A Scalable, User-Friendly Source Control System.
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Mads Kiilerich 45a6e1e82f largefiles: for update -C, only update largefiles when necessary
Before, a --clean update with largefiles would use the "optimization" that it
didn't read hashes from standin files before and after the update. Instead of
trusting the content of the standin files, it would rehash all the actual
largefiles that lfdirstate reported clean and update the standins that didn't
have the expected content. It could thus in some "impossible" situations
automatically recover from some "largefile got out sync with its standin"
issues (even there apparently still were weird corner cases where it could
fail). This extra checking is similar to what core --clean intentionally do
not do, and it made update --clean unbearable slow.

Usually in core Mercurial, --clean will rely on the dirstate to find the files
it should update. (It is thus intentionally possible (when trying to trick the
system or if there should be bugs) to end up in situations where --clean not
will restore the working directory content correctly.) Checking every file when
we "know" it is ok is however not an option - that would be too slow.

Instead, trust the content of the standin files. Use the same logic for --clean
as for linear updates and trust the dirstate and that our "logic" will keep
them in sync. It is much cheaper to just rehash the largefiles reported dirty
by a status walk and read all standins than to hash largefiles.

Most of the changes are just a change of indentation now when the different
kinds of updates no longer are handled that differently. Standins for added
files are however only written when doing a normal update, while deleted and
removed files only will be updated for --clean updates.
2015-04-15 15:22:16 -04:00
contrib rpms: create missing builds dir if it doesn't exist 2015-04-14 23:51:02 -04:00
doc spelling: fixes from proofreading of spell checker issues 2015-01-18 02:38:57 +01:00
hgext largefiles: for update -C, only update largefiles when necessary 2015-04-15 15:22:16 -04:00
i18n i18n-pt_BR: synchronized with f920316ac560 2015-03-31 20:20:17 -03:00
mercurial subrepo: calculate _relpath for hgsubrepo based on self instead of parent 2015-04-15 11:49:44 -04:00
tests largefiles: for update -C, only update largefiles when necessary 2015-04-15 15:22:16 -04:00
.hgignore hgignore: ignore the PyCharm workspace folder 2014-10-13 11:46:04 +02:00
.hgsigs Added signature for changeset ee341ecacdf1 2015-04-01 13:27:56 -05:00
CONTRIBUTORS Add note to CONTRIBUTORS file 2007-11-07 21:10:30 -06:00
COPYING COPYING: refresh with current address from fsf.org 2011-06-02 11:17:02 -05:00
hg hg: add support for HGUNICODEPEDANTRY environment variable 2014-06-23 09:33:07 -04:00
hgeditor Fixed a bashism with the use of $RANDOM in hgeditor. 2010-05-19 18:06:35 +02:00
hgweb.cgi mq: add a warning about uncommitted changes for qfinish 2011-11-10 15:40:34 -06:00
Makefile templater: tell hggettext to collect help of template functions 2015-04-03 21:36:39 +09:00
README readme: mention how to run in-place 2012-03-02 21:43:55 +02:00
setup.py manifest.c: new extension code to lazily parse manifests 2015-01-13 14:31:38 -08:00

Mercurial
=========

Mercurial is a fast, easy to use, distributed revision control tool
for software developers.

Basic install:

 $ make            # see install targets
 $ make install    # do a system-wide install
 $ hg debuginstall # sanity-check setup
 $ hg              # see help

Running without installing:

 $ make local      # build for inplace usage
 $ ./hg --version  # should show the latest version

See http://mercurial.selenic.com/ for detailed installation
instructions, platform-specific notes, and Mercurial user information.