <para id="x_27a">The <literal>ui</literal> parameter is a <literal 1.3070 + role="py-mod-mercurial.ui">ui</literal> object. The 1.3071 + <literal>repo</literal> parameter is a <literal 1.3072 + role="py-mod-mercurial.localrepo">localrepository</literal> 1.3073 + object. The names and values of the 1.3074 + <literal>**kwargs</literal> parameters depend on the hook 1.3075 + being invoked, with the following common features: 1.3076 + </para> 1.3077 + <itemizedlist> 1.3078 + <listitem><para id="x_27b">If a parameter is named 1.3079 + <literal>node</literal> or <literal>parentN</literal>, it 1.3080 + will contain a hexadecimal changeset ID. The empty string 1.3081 + is used to represent <quote>null changeset ID</quote> 1.3082 + instead of a string of zeroes. 1.3083 + </para> 1.3084 + </listitem> 1.3085 + <listitem><para id="x_27c">If a parameter is named 1.3086 + <literal>url</literal>, it will contain the URL of a 1.3087 + remote repository, if that can be determined. 1.3088 + </para> 1.3089 + </listitem> 1.3090 + <listitem><para id="x_27d">Boolean-valued parameters are represented as 1.3091 + Python <literal>bool</literal> objects. 1.3092 + </para> 1.3093 + </listitem></itemizedlist> 1.3094 + 1.3095 + <para id="x_27e">An in-process hook is called without a change to the 1.3096 + process's working directory (unlike external hooks, which are 1.3097 + run in the root of the repository). It must not change the 1.3098 + process's working directory, or it will cause any calls it 1.3099 + makes into the Mercurial API to fail. 1.3100 + </para> 1.3101 + 1.3102 + <para id="x_27f">If a hook returns a boolean <quote>false</quote> value, it 1.3103 + is considered to have succeeded. If it returns a boolean 1.3104 + <quote>true</quote> value or raises an exception, it is 1.3105 + considered to have failed. A useful way to think of the 1.3106 + calling convention is <quote>tell me if you fail</quote>. 1.3107 + </para> 1.3108 + 1.3109 + <para id="x_280">Note that changeset IDs are passed into Python hooks as 1.3110 + hexadecimal strings, not the binary hashes that Mercurial's 1.3111 + APIs normally use. To convert a hash from hex to binary, use 1.3112 + the <literal>bin</literal> function. 1.3113 + </para> 1.3114 + </sect2> 1.3115 + 1.3116 + <sect2> 1.3117 + <title>External hook execution</title> 1.3118 + 1.3119 + <para id="x_281">An external hook is passed to the shell of the user 1.3120 + running Mercurial. Features of that shell, such as variable 1.3121 + substitution and command redirection, are available. The hook 1.3122 + is run in the root directory of the repository (unlike 1.3123 + in-process hooks, which are run in the same directory that 1.3124 + Mercurial was run in). 1.3125 + </para> 1.3126 + 1.3127 + <para id="x_282">Hook parameters are passed to the hook as environment 1.3128 + variables. Each environment variable's name is converted in 1.3129 + upper case and prefixed with the string 1.3130 + <quote><literal>HG_</literal></quote>. For example, if the 1.3131 + name of a parameter is <quote><literal>node</literal></quote>, 1.3132 + the name of the environment variable representing that 1.3133 + parameter will be <quote><literal>HG_NODE</literal></quote>. 1.3134 + </para> 1.3135 + 1.3136 + <para id="x_283">A boolean parameter is represented as the string 1.3137 + <quote><literal>1</literal></quote> for <quote>true</quote>, 1.3138 + <quote><literal>0</literal></quote> for <quote>false</quote>. 1.3139 + If an environment variable is named <envar>HG_NODE</envar>, 1.3140 + <envar>HG_PARENT1</envar> or <envar>HG_PARENT2</envar>, it 1.3141 + contains a changeset ID represented as a hexadecimal string. 1.3142 + The empty string is used to represent <quote>null changeset 1.3143 + ID</quote> instead of a string of zeroes. If an environment 1.3144 + variable is named <envar>HG_URL</envar>, it will contain the 1.3145 + URL of a remote repository, if that can be determined. 