We write conflict to the working copy by materializing them as
conflict markers in a file. When the file has been modified (or just
the mtime has changed), we parse the markers to reconstruct the
conflict. For example, let's say we see this conflict marker:
```
<<<<<<<
+++++++
b
%%%%%%%
-a
+c
>>>>>>>
```
Then we will create a hunk with ["a"] as removed and ["b", "c"] as
added.
Now, since commit b84be06c08, when we materialize conflicts, we
minimize the diff part of the marker (the `%%%%%%%` part). The problem
is that that minimization may result in a different order of the
positive conflict terms. That's particularly bad because we do the
minimization per hunk, so we can end up reconstructing an input that
never existed.
This commit fixes the bug by only considering the next add and the one
after that, and emitting either only the first with `%%%%%%%`, or both
of them, with the first one in `++++++++` and the second one in
`%%%%%%%`.
Note that the recent fix to add context to modify/delete conflicts
means that when we parse modified such conflicts, we'll always
consider them resolved, since the expected adds/removes we pass will
not match what's actually in the file. That doesn't seem so bad, and
it's not obvious what the fix should be, so I'll leave that for later.
When we materialize modify/delete conflicts, we currently don't
include any context lines. That's because modify/delete conflicts have
only two sides, so there's no common base to compare to. Hunks that
are unchanged on the "modify" side are therefore not considered
conflicting, and since they they don't contribute new changes, they're
simply skipped (here:
3dfedf5814/lib/src/files.rs (L228-L230)).
It seems more useful to instead pretend that the missing side is an
empty file. That way we'll get a conflict in the entire file.
We can still decide later to make e.g. `jj resolve` prompt the user on
modify/delete conflicts just like `hg resolve` does (or maybe it
actually happens earlier there, I don't remember).
Closes#1244.
It's been about 10 weeks and 730 commits since 0.6.0, compared to
about 7 weeks and 350 commits between 0.5.0 and 0.6.0, so it's time
for a new release. There's been significant user-visible changes and
code-quality improvements. Thanks, everyone!
Supported values are,
- `none` for no author information,
- `full` for both the name and email,
- `name` for just the name,
- `username` for username part of the email,
- (default) `email` (or any other gibberish for that matter) for the full email.
I felt that the config is too narrow to have it's own top-level [diff]
section, and I couldn't think of another good place to have it. I'm
happy to hear other suggestions.
For stock merge-tools, having name -> args indirection makes sense. For
user-specific settings, it's simpler to set command name and arguments
together.
It might be a bit odd that "name with whitespace" can be parsed differently
depending on the existence of merge-tools."name with whitespace".
We have moved from saying "committing the working copy" towards saying
"snapshotting the working copy". More importantly, the option also
means that we don't update the working copy at the end. I went with
the `--ignore-working-copy` name suggested by Ilya. I also updated the
documentation of the option.
This allows us to use "if(description,)" to test empty description. And
I think this change is unavoidable if we want to add support for commit
template.
Git's HEAD ref is similar to other refs and can logically have
conflicts just like the other refs in `git_refs`. As with the other
refs, it can happen if you run concurrent commands importing two
different updates from Git. So let's treat `git_head` the same as
`git_refs` by making it an `Option<RefTarget>`.
I think of it more as style than a format, so using `style` in the
config key makes sense to me.
I didn't bother making upgrades easy by supporting the old name since
this was just released and only a few developers probably have it set.
The name of the [alias] section is inconsistent with other
table-valued sections ([revset-aliases], [colors], [merge-tools]), so
let's rename it. For comparison, `Cargo.toml` also uses plural names
(e.g. `[dependencies]`).
This is an example of labeled output of structured value types. I think
"{name} <{email}>" is a good default formatting, but I should note that
the signature also contains timestamp field.
This makes us sanitize ANSI escape bytes in the output if it goes to
the terminal, even when it's not colored (by us), such as when using
`--color=never`. That means that e.g. `jj cat
tests/test_commit_template.rs` will not be colored, but `jj cat
tests/test_commit_template.rs | cat` will be. Sanitizing output sent
to the terminal might help reduce some security threats based on
hiding content by using ANSI escapes.
We could add a config option for sanitizing the output, but I'm not
sure it'll be useful.
