jj/docs/operation-log.md
2021-12-18 07:56:48 -08:00

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Operation log

Introduction

Jujutsu records each operation that modifies the repo in the "operation log". You can see the log with jj op log. Each operation object contains a snapshot of how the repo looked at the end of the operation. We call this snapshot a "view" object. The view contains information about where each branch, tag, and Git ref (in Git-backed repos) pointed, as well as the set of heads in the repo, and the current checkout. The operation object also (in addition to the view) contains pointers to the operation(s) immediately before it, as well as metadata about the operation, such as timestamps, username, hostname, description.

The operation log allows you to undo an operation (jj op undo), which doesn't need to be the most recent one. It also lets you restore the entire repo to the way it looked at an earlier point (jj op restore).

Concurrent operations

One benefit of the operation log (and the reason for its creation) is that it allows lock-free concurrency -- you can run concurrent jj commands without corrupting the repo, even if you run the commands on different machines that access the repo via a distributed file system (as long as the file system guarantees that a write is only visible once previous writes are visible). When you run a jj command, it will start by loading the repo at the latest operation. It will not see any changes written by concurrent commands. If there are conflicts, you will be informed of them by subsequent jj st and/or jj log commands.

As an example, let's say you had started editing the description of a change and then also update the contents of the change (maybe because you had forgotten the editor). When you eventually close your editor, the command will succeed and e.g. jj log will indicate that the change has diverged.

Loading an old version of the repo

The top-level --at-operation/--at-top option allows you to load the repo at a specific operation. This can be useful for understanding how your repo got into the current state. It can be even more useful for understanding why someone else's repo got into its current state.

When you use --at-op, the automatic snapshotting of the working copy will not take place. When referring to a revision with the @ symbol (as many commands do by default), that will resolve to the current checkout recorded in the operation's view (which is actually how it always works -- it's just the snapshotting that's skipped with --at-op).

As a top-level option, --at-op, it can be passed to any command. However, you will typically only want to run read-only commands. For example, jj log, jj st, and jj diff all make sense. It's still possible to run e.g. jj --at-op=<some operation ID> describe. That's equivalent to having started jj describe back when the specified operation was the most recent operation and then let it run until now (which can be done for that particular command by not closing the editor). There's practically no good reason to do that other than to simulate concurrent commands.