1.3146 + </para> 1.3147 + 1.3148 + <para id="x_284">If a hook exits with a status of zero, it is considered to 1.3149 + have succeeded. If it exits with a non-zero status, it is 1.3150 + considered to have failed. 1.3151 + </para> 1.3152 + </sect2> 1.3153 + 1.3154 + <sect2> 1.3155 + <title>Finding out where changesets come from</title> 1.3156 + 1.3157 + <para id="x_285">A hook that involves the transfer of changesets between a 1.3158 + local repository and another may be able to find out 1.3159 + information about the <quote>far side</quote>. Mercurial 1.3160 + knows <emphasis>how</emphasis> changes are being transferred, 1.3161 + and in many cases <emphasis>where</emphasis> they are being 1.3162 + transferred to or from. 1.3163 + </para> 1.3164 + 1.3165 + <sect3 id="sec:hook:sources"> 1.3166 + <title>Sources of changesets</title> 1.3167 + 1.3168 + <para id="x_286">Mercurial will tell a hook what means are, or were, used 1.3169 + to transfer changesets between repositories. This is 1.3170 + provided by Mercurial in a Python parameter named 1.3171 + <literal>source</literal>, or an environment variable named 1.3172 + <envar>HG_SOURCE</envar>. 1.3173 + </para> 1.3174 + 1.3175 + <itemizedlist> 1.3176 + <listitem><para id="x_287"><literal>serve</literal>: Changesets are 1.3177 + transferred to or from a remote repository over http or 1.3178 + ssh. 1.3179 + </para> 1.3180 + </listitem> 1.3181 + <listitem><para id="x_288"><literal>pull</literal>: Changesets are 1.3182 + being transferred via a pull from one repository into 1.3183 + another. 1.3184 + </para> 1.3185 + </listitem> 1.3186 + <listitem><para id="x_289"><literal>push</literal>: Changesets are 1.3187 + being transferred via a push from one repository into 1.3188 + another. 1.3189 + </para> 1.3190 + </listitem> 1.3191 + <listitem><para id="x_28a"><literal>bundle</literal>: Changesets are 1.3192 + being transferred to or from a bundle. 1.3193 + </para> 1.3194 + </listitem></itemizedlist> 1.3195 + </sect3> 1.3196 + 1.3197 + <sect3 id="sec:hook:url"> 1.3198 + <title>Where changes are going&emdash;remote repository 1.3199 + URLs</title> 1.3200 + 1.3201 + <para id="x_28b">When possible, Mercurial will tell a hook the location 1.3202 + of the <quote>far side</quote> of an activity that transfers 1.3203 + changeset data between repositories. This is provided by 1.3204 + Mercurial in a Python parameter named 1.3205 + <literal>url</literal>, or an environment variable named 1.3206 + <envar>HG_URL</envar>. 1.3207 + </para> 1.3208 + 1.3209 + <para id="x_28c">This information is not always known. If a hook is 1.3210 + invoked in a repository that is being served via http or 1.3211 + ssh, Mercurial cannot tell where the remote repository is, 1.3212 + but it may know where the client is connecting from. In 1.3213 + such cases, the URL will take one of the following forms: 1.3214 + </para> 1.3215 + <itemizedlist> 1.3216 + <listitem><para id="x_28d"><literal>remote:ssh:1.2.3.4</literal>&emdash;remote 1.3217 + ssh client, at the IP address 1.3218 + <literal>1.2.3.4</literal>. 1.3219 + </para> 1.3220 + </listitem> 1.3221 + <listitem><para id="x_28e"><literal>remote:http:1.2.3.4</literal>&emdash;remote 1.3222 + http client, at the IP address 1.3223 + <literal>1.2.3.4</literal>. If the client is using SSL, 1.3224 + this will be of the form 1.3225 + <literal>remote:https:1.2.3.4</literal>. 1.3226 + </para> 1.3227 + </listitem> 1.3228 + <listitem><para id="x_28f">Empty&emdash;no information could be 1.3229 + discovered about the remote client. 