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Mercurial appears to resolve cwd-relative path first, so "glob:*.c" could be parsed as "**/*.c" if cwd was literally "**". It wouldn't practically matter, but isn't correct. Instead, jj's parser first splits glob into literal part and pattern. That's mainly because we want to parse the user input texts into type-safe objects, and (RepoPathBuf, glob::Pattern) pairs are the simplest ones. The current parser can't handle patterns like "foo/*/.." (= "foo" ?), and errors out. I believe this restriction is acceptable. Unlike literal paths, the 'glob:' pattern anchors to the whole file path. I don't think "prefix"-matching glob is useful, and making it the default would be rather confusing.
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Filesets
Jujutsu supports a functional language for selecting a set of files. Expressions in this language are called "filesets" (the idea comes from Mercurial). The language consists of file patterns, operators, and functions.
Filesets support is still experimental. It can be enabled by
ui.allow-filesets
.
ui.allow-filesets = true
File patterns
The following patterns are supported:
"path"
,path
(the quotes are optional), orcwd:"path"
: Matches cwd-relative path prefix (file or files under directory recursively.)cwd-file:"path"
orfile:"path"
: Matches cwd-relative file (or exact) path.cwd-glob:"pattern"
orglob:"pattern"
: Matches file paths with cwd-relative Unix-style shell wildcardpattern
. For example,glob:"*.c"
will match all.c
files in the current working directory non-recursively.root:"path"
: Matches workspace-relative path prefix (file or files under directory recursively.)root-file:"path"
: Matches workspace-relative file (or exact) path.root-glob:"pattern"
: Matches file paths with workspace-relative Unix-style shell wildcardpattern
.
Operators
The following operators are supported. x
and y
below can be any fileset
expressions.
x & y
: Matches bothx
andy
.x | y
: Matches eitherx
ory
(or both).x ~ y
: Matchesx
but noty
.~x
: Matches everything butx
.
You can use parentheses to control evaluation order, such as (x & y) | z
or
x & (y | z)
.
Functions
You can also specify patterns by using functions.
all()
: Matches everything.none()
: Matches nothing.
Examples
Show diff excluding Cargo.lock
.
jj diff '~Cargo.lock'
List files in src
excluding Rust sources.
jj files 'src ~ glob:"**/*.rs"'
Split a revision in two, putting foo
into the second commit.
jj split '~foo'