I wanted to have all the documentation available on the command line, but that makes it harder to maintain and link to. Let's move it to markdown instead. We may later be able to add some way of presenting the markdown in the terminal (or maybe by first converting it to reStructuredText).
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Working copy
Introduction
The working copy is where the current checkout's files are written so you can interact with them. It also where files are read from in order to create new commits (though there are many other ways of creating new commits).
Unlike most other VCSs, Jujutsu will automatically create commits from the
working copy contents when they have changed. Most jj
commands you run will
commit the working copy changes if they have changed. The resulting revision
will replace the previous working copy revision.
Also unlike most other VCSs, added files are implicitly tracked. That means that
if you add a new file to the working copy, it will be automatically committed
once you run e.g. jj st
. Similarly, if you remove a file from the working
copy, it will implicitly be untracked. There is no easy way to make it untrack
already tracked files (https://github.com/martinvonz/jj/issues/14).
Jujutsu currently supports only one working copy (https://github.com/martinvonz/jj/issues/13).
Open/closed revisions
As described in the introduction, Jujutsu automatically rewrites the current
checkout with any changes from the working copy. That works well while you're
developing that revision. On the other hand, if you check out some existing
revision, you generally don't want changes to the working copy to automatically
rewrite that revision. Jujutsu has a concept of "open" and "closed" revisions to
solve this. When you check out a closed revision, Jujutsu will actually create a
new, open revision on top of it and check that out. The checked-out revision
is thus always open. When you are done making changes to the currently
checked-out revision, you close it by running jj close
. That command then
updates to the rewritten revision (as most jj
commands do), and since the
rewritten revision is now closed, it creates a new open revision on top. If you
check out a closed revision and make changes on top of it that you want to go
into the revision, use jj squash
.
Conflicts
The working copy cannot contain conflicts. When you check out a revision that has conflicts, Jujutsu creates a new revision on top with the conflicts "materialized" as regular files. That revision will then be what's actually checked out. Materialized conflicts are simply files where the conflicting regions have been replaced by conflict markers.
Once you have resolved the conflicts, use jj squash
to move the conflict
resolutions into the conflicted revision.
There's not yet a way of resolving conflicts in an external merge tool
(https://github.com/martinvonz/jj/issues/18). There's also no good way of
resolving conflicts between directories, files, and symlinks
(https://github.com/martinvonz/jj/issues/19). You can use jj restore
to
choose one side of the conflict, but there's no way to even see where the
involved parts came from.
Ignored files
You probably don't want build outputs and temporary files to be under version
control. You can tell Jujutsu to not automatically track certain files by using
.gitignore
files (there's no such thing as .jjignore
yet).
See https://git-scm.com/docs/gitignore for details about the format.
.gitignore
files are supported in any directory in the working copy, as well
as in $HOME/.gitignore
. However, $GIT_DIR/info/exclude
or equivalent way
(maybe .jj/gitignore
) of specifying per-clone ignores is not yet supported.