bos@559: <!-- vim: set filetype=docbkxml shiftwidth=2 autoindent expandtab tw=77 : --> bos@559: bos@559: <chapter id="chap:branch"> bos@572: <?dbhtml filename="managing-releases-and-branchy-development.html"?> bos@559: <title>Managing releases and branchy development</title> bos@559: bos@584: <para id="x_369">Mercurial provides several mechanisms for you to manage a bos@559: project that is making progress on multiple fronts at once. To bos@559: understand these mechanisms, let's first take a brief look at a bos@559: fairly normal software project structure.</para> bos@559: bos@584: <para id="x_36a">Many software projects issue periodic <quote>major</quote> bos@559: releases that contain substantial new features. In parallel, they bos@559: may issue <quote>minor</quote> releases. These are usually bos@559: identical to the major releases off which they're based, but with bos@559: a few bugs fixed.</para> bos@559: bos@584: <para id="x_36b">In this chapter, we'll start by talking about how to keep bos@559: records of project milestones such as releases. We'll then bos@559: continue on to talk about the flow of work between different bos@559: phases of a project, and how Mercurial can help you to isolate and bos@559: manage this work.</para> bos@559: bos@559: <sect1> bos@559: <title>Giving a persistent name to a revision</title> bos@559: bos@584: <para id="x_36c">Once you decide that you'd like to call a particular bos@559: revision a <quote>release</quote>, it's a good idea to record bos@559: the identity of that revision. This will let you reproduce that bos@559: release at a later date, for whatever purpose you might need at bos@559: the time (reproducing a bug, porting to a new platform, etc). bos@567: &interaction.tag.init;</para> bos@559: bos@584: <para id="x_36d">Mercurial lets you give a permanent name to any revision bos@559: using the <command role="hg-cmd">hg tag</command> command. Not bos@567: surprisingly, these names are called <quote>tags</quote>.</para> bos@567: bos@567: &interaction.tag.tag; bos@559: bos@584: <para id="x_36e">A tag is nothing more than a <quote>symbolic name</quote> bos@559: for a revision. Tags exist purely for your convenience, so that bos@559: you have a handy permanent way to refer to a revision; Mercurial bos@559: doesn't interpret the tag names you use in any way. Neither bos@559: does Mercurial place any restrictions on the name of a tag, bos@559: beyond a few that are necessary to ensure that a tag can be bos@559: parsed unambiguously. A tag name cannot contain any of the bos@559: following characters:</para> bos@559: <itemizedlist> bos@584: <listitem><para id="x_36f">Colon (ASCII 58, bos@559: <quote><literal>:</literal></quote>)</para> bos@559: </listitem> bos@584: <listitem><para id="x_370">Carriage return (ASCII 13, bos@559: <quote><literal>\r</literal></quote>)</para> bos@559: </listitem> bos@584: <listitem><para id="x_371">Newline (ASCII 10, bos@559: <quote><literal>\n</literal></quote>)</para> bos@559: </listitem></itemizedlist> bos@559: bos@584: <para id="x_372">You can use the <command role="hg-cmd">hg tags</command> bos@559: command to display the tags present in your repository. In the bos@559: output, each tagged revision is identified first by its name, bos@559: then by revision number, and finally by the unique hash of the bos@567: revision.</para> bos@567: bos@567: &interaction.tag.tags; bos@567: bos@584: <para id="x_373">Notice that <literal>tip</literal> is listed in the output bos@567: of <command role="hg-cmd">hg tags</command>. The bos@567: <literal>tip</literal> tag is a special <quote>floating</quote> bos@567: tag, which always identifies the newest revision in the bos@567: repository.</para> bos@559: bos@584: <para id="x_374">In the output of the <command role="hg-cmd">hg bos@559: tags</command> command, tags are listed in reverse order, by bos@559: revision number. This usually means that recent tags are listed bos@559: before older tags. It also means that <literal>tip</literal> is bos@559: always going to be the first tag listed in the output of bos@559: <command role="hg-cmd">hg tags</command>.</para> bos@559: bos@584: <para id="x_375">When you run <command role="hg-cmd">hg log</command>, if it bos@559: displays a revision that has tags associated with it, it will bos@567: print those tags.</para> bos@567: bos@567: &interaction.tag.log; bos@559: bos@584: <para id="x_376">Any time you need to provide a revision ID to a Mercurial bos@559: command, the command will accept a tag name in its place. bos@559: Internally, Mercurial will translate your tag name into the bos@567: corresponding revision ID, then use that.