1.3230 + </para> 1.3231 + </listitem></itemizedlist> 1.3232 + </sect3> 1.3233 + </sect2> 1.3234 + </sect1> 1.3235 + <sect1> 1.3236 + <title>Hook reference</title> 1.3237 + 1.3238 + <sect2 id="sec:hook:changegroup"> 1.3239 + <title><literal role="hook">changegroup</literal>&emdash;after 1.3240 + remote changesets added</title> 1.3241 + 1.3242 + <para id="x_290">This hook is run after a group of pre-existing changesets 1.3243 + has been added to the repository, for example via a <command 1.3244 + role="hg-cmd">hg pull</command> or <command role="hg-cmd">hg 1.3245 + unbundle</command>. This hook is run once per operation 1.3246 + that added one or more changesets. This is in contrast to the 1.3247 + <literal role="hook">incoming</literal> hook, which is run 1.3248 + once per changeset, regardless of whether the changesets 1.3249 + arrive in a group. 1.3250 + </para> 1.3251 + 1.3252 + <para id="x_291">Some possible uses for this hook include kicking off an 1.3253 + automated build or test of the added changesets, updating a 1.3254 + bug database, or notifying subscribers that a repository 1.3255 + contains new changes. 1.3256 + </para> 1.3257 + 1.3258 + <para id="x_292">Parameters to this hook: 1.3259 + </para> 1.3260 + <itemizedlist> 1.3261 + <listitem><para id="x_293"><literal>node</literal>: A changeset ID. The 1.3262 + changeset ID of the first changeset in the group that was 1.3263 + added. All changesets between this and 1.3264 + <literal role="tag">tip</literal>, inclusive, were added by a single 1.3265 + <command role="hg-cmd">hg pull</command>, <command 1.3266 + role="hg-cmd">hg push</command> or <command 1.3267 + role="hg-cmd">hg unbundle</command>. 1.3268 + </para> 1.3269 + </listitem> 1.3270 + <listitem><para id="x_294"><literal>source</literal>: A 1.3271 + string. The source of these changes. See <xref 1.3272 + linkend="sec:hook:sources"/> for details. 1.3273 + </para> 1.3274 + </listitem> 1.3275 + <listitem><para id="x_295"><literal>url</literal>: A URL. The 1.3276 + location of the remote repository, if known. See <xref 1.3277 + linkend="sec:hook:url"/> for more information. 1.3278 + </para> 1.3279 + </listitem></itemizedlist> 1.3280 + 1.3281 + <para id="x_296">See also: <literal 1.3282 + role="hook">incoming</literal> (<xref 1.3283 + linkend="sec:hook:incoming"/>), <literal 1.3284 + role="hook">prechangegroup</literal> (<xref 1.3285 + linkend="sec:hook:prechangegroup"/>), <literal 1.3286 + role="hook">pretxnchangegroup</literal> (<xref 1.3287 + linkend="sec:hook:pretxnchangegroup"/>) 1.3288 + </para> 1.3289 + </sect2> 1.3290 + 1.3291 + <sect2 id="sec:hook:commit"> 1.3292 + <title><literal role="hook">commit</literal>&emdash;after a new 1.3293 + changeset is created</title> 1.3294 + 1.3295 + <para id="x_297">This hook is run after a new changeset has been created. 1.3296 + </para> 1.3297 + 1.3298 + <para id="x_298">Parameters to this hook: 1.3299 + </para> 1.3300 + <itemizedlist> 1.3301 + <listitem><para id="x_299"><literal>node</literal>: A changeset ID. The 1.3302 + changeset ID of the newly committed changeset. 1.3303 + </para> 1.3304 + </listitem> 1.3305 + <listitem><para id="x_29a"><literal>parent1</literal>: A changeset ID. 1.3306 + The changeset ID of the first parent of the newly 1.3307 + committed changeset. 1.3308 + </para> 1.3309 + </listitem> 1.3310 + <listitem><para id="x_29b"><literal>parent2</literal>: A changeset ID. 1.3311 + The changeset ID of the second parent of the newly 1.3312 + committed changeset. 1.3313 + </para> 1.3314 + </listitem></itemizedlist> 1.3315 + 1.3316 + <para id="x_29c">See also: <literal 1.3317 + role="hook">precommit</literal> (<xref 1.3318 + linkend="sec:hook:precommit"/>), <literal 1.3319 + role="hook">pretxncommit</literal> (<xref 1.3320 + linkend="sec:hook:pretxncommit"/>) 1.3321 + </para> 1.3322 + </sect2> 1.3323 + 1.3324 + <sect2 id="sec:hook:incoming"> 1.3325 + <title><literal role="hook">incoming</literal>&emdash;after one 1.3326 + remote changeset is added</title> 1.3327 + 1.3328 + <para id="x_29d">This hook is run after a pre-existing changeset has been 1.3329 + added to the repository, for example via a <command 1.3330 + role="hg-cmd">hg push</command>. If a group of changesets 1.3331 + was added in a single operation, this hook is called once for 1.3332 + each added changeset. 