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232 lines
9.4 KiB
Markdown
232 lines
9.4 KiB
Markdown
# Glossary
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## Anonymous branch
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An anonymous branch is a chain of commits that doesn't have any
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[named branches](#branch) pointing to it or to any of its descendants. Unlike
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Git, Jujutsu keeps commits on anonymous branches around until they are
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explicitly abandoned. Visible anonymous branches are tracked by the
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[view](#view), which stores a list of [heads](#head) of such branches.
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## Backend
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A backend is an implementation of the storage layer. There are currently two
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builtin commit backends: the Git backend and the native backend. The Git backend
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stores commits in a Git repository. The native backend is used for testing
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purposes only. Alternative backends could be used, for example, if somebody
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wanted to use jj with a humongous monorepo (as Google does).
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There are also pluggable backends for storing other information than commits,
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such as the "operation store backend" for storing
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[the operation log](#operation-log).
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## Branch
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A branch is a named pointer to a [commit](#commit). They automatically follow
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the commit if it gets [rewritten](#rewrite). Branches are sometimes called
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"named branches" to distinguish them from
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[anonymous branches](#anonymous-branch), but note that they are more similar
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to Git's branches than to
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[Mercurial's named branches](https://www.mercurial-scm.org/wiki/Branch#Named_branches).
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See [here](branches.md) for details.
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## Change
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A change is a commit as it [evolves over time](#rewrite).
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## Change ID
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A change ID is a unique identifier for a [change](#change). They are typically
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16 bytes long and are often randomly generated. By default, `jj log` presents
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them as a sequence of 12 letters in the k-z range, at the beginning of a line.
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These are actually hexadecimal numbers that use "digits" z-k instead of 0-9a-f.
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For the git backend, Change IDs are currently maintained only locally and not
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exchanged via push/fetch operations.
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## Commit
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A snapshot of the files in the repository at a given point in time (technically
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a [tree object](#tree)), together with some metadata. The metadata includes the
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author, the date, and pointers to the commit's parents. Through the pointers to
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the parents, the commits form a
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[Directed Acyclic Graph (DAG)](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Directed_acyclic_graph)
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.
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Note that even though commits are stored as snapshots, they are often treated
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as differences between snapshots, namely compared to their parent's snapshot. If
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they have more than one parent, then the difference is computed against the
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result of merging the parents. For example, `jj diff` will show the differences
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introduced by a commit compared to its parent(s), and `jj rebase` will apply
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those changes onto another base commit.
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The word "revision" is used as a synonym for "commit".
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## Commit ID
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A commit ID is a unique identifier for a [commit](#commit). They are 20 bytes
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long when using the Git backend. They are presented in regular hexadecimal
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format at the end of the line in `jj log`, using 12 hexadecimal digits by
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default. When using the Git backend, the commit ID is the Git commit ID.
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## Co-located repos
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When using the Git [backend](#backend) and the backing Git repository's `.git/`
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directory is a sibling of `.jj/`, we call the repository "co-located". Most
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tools designed for Git can be easily used on such repositories. `jj` and `git`
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commands can be used interchangeably.
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See [here](git-compatibility.md#co-located-jujutsugit-repos) for details.
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## Conflict
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Conflicts can occur in many places. The most common type is conflicts in files.
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Those are the conflicts that users coming from other VCSs are usually familiar
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with. You can see them in `jj status` and in `jj log` (the red "conflict"
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label at the end of the line). See [here](conflicts.md) for details.
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Conflicts can also occur in [branches](#branch). For example, if you moved a
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branch locally, and it was also moved on the remote, then the branch will be
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in a conflicted state after you pull from the remote.
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See [here](branches.md#conflicts) for details.
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Similar to a branch conflict, when a [change](#change) is rewritten locally
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and remotely, for example, then the change will be in a conflicted state. We
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call that a [divergent change](#divergent-change).
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## Divergent change
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A divergent change is a [change](#change) that has more than one
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[visible commit](#visible-commits).
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## Head
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A head is a commit with no descendants. The context in which it has no
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descendants varies. For example, the `heads(X)`
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[revset function](revsets.md#functions) returns commits that have no descendants
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within the set `X` itself. The [view](#view) records which
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anonymous heads (heads without a branch pointing to them) are visible at a
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given [operation](#operation). Note that this is quite different from Git's
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[HEAD](https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Git-Internals-Git-References#ref_the_ref).