</para> bos@567: bos@567: &interaction.tag.log.v1.0; bos@559: bos@584: <para id="x_377">There's no limit on the number of tags you can have in a bos@559: repository, or on the number of tags that a single revision can bos@559: have. As a practical matter, it's not a great idea to have bos@559: <quote>too many</quote> (a number which will vary from project bos@559: to project), simply because tags are supposed to help you to bos@559: find revisions. If you have lots of tags, the ease of using bos@559: them to identify revisions diminishes rapidly.</para> bos@559: bos@584: <para id="x_378">For example, if your project has milestones as frequent as bos@559: every few days, it's perfectly reasonable to tag each one of bos@559: those. But if you have a continuous build system that makes bos@559: sure every revision can be built cleanly, you'd be introducing a bos@559: lot of noise if you were to tag every clean build. Instead, you bos@559: could tag failed builds (on the assumption that they're rare!), bos@559: or simply not use tags to track buildability.</para> bos@559: bos@584: <para id="x_379">If you want to remove a tag that you no longer want, use bos@567: <command role="hg-cmd">hg tag --remove</command>.</para> bos@567: bos@567: &interaction.tag.remove; bos@567: bos@584: <para id="x_37a">You can also modify a tag at any time, so that it identifies bos@567: a different revision, by simply issuing a new <command bos@567: role="hg-cmd">hg tag</command> command. You'll have to use the bos@567: <option role="hg-opt-tag">-f</option> option to tell Mercurial bos@567: that you <emphasis>really</emphasis> want to update the bos@567: tag.</para> bos@567: bos@567: &interaction.tag.replace; bos@567: bos@584: <para id="x_37b">There will still be a permanent record of the previous bos@567: identity of the tag, but Mercurial will no longer use it. bos@567: There's thus no penalty to tagging the wrong revision; all you bos@567: have to do is turn around and tag the correct revision once you bos@567: discover your error.</para> bos@559: bos@584: <para id="x_37c">Mercurial stores tags in a normal revision-controlled file bos@559: in your repository. If you've created any tags, you'll find bos@675: them in a file in the root of your repository named <filename bos@559: role="special">.hgtags</filename>. When you run the <command bos@559: role="hg-cmd">hg tag</command> command, Mercurial modifies bos@559: this file, then automatically commits the change to it. This bos@559: means that every time you run <command role="hg-cmd">hg bos@559: tag</command>, you'll see a corresponding changeset in the bos@567: output of <command role="hg-cmd">hg log</command>.</para> bos@567: bos@567: &interaction.tag.tip; bos@559: bos@559: <sect2> bos@559: <title>Handling tag conflicts during a merge</title> bos@559: bos@584: <para id="x_37d">You won't often need to care about the <filename bos@559: role="special">.hgtags</filename> file, but it sometimes bos@559: makes its presence known during a merge. The format of the bos@559: file is simple: it consists of a series of lines. Each line bos@559: starts with a changeset hash, followed by a space, followed by bos@559: the name of a tag.</para> bos@559: bos@584: <para id="x_37e">If you're resolving a conflict in the <filename bos@559: role="special">.hgtags</filename> file during a merge, bos@559: there's one twist to modifying the <filename bos@559: role="special">.hgtags</filename> file: when Mercurial is bos@559: parsing the tags in a repository, it bos@559: <emphasis>never</emphasis> reads the working copy of the bos@559: <filename role="special">.hgtags</filename> file. Instead, it bos@559: reads the <emphasis>most recently committed</emphasis> bos@559: revision of the file.</para> bos@559: bos@584: <para id="x_37f">An unfortunate consequence of this design is that you bos@559: can't actually verify that your merged <filename bos@559: role="special">.hgtags</filename> file is correct until bos@559: <emphasis>after</emphasis> you've committed a change. So if bos@559: you find yourself resolving a conflict on <filename bos@559: role="special">.hgtags</filename> during a merge, be sure to bos@559: run <command role="hg-cmd">hg tags</command> after you commit. bos@559: If it finds an error in the <filename bos@559: role="special">.hgtags</filename> file, it will report the bos@559: location of the error, which you can then fix and commit. You bos@559: should then run <command role="hg-cmd">hg tags</command> bos@559: again, just to be sure that your fix is correct.