1.3333 + </para> 1.3334 + 1.3335 + <para id="x_29e">You can use this hook for the same purposes as 1.3336 + the <literal role="hook">changegroup</literal> hook (<xref 1.3337 + linkend="sec:hook:changegroup"/>); it's simply more 1.3338 + convenient sometimes to run a hook once per group of 1.3339 + changesets, while other times it's handier once per changeset. 1.3340 + </para> 1.3341 + 1.3342 + <para id="x_29f">Parameters to this hook: 1.3343 + </para> 1.3344 + <itemizedlist> 1.3345 + <listitem><para id="x_2a0"><literal>node</literal>: A changeset ID. The 1.3346 + ID of the newly added changeset. 1.3347 + </para> 1.3348 + </listitem> 1.3349 + <listitem><para id="x_2a1"><literal>source</literal>: A 1.3350 + string. The source of these changes. See <xref 1.3351 + linkend="sec:hook:sources"/> for details. 1.3352 + </para> 1.3353 + </listitem> 1.3354 + <listitem><para id="x_2a2"><literal>url</literal>: A URL. The 1.3355 + location of the remote repository, if known. See <xref 1.3356 + linkend="sec:hook:url"/> for more information. 1.3357 + </para> 1.3358 + </listitem></itemizedlist> 1.3359 + 1.3360 + <para id="x_2a3">See also: <literal 1.3361 + role="hook">changegroup</literal> (<xref 1.3362 + linkend="sec:hook:changegroup"/>) <literal 1.3363 + role="hook">prechangegroup</literal> (<xref 1.3364 + linkend="sec:hook:prechangegroup"/>), <literal 1.3365 + role="hook">pretxnchangegroup</literal> (<xref 1.3366 + linkend="sec:hook:pretxnchangegroup"/>) 1.3367 + </para> 1.3368 + </sect2> 1.3369 + 1.3370 + <sect2 id="sec:hook:outgoing"> 1.3371 + <title><literal role="hook">outgoing</literal>&emdash;after 1.3372 + changesets are propagated</title> 1.3373 + 1.3374 + <para id="x_2a4">This hook is run after a group of changesets has been 1.3375 + propagated out of this repository, for example by a <command 1.3376 + role="hg-cmd">hg push</command> or <command role="hg-cmd">hg 1.3377 + bundle</command> command. 1.3378 + </para> 1.3379 + 1.3380 + <para id="x_2a5">One possible use for this hook is to notify administrators 1.3381 + that changes have been pulled. 1.3382 + </para> 1.3383 + 1.3384 + <para id="x_2a6">Parameters to this hook: 1.3385 + </para> 1.3386 + <itemizedlist> 1.3387 + <listitem><para id="x_2a7"><literal>node</literal>: A changeset ID. The 1.3388 + changeset ID of the first changeset of the group that was 1.3389 + sent. 1.3390 + </para> 1.3391 + </listitem> 1.3392 + <listitem><para id="x_2a8"><literal>source</literal>: A string. The 1.3393 + source of the of the operation (see <xref 1.3394 + linkend="sec:hook:sources"/>). If a remote 1.3395 + client pulled changes from this repository, 1.3396 + <literal>source</literal> will be 1.3397 + <literal>serve</literal>. If the client that obtained 1.3398 + changes from this repository was local, 1.3399 + <literal>source</literal> will be 1.3400 + <literal>bundle</literal>, <literal>pull</literal>, or 1.3401 + <literal>push</literal>, depending on the operation the 1.3402 + client performed. 1.3403 + </para> 1.3404 + </listitem> 1.3405 + <listitem><para id="x_2a9"><literal>url</literal>: A URL. The 1.3406 + location of the remote repository, if known. See <xref 1.3407 + linkend="sec:hook:url"/> for more information. 1.3408 + </para> 1.3409 + </listitem></itemizedlist> 1.3410 + 1.3411 + <para id="x_2aa">See also: <literal 1.3412 + role="hook">preoutgoing</literal> (<xref 1.3413 + linkend="sec:hook:preoutgoing"/>) 1.3414 + </para> 1.3415 + </sect2> 1.3416 + 1.3417 + <sect2 id="sec:hook:prechangegroup"> 1.3418 + <title><literal 1.3419 + role="hook">prechangegroup</literal>&emdash;before starting 1.3420 + to add remote changesets</title> 1.3421 + 1.3422 + <para id="x_2ab">This controlling hook is run before Mercurial begins to 1.3423 + add a group of changesets from another repository. 1.3424 + </para> 1.3425 + 1.3426 + <para id="x_2ac">This hook does not have any information about the 1.3427 + changesets to be added, because it is run before transmission 1.3428 + of those changesets is allowed to begin. If this hook fails, 1.3429 + the changesets will not be transmitted. 