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## Hidden commits, abandoned commits
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See [visible commits](#visible-commits).
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## Operation
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A snapshot of the [visible commits](#visible-commits) and [branches](#branches)
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at a given point in time (technically a [view object](#view)), together with
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some metadata. The metadata includes the username, hostname, timestamps, and
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pointers to the operation's parents.
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## Operation log
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The operation log is the
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[DAG](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Directed_acyclic_graph) formed by
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[operation](#operation) objects, much in the same way that commits form a DAG,
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which is sometimes called the "commit history". When operations happen in
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sequence, they form a single line in the graph. Operations that happen
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concurrently from jj's perspective result in forks and merges in the DAG.
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## Repository
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Basically everything under `.jj/`, i.e. the full set of [operations](#operation)
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and [commits](#commit).
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## Remote
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TODO
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## Revision
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A synonym for [Commit](#commit).
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## Revset
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Jujutsu supports a functional language for selecting a set of revisions.
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Expressions in this language are called "revsets". See [here](revsets.md) for
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details. We also often use the term "revset" for the set of revisions selected
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by a revset.
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## Rewrite
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To "rewrite" a commit means to create a new version of that commit with
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different contents, metadata (including parent pointers), or both. Rewriting a
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commit results in a new commit, and thus a new [commit ID](#commit-id), but the
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[change ID](#change-id) generally remains the same. Some examples of rewriting a
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commit would be changing its description or rebasing it. Modifying the working
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copy rewrites the working copy commit.
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## Root commit
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The root commit is a virtual commit at the root of every repository. It has a
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commit ID consisting of all '0's (`00000000...`) and a change ID consisting of
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all 'z's (`zzzzzzzz...`). It can be referred to in [revsets](#revset) by the
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function `root()`. Note that our definition of "root commit" is different from
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Git's; Git's "root commits" are the first commit(s) in the repository, i.e. the
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commits `jj log -r root()+` will show.
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## Tree
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A tree object represents a snapshot of a directory in the repository. Tree
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objects are defined recursively; each tree object only has the files and
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directories contained directly in the directory it represents.
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## Tracked branches and tracking branches
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A remote branch can be made "tracked" with the `jj branch track` command. This
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results in a "tracking" local branch that tracks the remote branch.
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See [the branches documentation](branches.md#terminology-summary) for a more
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detailed definition of these terms.
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## Visible commits
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Visible commits are the commits you see in `jj log -r 'all()'`. They are the
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commits that are reachable from an anonymous head in the [view](#view).
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Ancestors of a visible commit are implicitly visible.
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Intuitively, visible commits are the "latest versions" of a revision with a
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given [change id](#change-id). A commit that's abandoned or
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[rewritten](#rewrite) stops being visible and is labeled as "hidden". Such
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commits are no longer accessible using a change id, but they are still
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accessible by their [commit id](#commit-id).
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## View
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A view is a snapshot of branches and their targets, anonymous heads,
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and working-copy commits. The anonymous heads define which commits
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are [visible](#visible-commits).
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A view object is similar to a [tree](#tree) object in that it represents a
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snapshot without history, and an [operation](#operation) object is similar to a
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[commit](#commit) object in that it adds metadata and history.
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## Workspace
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A workspace is a [working copy](#working-copy) and an
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associated [repository](#repository). There can be multiple workspaces for a
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single repository. Each workspace has a `.jj/` directory, but the
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[commits](#commit) and [operations](#operation) will be stored in the initial
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workspace; the other workspaces will have pointers to the initial workspace. See
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[here](working-copy.md#workspaces) for details.
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This is what Git calls a "worktree".
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## Working copy
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The working copy contains the files you're currently working on. It is
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automatically snapshot at the beginning of almost every `jj` command, thus
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creating a new [working-copy commit](#working-copy-commit) if any changes had
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been made in the working copy. Conversely, the working copy is automatically
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updated to the state of the working-copy commit at the end of almost every `jj`
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command. See [here](working-copy.md) for details.
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This is what Git calls a "working tree".
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## Working-copy commit
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A commit that corresponds to the current state of the working copy. There is
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one working-copy commit per [workspace](#workspace). The current working-copy
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commits are tracked in the [operation log](#operation-log).
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