</para> bos@559: </sect2> bos@675: bos@559: <sect2> bos@559: <title>Tags and cloning</title> bos@559: bos@584: <para id="x_380">You may have noticed that the <command role="hg-cmd">hg bos@559: clone</command> command has a <option bos@559: role="hg-opt-clone">-r</option> option that lets you clone bos@559: an exact copy of the repository as of a particular changeset. bos@559: The new clone will not contain any project history that comes bos@559: after the revision you specified. This has an interaction bos@559: with tags that can surprise the unwary.</para> bos@559: bos@701: <para id="x_381">Recall that a tag is stored as a revision to bos@701: the <filename role="special">.hgtags</filename> file. When you bos@701: create a tag, the changeset in which its recorded refers to an bos@701: older changeset. When you run <command role="hg-cmd">hg clone bos@701: -r foo</command> to clone a repository as of tag bos@701: <literal>foo</literal>, the new clone <emphasis>will not bos@701: contain any revision newer than the one the tag refers to, bos@701: including the revision where the tag was created</emphasis>. bos@701: The result is that you'll get exactly the right subset of the bos@559: project's history in the new repository, but bos@559: <emphasis>not</emphasis> the tag you might have bos@559: expected.</para> bos@559: </sect2> bos@675: bos@559: <sect2> bos@559: <title>When permanent tags are too much</title> bos@559: bos@584: <para id="x_382">Since Mercurial's tags are revision controlled and carried bos@559: around with a project's history, everyone you work with will bos@559: see the tags you create. But giving names to revisions has bos@559: uses beyond simply noting that revision bos@559: <literal>4237e45506ee</literal> is really bos@559: <literal>v2.0.2</literal>. If you're trying to track down a bos@559: subtle bug, you might want a tag to remind you of something bos@559: like <quote>Anne saw the symptoms with this bos@559: revision</quote>.</para> bos@559: bos@584: <para id="x_383">For cases like this, what you might want to use are bos@559: <emphasis>local</emphasis> tags. You can create a local tag bos@559: with the <option role="hg-opt-tag">-l</option> option to the bos@559: <command role="hg-cmd">hg tag</command> command. This will bos@559: store the tag in a file called <filename bos@559: role="special">.hg/localtags</filename>. Unlike <filename bos@559: role="special">.hgtags</filename>, <filename bos@559: role="special">.hg/localtags</filename> is not revision bos@559: controlled. Any tags you create using <option bos@559: role="hg-opt-tag">-l</option> remain strictly local to the bos@559: repository you're currently working in.</para> bos@559: </sect2> bos@559: </sect1> bos@675: bos@559: <sect1> bos@559: <title>The flow of changes&emdash;big picture vs. little</title> bos@559: bos@701: <para id="x_384">To return to the outline I sketched at the bos@701: beginning of the chapter, let's think about a project that has bos@701: multiple concurrent pieces of work under development at bos@701: once.</para> bos@559: bos@584: <para id="x_385">There might be a push for a new <quote>main</quote> release; bos@559: a new minor bugfix release to the last main release; and an bos@559: unexpected <quote>hot fix</quote> to an old release that is now bos@559: in maintenance mode.</para> bos@559: bos@584: <para id="x_386">The usual way people refer to these different concurrent bos@559: directions of development is as <quote>branches</quote>. bos@559: However, we've already seen numerous times that Mercurial treats bos@559: <emphasis>all of history</emphasis> as a series of branches and bos@559: merges. Really, what we have here is two ideas that are bos@559: peripherally related, but which happen to share a name.</para> bos@559: <itemizedlist> bos@584: <listitem><para id="x_387"><quote>Big picture</quote> branches represent bos@559: the sweep of a project's evolution; people give them names, bos@559: and talk about them in conversation.</para> bos@559: </listitem> bos@584: <listitem><para id="x_388"><quote>Little picture</quote> branches are bos@559: artefacts of the day-to-day activity of developing and bos@559: merging changes. They expose the narrative of how the code bos@559: was developed.