1.3430 + </para> 1.3431 + 1.3432 + <para id="x_2ad">One use for this hook is to prevent external changes from 1.3433 + being added to a repository. For example, you could use this 1.3434 + to <quote>freeze</quote> a server-hosted branch temporarily or 1.3435 + permanently so that users cannot push to it, while still 1.3436 + allowing a local administrator to modify the repository. 1.3437 + </para> 1.3438 + 1.3439 + <para id="x_2ae">Parameters to this hook: 1.3440 + </para> 1.3441 + <itemizedlist> 1.3442 + <listitem><para id="x_2af"><literal>source</literal>: A string. The 1.3443 + source of these changes. See <xref 1.3444 + linkend="sec:hook:sources"/> for details. 1.3445 + </para> 1.3446 + </listitem> 1.3447 + <listitem><para id="x_2b0"><literal>url</literal>: A URL. The 1.3448 + location of the remote repository, if known. See <xref 1.3449 + linkend="sec:hook:url"/> for more information. 1.3450 + </para> 1.3451 + </listitem></itemizedlist> 1.3452 + 1.3453 + <para id="x_2b1">See also: <literal 1.3454 + role="hook">changegroup</literal> (<xref 1.3455 + linkend="sec:hook:changegroup"/>), <literal 1.3456 + role="hook">incoming</literal> (<xref 1.3457 + linkend="sec:hook:incoming"/>), <literal 1.3458 + role="hook">pretxnchangegroup</literal> (<xref 1.3459 + linkend="sec:hook:pretxnchangegroup"/>) 1.3460 + </para> 1.3461 + </sect2> 1.3462 + 1.3463 + <sect2 id="sec:hook:precommit"> 1.3464 + <title><literal role="hook">precommit</literal>&emdash;before 1.3465 + starting to commit a changeset</title> 1.3466 + 1.3467 + <para id="x_2b2">This hook is run before Mercurial begins to commit a new 1.3468 + changeset. It is run before Mercurial has any of the metadata 1.3469 + for the commit, such as the files to be committed, the commit 1.3470 + message, or the commit date. 1.3471 + </para> 1.3472 + 1.3473 + <para id="x_2b3">One use for this hook is to disable the ability to commit 1.3474 + new changesets, while still allowing incoming changesets. 1.3475 + Another is to run a build or test, and only allow the commit 1.3476 + to begin if the build or test succeeds. 1.3477 + </para> 1.3478 + 1.3479 + <para id="x_2b4">Parameters to this hook: 1.3480 + </para> 1.3481 + <itemizedlist> 1.3482 + <listitem><para id="x_2b5"><literal>parent1</literal>: A changeset ID. 1.3483 + The changeset ID of the first parent of the working 1.3484 + directory. 1.3485 + </para> 1.3486 + </listitem> 1.3487 + <listitem><para id="x_2b6"><literal>parent2</literal>: A changeset ID. 1.3488 + The changeset ID of the second parent of the working 1.3489 + directory. 1.3490 + </para> 1.3491 + </listitem></itemizedlist> 1.3492 + <para id="x_2b7">If the commit proceeds, the parents of the working 1.3493 + directory will become the parents of the new changeset. 1.3494 + </para> 1.3495 + 1.3496 + <para id="x_2b8">See also: <literal role="hook">commit</literal> 1.3497 + (<xref linkend="sec:hook:commit"/>), <literal 1.3498 + role="hook">pretxncommit</literal> (<xref 1.3499 + linkend="sec:hook:pretxncommit"/>) 1.3500 + </para> 1.3501 + </sect2> 1.3502 + 1.3503 + <sect2 id="sec:hook:preoutgoing"> 1.3504 + <title><literal role="hook">preoutgoing</literal>&emdash;before 1.3505 + starting to propagate changesets</title> 1.3506 + 1.3507 + <para id="x_2b9">This hook is invoked before Mercurial knows the identities 1.3508 + of the changesets to be transmitted. 1.3509 + </para> 1.3510 + 1.3511 + <para id="x_2ba">One use for this hook is to prevent changes from being 1.3512 + transmitted to another repository. 1.3513 + </para> 1.3514 + 1.3515 + <para id="x_2bb">Parameters to this hook: 1.3516 + </para> 1.3517 + <itemizedlist> 1.3518 + <listitem><para id="x_2bc"><literal>source</literal>: A 1.3519 + string. The source of the operation that is attempting to 1.3520 + obtain changes from this repository (see <xref 1.3521 + linkend="sec:hook:sources"/>). See the documentation 1.3522 + for the <literal>source</literal> parameter to the 1.3523 + <literal role="hook">outgoing</literal> hook, in 1.3524 + <xref linkend="sec:hook:outgoing"/>, for possible values 1.3525 + of this parameter. 