`jj cat` better matches `hg cat` and, of course, `cat`. I apparently
called it `jj print` when I added it in 7a013a59ae because I haven't
found `hg cat` useful for actually concatenating files. That's still
true, and I don't know if we will ever bother to teach `jj cat` to
actually concatenate files, but I think the familiarity of `cat` is
more important.
For reference, Git calls it `git show <rev>:<file>`.
I kept `print` as an alias and added a test for it. I also documented
the test better.
By the way, I've considered adding a command for writing from stdin
directly to a specific commit. If we ever do, it might make sense to
call that command `write` (e.g. `echo foo | jj write -r @-
README.md`). Then it would make sense to add `read` as an alias to
`cat`. I'm not sure that's a good idea, but let's leave that for later
anyway.
The `indexmap` crate is used to make `duplicate`'s output have a sane order,
making it easier to test.
It's also used later to remove duplicate revisions in the `abandon` command.
Fixes https://github.com/martinvonz/jj/issues/1050
Thanks to Martin for suggesting the exact fix.
The tests go into the new tests/test_duplicate_command.rs, which will be
expanded shortly with other tests depending on this bugfix.
The `git.fetch` and `git.push` keys can be used in the configuration file
for the default to use in `jj git fetch` and `jj git push` operations.
By defaut, "origin" is used in both cases.
You may use "abc\\" in .gitignore to ignore a file named "abc\". In this
case, removing training spaces on "abc\\ " must result in "abc\\" as the
trailing space is not escaped, the preceeding backslash being part of
the previous "\\" escaping sequence.
- branches has the signature branches([needle]), meaning the needle is optional (branches() is equivalent to branches("")) and it matches all branches whose name contains needle as a substring
- remote_branches has the signature remote_branches([branch_needle[, remote_needle]]), meaning it can be called with no arguments, or one argument (in which case, it's similar to branches), or two arguments where the first argument matches branch names and the second argument matches remote names (similar to branches, remote_branches(), remote_branches("") and remote_branches("", "") are all equivalent)
If a workspace path is explicitly specified, it must point to the exact
workspace directory. This is the same behavior as 'hg -R'. OTOH, 'git -C'
is the option to chdir, so it makes sense to search .git from that directory.
This also fixes 'jj -R ../..' which would previously look up '../..', '..',
'.', ...
Since per-repo config may contain CLI settings, it must be visible to CLI.
Therefore, UserSettings::with_repo() -> RepoSettings isn't used, and its
implementation is nullified by this commit.
#616
Otherwise the description set by -m would differ from the one set by editor.
This fixes test_describe() which says "make no changes", but previously "\n"
would be added by the second "jj describe".
As you can see, almost all hashes change in CLI tests. This means in-flight
PRs will need to be rebased to update insta snapshots.
Description text could be normalized by CommitBuilder, but the caller would
have to normalize it beforehand to compare with the current description, so
we would need an explicit function anyway. Another idea is to add a newtype
that represents a normalized description, and make CommitBuilder require it.
Commit::description() will return &Description in place of &str to ensure
that commit.description() == raw_str wouldn't compile.
Git CLI provides --cleanup=<mode> option to switch normalization rules, but
I don't think we'll need such feature.
"jj log -p --summary" now shows summary and color-words diff, like
"hg log -p --stat".
Handling of "-p" is tricky. I first considered "-p" would turn on the default
diff output, but I found it would be confusing if "jj log -p --git" showed
both color-words and git diffs. So the default format is inserted only if
no --git nor --color-words is explicitly specified.
The author timestamp is rarely useful (in my experience). The
committer timestamp, on the other hand, can be useful for
understanding when a change was most recently modified. IIRC, I
originally picked the author timestamp to match the email (which is
the author's), but it's probably not confusing to use the author email
and the committer timestamp. I suspect few users will even reflect on
it.
The number of lines in the diff output is unchanged.
This makes diffs a little more readable when the "..." would otherwise hide a
single line of code that helps in understanding the surrounding context lines.
This change mostly rearranges the loop that consumes the diff lines, so it can
buffer up to num_context_lines*2+1 lines instead of just num_context_lines.
There's a bit of extra code to handle times when a "..." replaces the last line
of a diff.
Note that `jj diff --git` is unchanged, and will still output `@@` lines that
replace a single line of context.
This fixes the bug described in the previous commit.
Because we now print the message about failed exports also while
snapshotting, we may end up reporting it twice on one command. I'm not
sure it's worth worrying about that. We can deal with that later if it
turns out to be a common complaint.