</para> bos@559: </listitem></itemizedlist> bos@675: </sect1> bos@675: bos@559: <sect1> bos@559: <title>Managing big-picture branches in repositories</title> bos@559: bos@584: <para id="x_389">The easiest way to isolate a <quote>big picture</quote> bos@559: branch in Mercurial is in a dedicated repository. If you have bos@559: an existing shared repository&emdash;let's call it bos@559: <literal>myproject</literal>&emdash;that reaches a bos@559: <quote>1.0</quote> milestone, you can start to prepare for bos@559: future maintenance releases on top of version 1.0 by tagging the bos@567: revision from which you prepared the 1.0 release.</para> bos@567: bos@567: &interaction.branch-repo.tag; bos@567: bos@584: <para id="x_38a">You can then clone a new shared bos@567: <literal>myproject-1.0.1</literal> repository as of that bos@567: tag.</para> bos@567: bos@567: &interaction.branch-repo.clone; bos@559: bos@584: <para id="x_38b">Afterwards, if someone needs to work on a bug fix that ought bos@559: to go into an upcoming 1.0.1 minor release, they clone the bos@559: <literal>myproject-1.0.1</literal> repository, make their bos@567: changes, and push them back.</para> bos@567: bos@567: &interaction.branch-repo.bugfix; bos@567: bos@584: <para id="x_38c">Meanwhile, development for bos@559: the next major release can continue, isolated and unabated, in bos@567: the <literal>myproject</literal> repository.</para> bos@567: bos@567: &interaction.branch-repo.new; bos@675: </sect1> bos@675: bos@559: <sect1> bos@559: <title>Don't repeat yourself: merging across branches</title> bos@559: bos@584: <para id="x_38d">In many cases, if you have a bug to fix on a maintenance bos@559: branch, the chances are good that the bug exists on your bos@559: project's main branch (and possibly other maintenance branches, bos@559: too). It's a rare developer who wants to fix the same bug bos@559: multiple times, so let's look at a few ways that Mercurial can bos@559: help you to manage these bugfixes without duplicating your bos@559: work.</para> bos@559: bos@584: <para id="x_38e">In the simplest instance, all you need to do is pull changes bos@559: from your maintenance branch into your local clone of the target bos@567: branch.</para> bos@567: bos@567: &interaction.branch-repo.pull; bos@567: bos@584: <para id="x_38f">You'll then need to merge the heads of the two branches, and bos@567: push back to the main branch.</para> bos@567: bos@567: &interaction.branch-repo.merge; bos@675: </sect1> bos@675: bos@559: <sect1> bos@559: <title>Naming branches within one repository</title> bos@559: bos@584: <para id="x_390">In most instances, isolating branches in repositories is the bos@559: right approach. Its simplicity makes it easy to understand; and bos@559: so it's hard to make mistakes. There's a one-to-one bos@559: relationship between branches you're working in and directories bos@559: on your system. This lets you use normal (non-Mercurial-aware) bos@559: tools to work on files within a branch/repository.</para> bos@559: bos@584: <para id="x_391">If you're more in the <quote>power user</quote> category bos@559: (<emphasis>and</emphasis> your collaborators are too), there is bos@559: an alternative way of handling branches that you can consider. bos@559: I've already mentioned the human-level distinction between bos@559: <quote>small picture</quote> and <quote>big picture</quote> bos@559: branches. While Mercurial works with multiple <quote>small bos@559: picture</quote> branches in a repository all the time (for bos@559: example after you pull changes in, but before you merge them), bos@559: it can <emphasis>also</emphasis> work with multiple <quote>big bos@559: picture</quote> branches.</para> bos@559: bos@584: <para id="x_392">The key to working this way is that Mercurial lets you bos@559: assign a persistent <emphasis>name</emphasis> to a branch. bos@559: There always exists a branch named <literal>default</literal>. bos@559: Even before you start naming branches yourself, you can find bos@559: traces of the <literal>default</literal> branch if you look for bos@559: them.</para> bos@559: bos@584: <para id="x_393">As an example, when you run the <command role="hg-cmd">hg bos@559: commit</command> command, and it pops up your editor so that bos@559: you can enter a commit message, look for a line that contains bos@559: the text <quote><literal>HG: branch default</literal></quote> at bos@559: the bottom. This is telling you that your commit will occur on bos@559: the branch named <literal>default</literal>.</para> bos@559: bos@584: <para id="x_394">To start working with named branches, use the <command bos@559: role="hg-cmd">hg branches</command> command. This command bos@559: lists the named branches already present in your repository, bos@567: telling you which changeset is the tip of each.