1.3526 + </para> 1.3527 + </listitem> 1.3528 + <listitem><para id="x_2bd"><literal>url</literal>: A URL. The 1.3529 + location of the remote repository, if known. See <xref 1.3530 + linkend="sec:hook:url"/> for more information. 1.3531 + </para> 1.3532 + </listitem></itemizedlist> 1.3533 + 1.3534 + <para id="x_2be">See also: <literal 1.3535 + role="hook">outgoing</literal> (<xref 1.3536 + linkend="sec:hook:outgoing"/>) 1.3537 + </para> 1.3538 + </sect2> 1.3539 + 1.3540 + <sect2 id="sec:hook:pretag"> 1.3541 + <title><literal role="hook">pretag</literal>&emdash;before 1.3542 + tagging a changeset</title> 1.3543 + 1.3544 + <para id="x_2bf">This controlling hook is run before a tag is created. If 1.3545 + the hook succeeds, creation of the tag proceeds. If the hook 1.3546 + fails, the tag is not created. 1.3547 + </para> 1.3548 + 1.3549 + <para id="x_2c0">Parameters to this hook: 1.3550 + </para> 1.3551 + <itemizedlist> 1.3552 + <listitem><para id="x_2c1"><literal>local</literal>: A boolean. Whether 1.3553 + the tag is local to this repository instance (i.e. stored 1.3554 + in <filename role="special">.hg/localtags</filename>) or 1.3555 + managed by Mercurial (stored in <filename 1.3556 + role="special">.hgtags</filename>). 1.3557 + </para> 1.3558 + </listitem> 1.3559 + <listitem><para id="x_2c2"><literal>node</literal>: A changeset ID. The 1.3560 + ID of the changeset to be tagged. 1.3561 + </para> 1.3562 + </listitem> 1.3563 + <listitem><para id="x_2c3"><literal>tag</literal>: A string. The name of 1.3564 + the tag to be created. 1.3565 + </para> 1.3566 + </listitem></itemizedlist> 1.3567 + 1.3568 + <para id="x_2c4">If the tag to be created is 1.3569 + revision-controlled, the <literal 1.3570 + role="hook">precommit</literal> and <literal 1.3571 + role="hook">pretxncommit</literal> hooks (<xref 1.3572 + linkend="sec:hook:commit"/> and <xref 1.3573 + linkend="sec:hook:pretxncommit"/>) will also be run. 1.3574 + </para> 1.3575 + 1.3576 + <para id="x_2c5">See also: <literal role="hook">tag</literal> 1.3577 + (<xref linkend="sec:hook:tag"/>) 1.3578 + </para> 1.3579 + </sect2> 1.3580 + 1.3581 + <sect2 id="sec:hook:pretxnchangegroup"> 1.3582 + <title><literal 1.3583 + role="hook">pretxnchangegroup</literal>&emdash;before 1.3584 + completing addition of remote changesets</title> 1.3585 + 1.3586 + <para id="x_2c6">This controlling hook is run before a 1.3587 + transaction&emdash;that manages the addition of a group of new 1.3588 + changesets from outside the repository&emdash;completes. If 1.3589 + the hook succeeds, the transaction completes, and all of the 1.3590 + changesets become permanent within this repository. If the 1.3591 + hook fails, the transaction is rolled back, and the data for 1.3592 + the changesets is erased. 1.3593 + </para> 1.3594 + 1.3595 + <para id="x_2c7">This hook can access the metadata associated with the 1.3596 + almost-added changesets, but it should not do anything 1.3597 + permanent with this data. It must also not modify the working 1.3598 + directory. 1.3599 + </para> 1.3600 + 1.3601 + <para id="x_2c8">While this hook is running, if other Mercurial processes 1.3602 + access this repository, they will be able to see the 1.3603 + almost-added changesets as if they are permanent. This may 1.3604 + lead to race conditions if you do not take steps to avoid 1.3605 + them. 1.3606 + </para> 1.3607 + 1.3608 + <para id="x_2c9">This hook can be used to automatically vet a group of 1.3609 + changesets. If the hook fails, all of the changesets are 1.3610 + <quote>rejected</quote> when the transaction rolls back. 1.3611 + </para> 1.3612 + 1.3613 + <para id="x_2ca">Parameters to this hook: 1.3614 + </para> 1.3615 + <itemizedlist> 1.3616 + <listitem><para id="x_2cb"><literal>node</literal>: A changeset ID. The 1.3617 + changeset ID of the first changeset in the group that was 1.3618 + added. All changesets between this and 1.3619 + <literal role="tag">tip</literal>, 1.3620 + inclusive, were added by a single <command 1.3621 + role="hg-cmd">hg pull</command>, <command 1.3622 + role="hg-cmd">hg push</command> or <command 1.3623 + role="hg-cmd">hg unbundle</command>. 