When a workspace's working-copy commit is updated from another
workspace, the workspace becomes "stale". That means that the working
copy on disk doesn't represent the commit that the repo's view says it
should. In this state, we currently automatically it to the desired
commit next time the user runs any command in the workspace. That can
be undesirable e.g. if the user had a slow build or test run started
in the working copy. It can also be surprising that a checkout happens
when the user ran a seemingly readonly command like `jj status`.
This patch makes most commands instead error out if the working copy
is stale, and adds a `jj workspace update-stale` to update it. The
user can still run commands with `--no-commit-working-copy` in this
state (doing e.g. `jj --no-commit-working-copy rebase -r @ -d @--` is
another way of getting into the stale-working-copy state, by the way).
It seems like I forgot to update the `jj status` output when I decided
(years ago?) that the changes in a commit should always be compared to
the auto-merged parents. I was very confused before I realized that
`jj status` was showing the diff summary against the first parent. I
suppose the fact that `jj status` lists only one parent should have
been a hint. Thanks to ilyagr@ for finding this odd behavior. This
patch fixes it by making the command list all parents, and changes the
diff summary to be against the auto-merged parents.
As dbarnett@ reported on #9, our default of `less`, combined with our
default of enabling color on TTYs, means that we print ANSI codes to
`less` by default. Unless the user has set e.g. `$LESS=R`, `less` is
going to escape those codes, resulting in garbage like this:
```
@ ESC[1;35mbb39c26a29feESC[0m ESC[1;33m(no email configured)ESC[0m ESC[1;36m2022-12-03....
```
I guess most of us didn't notice because we have something like
`$LESS=FRX` set.
This patch changes our default from `less` to `less -FRX`. Those are
the flags we're using for our internal hg distribution at Google, and
that has seemed quite uncontroversial.
I added a pointer from the changelog to the tracking issue while at
it.
To prevent git's GC from breaking a repo, we already add a git ref to
commits we create in the git backend. However, we don't add refs to
commits we import from git. This fixes that.
Closes#815.
With this patch, we auto-upgrade existing repos that use Thrift format
for the operation log to use Protobuf format. That would only be repos
used with an unreleased version of jj after 0.5.1 (which may be the
majority of repos?).
The upgrade from Thrift is simpler because we now use the same hashing
scheme for the Protobuf-based storage, so the operation and view IDs
remain the same as they were in the Thrift-based storage. We could
simplify the code a bit more as a result, but since this code is
supposed to be short-lived, I didn't bother.
Since the change from the Protobuf format with the old hashing scheme
to a the (same) Protobuf format with the new hashing scheme shouldn't
impact users, I removed the entry we had in the changelog about the
format change.
I thought I had seen our current formatting, i.e. `(#123)`, get
auto-linked by GitHub, but it seems it doesn't. This patch therefore
changes to use markdown links. I copied the style from Cargo (and
Clippy).
The change in hashing scheme should not even be noticeable, except
maybe because the same objects may be saved twice and take extra
space, and may be slower because we compare the contents for equality
instead of short-circuiting when we the hash matches.
This fixes the bugs shown by the tests added in the previous patch by
checking that the git branches we're about to update have not been
updated by git since our last export. If they have, we fail those
branches. The user can then re-import from the git repo and resolve
any conflicts before exporting again.
I had to update the `test_export_import_sequence` to make it
pass. That shows a new bug, which I'll fix next. The problem is that
the exported view doesn't get updated on import, so we would try to
export changes compared to an earlier export, even though we actually
knew (because of the `jj git import`) that the state in git had
changed.
The Protobuf team at Google decided to let us use Protobufs internally
after all. That will make things a little easier for us with the
Google-internal adapations, and the `protobuf` crate is noticeably
faster than the `thrift` crate.
This effectively rolls back commit 5b10c9aa0a. I resolved some
conflicts caused by the rename from `NormalFile` to `File`. I also
kept the changelog entry, but I changed it to say that the hashing
scheme has changed (not the format), but since the hashes are just
used for identity, existing repos should still work.
A new FileType, GitSubmodule is added which is ignored. Files or
directories having this type are not added to the work queue and
are ignored in snapshot. Submodules are not created by jujutsu
when resetting or checking out a tree, they should be currently
managed using git.