</para> bos@567: bos@567: &interaction.branch-named.branches; bos@567: bos@584: <para id="x_395">Since you haven't created any named branches yet, the only bos@567: one that exists is <literal>default</literal>.</para> bos@559: bos@584: <para id="x_396">To find out what the <quote>current</quote> branch is, run bos@559: the <command role="hg-cmd">hg branch</command> command, giving bos@559: it no arguments. This tells you what branch the parent of the bos@567: current changeset is on.</para> bos@567: bos@567: &interaction.branch-named.branch; bos@559: bos@584: <para id="x_397">To create a new branch, run the <command role="hg-cmd">hg bos@559: branch</command> command again. This time, give it one bos@567: argument: the name of the branch you want to create.</para> bos@567: bos@567: &interaction.branch-named.create; bos@559: bos@584: <para id="x_398">After you've created a branch, you might wonder what effect bos@559: the <command role="hg-cmd">hg branch</command> command has had. bos@559: What do the <command role="hg-cmd">hg status</command> and bos@567: <command role="hg-cmd">hg tip</command> commands report?</para> bos@567: bos@567: &interaction.branch-named.status; bos@567: bos@584: <para id="x_399">Nothing has changed in the bos@559: working directory, and there's been no new history created. As bos@559: this suggests, running the <command role="hg-cmd">hg bos@559: branch</command> command has no permanent effect; it only bos@559: tells Mercurial what branch name to use the bos@559: <emphasis>next</emphasis> time you commit a changeset.</para> bos@559: bos@584: <para id="x_39a">When you commit a change, Mercurial records the name of the bos@559: branch on which you committed. Once you've switched from the bos@559: <literal>default</literal> branch to another and committed, bos@559: you'll see the name of the new branch show up in the output of bos@559: <command role="hg-cmd">hg log</command>, <command bos@559: role="hg-cmd">hg tip</command>, and other commands that bos@567: display the same kind of output.</para> bos@567: bos@567: &interaction.branch-named.commit; bos@567: bos@584: <para id="x_39b">The <command role="hg-cmd">hg log</command>-like commands bos@567: will print the branch name of every changeset that's not on the bos@559: <literal>default</literal> branch. As a result, if you never bos@559: use named branches, you'll never see this information.</para> bos@559: bos@584: <para id="x_39c">Once you've named a branch and committed a change with that bos@559: name, every subsequent commit that descends from that change bos@559: will inherit the same branch name. You can change the name of a bos@559: branch at any time, using the <command role="hg-cmd">hg bos@567: branch</command> command.</para> bos@567: bos@567: &interaction.branch-named.rebranch; bos@567: bos@584: <para id="x_39d">In practice, this is something you won't do very often, as bos@567: branch names tend to have fairly long lifetimes. (This isn't a bos@567: rule, just an observation.)</para> bos@675: </sect1> bos@675: bos@559: <sect1> bos@559: <title>Dealing with multiple named branches in a bos@559: repository</title> bos@559: bos@584: <para id="x_39e">If you have more than one named branch in a repository, bos@559: Mercurial will remember the branch that your working directory bos@701: is on when you start a command like <command role="hg-cmd">hg bos@559: update</command> or <command role="hg-cmd">hg pull bos@559: -u</command>. It will update the working directory to the tip bos@559: of this branch, no matter what the <quote>repo-wide</quote> tip bos@559: is. To update to a revision that's on a different named branch, bos@559: you may need to use the <option role="hg-opt-update">-C</option> bos@559: option to <command role="hg-cmd">hg update</command>.</para> bos@559: bos@672: <para id="x_39f">This behavior is a little subtle, so let's see it in bos@559: action. First, let's remind ourselves what branch we're bos@567: currently on, and what branches are in our repository.</para> bos@567: bos@567: &interaction.branch-named.parents; bos@567: bos@584: <para id="x_3a0">We're on the <literal>bar</literal> branch, but there also bos@567: exists an older <command role="hg-cmd">hg foo</command> bos@567: branch.</para> bos@559: bos@584: <para id="x_3a1">We can <command role="hg-cmd">hg update</command> back and bos@559: forth between the tips of the <literal>foo</literal> and bos@559: <literal>bar</literal> branches without needing to use the bos@559: <option role="hg-opt-update">-C</option> option, because this bos@559: only involves going backwards and forwards linearly through our bos@567: change history.