1.3624 + </para> 1.3625 + </listitem> 1.3626 + <listitem><para id="x_2cc"><literal>source</literal>: A 1.3627 + string. The source of these changes. See <xref 1.3628 + linkend="sec:hook:sources"/> for details. 1.3629 + </para> 1.3630 + </listitem> 1.3631 + <listitem><para id="x_2cd"><literal>url</literal>: A URL. The 1.3632 + location of the remote repository, if known. See <xref 1.3633 + linkend="sec:hook:url"/> for more information. 1.3634 + </para> 1.3635 + </listitem></itemizedlist> 1.3636 + 1.3637 + <para id="x_2ce">See also: <literal 1.3638 + role="hook">changegroup</literal> (<xref 1.3639 + linkend="sec:hook:changegroup"/>), <literal 1.3640 + role="hook">incoming</literal> (<xref 1.3641 + linkend="sec:hook:incoming"/>), <literal 1.3642 + role="hook">prechangegroup</literal> (<xref 1.3643 + linkend="sec:hook:prechangegroup"/>) 1.3644 + </para> 1.3645 + </sect2> 1.3646 + 1.3647 + <sect2 id="sec:hook:pretxncommit"> 1.3648 + <title><literal role="hook">pretxncommit</literal>&emdash;before 1.3649 + completing commit of new changeset</title> 1.3650 + 1.3651 + <para id="x_2cf">This controlling hook is run before a 1.3652 + transaction&emdash;that manages a new commit&emdash;completes. 1.3653 + If the hook succeeds, the transaction completes and the 1.3654 + changeset becomes permanent within this repository. If the 1.3655 + hook fails, the transaction is rolled back, and the commit 1.3656 + data is erased. 1.3657 + </para> 1.3658 + 1.3659 + <para id="x_2d0">This hook can access the metadata associated with the 1.3660 + almost-new changeset, but it should not do anything permanent 1.3661 + with this data. It must also not modify the working 1.3662 + directory. 1.3663 + </para> 1.3664 + 1.3665 + <para id="x_2d1">While this hook is running, if other Mercurial processes 1.3666 + access this repository, they will be able to see the 1.3667 + almost-new changeset as if it is permanent. This may lead to 1.3668 + race conditions if you do not take steps to avoid them. 1.3669 + </para> 1.3670 + 1.3671 + <para id="x_2d2">Parameters to this hook:</para> 1.3672 + 1.3673 + <itemizedlist> 1.3674 + <listitem><para id="x_2d3"><literal>node</literal>: A changeset ID. The 1.3675 + changeset ID of the newly committed changeset. 1.3676 + </para> 1.3677 + </listitem> 1.3678 + <listitem><para id="x_2d4"><literal>parent1</literal>: A changeset ID. 1.3679 + The changeset ID of the first parent of the newly 1.3680 + committed changeset. 1.3681 + </para> 1.3682 + </listitem> 1.3683 + <listitem><para id="x_2d5"><literal>parent2</literal>: A changeset ID. 1.3684 + The changeset ID of the second parent of the newly 1.3685 + committed changeset. 1.3686 + </para> 1.3687 + </listitem></itemizedlist> 1.3688 + 1.3689 + <para id="x_2d6">See also: <literal 1.3690 + role="hook">precommit</literal> (<xref 1.3691 + linkend="sec:hook:precommit"/>) 1.3692 + </para> 1.3693 + </sect2> 1.3694 + 1.3695 + <sect2 id="sec:hook:preupdate"> 1.3696 + <title><literal role="hook">preupdate</literal>&emdash;before 1.3697 + updating or merging working directory</title> 1.3698 + 1.3699 + <para id="x_2d7">This controlling hook is run before an update 1.3700 + or merge of the working directory begins. It is run only if 1.3701 + Mercurial's normal pre-update checks determine that the update 1.3702 + or merge can proceed. If the hook succeeds, the update or 1.3703 + merge may proceed; if it fails, the update or merge does not 1.3704 + start. 1.3705 + </para> 1.3706 + 1.3707 + <para id="x_2d8">Parameters to this hook: 1.3708 + </para> 1.3709 + <itemizedlist> 1.3710 + <listitem><para id="x_2d9"><literal>parent1</literal>: A 1.3711 + changeset ID. The ID of the parent that the working 1.3712 + directory is to be updated to. If the working directory 1.3713 + is being merged, it will not change this parent. 1.3714 + </para> 1.3715 + </listitem> 1.3716 + <listitem><para id="x_2da"><literal>parent2</literal>: A 1.3717 + changeset ID. Only set if the working directory is being 1.3718 + merged. The ID of the revision that the working directory 1.3719 + is being merged with. 1.3720 + </para> 1.3721 + </listitem></itemizedlist> 1.3722 + 1.3723 + <para id="x_2db">See also: <literal role="hook">update</literal> 1.3724 + (<xref linkend="sec:hook:update"/>)</para> 1.3725 + </sect2> 1.3726 + 1.3727 + <sect2 id="sec:hook:tag"> 1.3728 + <title><literal role="hook">tag</literal>&emdash;after tagging a 1.3729 + changeset</title> 1.3730 + 1.3731 + <para id="x_2dc">This hook is run after a tag has been created. 1.3732 + </para> 1.3733 + 1.3734 + <para id="x_2dd">Parameters to this hook: 1.3735 + </para> 1.3736 + <itemizedlist> 1.3737 + <listitem><para id="x_2de"><literal>local</literal>: A boolean. Whether 1.3738 + the new tag is local to this repository instance (i.e. 1.3739 + stored in <filename 1.3740 + role="special">.hg/localtags</filename>) or managed by 1.3741 + Mercurial (stored in <filename 1.3742 + role="special">.hgtags</filename>). 1.3743 + </para> 1.3744 + </listitem> 1.3745 + <listitem><para id="x_2df"><literal>node</literal>: A changeset ID. The 1.3746 + ID of the changeset that was tagged. 1.3747 + </para> 1.3748 + </listitem> 1.3749 + <listitem><para id="x_2e0"><literal>tag</literal>: A string. The name of 1.3750 + the tag that was created. 1.3751 + </para> 1.3752 + </listitem></itemizedlist> 1.3753 + 1.3754 + <para id="x_2e1">If the created tag is revision-controlled, the <literal 1.3755 + role="hook">commit</literal> hook (section <xref 1.3756 + linkend="sec:hook:commit"/>) is run before this hook. 1.3757 + </para> 1.3758 + 1.3759 + <para id="x_2e2">See also: <literal role="hook">pretag</literal> 1.3760 + (<xref linkend="sec:hook:pretag"/>) 1.3761 + </para> 1.3762 + </sect2> 1.3763 + 1.3764 + <sect2 id="sec:hook:update"> 1.3765 + <title><literal role="hook">update</literal>&emdash;after 1.3766 + updating or merging working directory</title> 1.3767 + 1.3768 + <para id="x_2e3">This hook is run after an update or merge of the working 1.3769 + directory completes. Since a merge can fail (if the external 1.3770 + <command>hgmerge</command> command fails to resolve conflicts 1.3771 + in a file), this hook communicates whether the update or merge 1.3772 + completed cleanly. 1.3773 + </para> 1.3774 + 1.3775 + <itemizedlist> 1.3776 + <listitem><para id="x_2e4"><literal>error</literal>: A boolean. 1.3777 + Indicates whether the update or merge completed 1.3778 + successfully. 1.3779 + </para> 1.3780 + </listitem> 1.3781 + <listitem><para id="x_2e5"><literal>parent1</literal>: A changeset ID. 1.3782 + The ID of the parent that the working directory was 1.3783 + updated to. If the working directory was merged, it will 1.3784 + not have changed this parent. 1.3785 + </para> 1.3786 + </listitem> 1.3787 + <listitem><para id="x_2e6"><literal>parent2</literal>: A changeset ID. 1.3788 + Only set if the working directory was merged. The ID of 1.3789 + the revision that the working directory was merged with. 1.3790 + </para> 1.3791 + </listitem></itemizedlist> 1.3792 + 1.3793 + <para id="x_2e7">See also: <literal role="hook">preupdate</literal> 1.3794 + (<xref linkend="sec:hook:preupdate"/>) 1.3795 + </para> 1.3796 + 1.3797 + </sect2> 1.3798 + </sect1> 1.3799 </chapter> 1.3800 1.3801 <!-- 1.3802 local variables: 1.3803 sgml-parent-document: ("00book.xml" "book" "chapter") 1.3804 end: 1.3805 ---> 1.3806 \ No newline at end of file 1.3807 +-->