</para> bos@567: bos@567: &interaction.branch-named.update-switchy; bos@559: bos@584: <para id="x_3a2">If we go back to the <literal>foo</literal> branch and then bos@559: run <command role="hg-cmd">hg update</command>, it will keep us bos@559: on <literal>foo</literal>, not move us to the tip of bos@567: <literal>bar</literal>.</para> bos@567: bos@567: &interaction.branch-named.update-nothing; bos@559: bos@584: <para id="x_3a3">Committing a new change on the <literal>foo</literal> branch bos@567: introduces a new head.</para> bos@567: bos@567: &interaction.branch-named.foo-commit; bos@675: </sect1> bos@675: bos@559: <sect1> bos@559: <title>Branch names and merging</title> bos@559: bos@584: <para id="x_3a4">As you've probably noticed, merges in Mercurial are not bos@559: symmetrical. Let's say our repository has two heads, 17 and 23. bos@559: If I <command role="hg-cmd">hg update</command> to 17 and then bos@559: <command role="hg-cmd">hg merge</command> with 23, Mercurial bos@559: records 17 as the first parent of the merge, and 23 as the bos@559: second. Whereas if I <command role="hg-cmd">hg update</command> bos@559: to 23 and then <command role="hg-cmd">hg merge</command> with bos@559: 17, it records 23 as the first parent, and 17 as the bos@559: second.</para> bos@559: bos@584: <para id="x_3a5">This affects Mercurial's choice of branch name when you bos@559: merge. After a merge, Mercurial will retain the branch name of bos@559: the first parent when you commit the result of the merge. If bos@559: your first parent's branch name is <literal>foo</literal>, and bos@559: you merge with <literal>bar</literal>, the branch name will bos@559: still be <literal>foo</literal> after you merge.</para> bos@559: bos@584: <para id="x_3a6">It's not unusual for a repository to contain multiple heads, bos@559: each with the same branch name. Let's say I'm working on the bos@559: <literal>foo</literal> branch, and so are you. We commit bos@559: different changes; I pull your changes; I now have two heads, bos@559: each claiming to be on the <literal>foo</literal> branch. The bos@559: result of a merge will be a single head on the bos@559: <literal>foo</literal> branch, as you might hope.</para> bos@559: bos@584: <para id="x_3a7">But if I'm working on the <literal>bar</literal> branch, and bos@559: I merge work from the <literal>foo</literal> branch, the result bos@567: will remain on the <literal>bar</literal> branch.</para> bos@567: bos@567: &interaction.branch-named.merge; bos@559: bos@584: <para id="x_3a8">To give a more concrete example, if I'm working on the bos@559: <literal>bleeding-edge</literal> branch, and I want to bring in bos@559: the latest fixes from the <literal>stable</literal> branch, bos@559: Mercurial will choose the <quote>right</quote> bos@559: (<literal>bleeding-edge</literal>) branch name when I pull and bos@559: merge from <literal>stable</literal>.</para> bos@675: </sect1> bos@675: bos@559: <sect1> bos@559: <title>Branch naming is generally useful</title> bos@559: bos@584: <para id="x_3a9">You shouldn't think of named branches as applicable only to bos@559: situations where you have multiple long-lived branches bos@559: cohabiting in a single repository. They're very useful even in bos@559: the one-branch-per-repository case.</para> bos@559: bos@584: <para id="x_3aa">In the simplest case, giving a name to each branch gives you bos@559: a permanent record of which branch a changeset originated on. bos@559: This gives you more context when you're trying to follow the bos@559: history of a long-lived branchy project.</para> bos@559: bos@584: <para id="x_3ab">If you're working with shared repositories, you can set up a bos@559: <literal role="hook">pretxnchangegroup</literal> hook on each bos@559: that will block incoming changes that have the bos@559: <quote>wrong</quote> branch name. This provides a simple, but bos@559: effective, defence against people accidentally pushing changes bos@559: from a <quote>bleeding edge</quote> branch to a bos@559: <quote>stable</quote> branch. Such a hook might look like this bos@559: inside the shared repo's <filename role="special"> bos@559: /.hgrc</filename>.</para> bos@580: <programlisting>[hooks] bos@580: pretxnchangegroup.branch = hg heads --template '{branches} ' | grep mybranch</programlisting> bos@559: </sect1> bos@559: </chapter> bos@559: bos@559: <!-- bos@559: local variables: bos@559: sgml-parent-document: ("00book.xml" "book" "chapter") bos@559: end: bos@559: -->