Teach Ui's writing functions to write to a pager without touching the
process's file descriptors. This is done by introducing UiOutput::Paged,
which spawns a pager that Ui's functions can write to.
The pager program can be chosen via `ui.pager`. (defaults to Defaults to
$PAGER, and 'less' if that is unset (falling back to 'less' also makes
the tests pass).
Currently, commands are paginated if:
- they have "long" output (as defined by jj developers)
- jj is invoked in a terminal
The next commit will allow pagination to be turned off via a CLI option.
More complex pagination toggling (e.g. showing a pager even if the
output doesn't look like a terminal, using a pager for shorter ouput) is
left for a future PR.
Thanks, everyone! :) I'm happy to rephrase the text. I included people
in order of their first contribution in the release. I included their
full name and the GitHub username.
Function parameters are processed as local symbols while substituting
alias expression. This isn't as efficient as Mercurial which caches
a tree of fully-expanded function template, but that wouldn't matter in
practice.
Aliases are loaded at WorkspaceCommandHelper::new() as it's easier to warn
invalid declarations there. Not all commands use revsets, but many do, so
I think it's okay to always pay the loading cost. Parsing the declaration
part (i.e. a symbol) should be fast anyway.
The nested error message isn't super readable, but seems good enough.
Config syntax to bikeshed:
- naming: [revset-alias] vs [revset-aliases] ?
- function alias will need quotes: 'f(x)' = 'x'
This adds a warning whenever export to the backing Git repo fails,
whether it's by an explicit `jj git export` or an automatic export. It
might be too spammy to print the message after every failed command in
the colocated case, but let's try it and see.
The expression 'x ~ empty()' is identical to 'x & file(".")', but more
intuitive.
Note that 'x ~ empty()' is slower than 'x & file(".")' since the negative
intersection isn't optimized right now. I think that can be handled as
follows: 'x ~ filter(f)' -> 'x & filter(!f)' -> 'filter(!f, x)'
We currently get the hostname and username from the `whoami` crate. We
do that in lib crate, without giving the caller a way to override
them. That seems wrong since it might be used in a server and
performing operations on behalf of some other user. This commit makes
the hostname and username configurable, so the calling crate can pass
them in. If they have not been passed in, we still default to the
values from the `whoami` crate.
We have talked about showing the commit ID only for divergent changes
because it's generally easier to work with the change ID, and it's
less likely to result in a divergent change. However, it's useful to
have the commit ID available for pasting into e.g. a commit message or
the GitHub UI. To try to steer users towards using the change ID, this
commit moves the commit ID off to the right in the log output.
I put it just after the "divergent" field, because that makes it close
to how I imagine it would look if we decided to hide the commit ID
except for divergent changes. I was thinking that could be rendered as
"divergent (abc123)". So if we add config to hide the commit ID, then
it would be rendered almost the same for divergent commits (just with
the added parentheses). It would also make sense to replace the
"divergent" field by a question mark on the change ID, since change
IDs basically behave like branches. If we do that, then the placement
of the commit ID I picked in this commit does not make sense.
This migrates the native backend from Protobuf to Thrift since
Google's Protobuf team does let us import jj into Google's monorepo if
it uses a third-party Protobuf library.
Since the native backend is not supported, I didn't write any
migration code for it.
We can't remove `lib/src/protos/store.proto` yet, because it's also
used by the Git backend (only the `predecessors` and `change_id`
fields).
When we export branches to Git, we didn't update our own record of
Git's refs. This frequently led to spurious conflicts in these refs
(e.g. #463). This is typically what happened:
1. Import a branch pointing to commit A from Git
2. Modify the branch in jj to point to commit B
3. Export the branch to Git
4. Update the branch in Git to point to commit C
5. Import refs from Git
In step 3, we forgot to update our record of the branch in the repo
view's `git_refs` field. That led to the import in step 5 to think
that the branch moved from A to C in Git, which conflicts with the
internal branch target of B.
This commit fixes the bug by updating the refs in the `MutableRepo`.
Closes#463.
As mentioned in the previous commit, we need to remove the Protobuf
dependency in order to be allowed to import jj into Google's
repo. This commit makes `SimpleOpStore` store its data using Thrift
instead of Protobufs. It also adds automatic upgrade of existing
repos. The upgrade process took 18 s in my repo, which has 22k
operations. The upgraded storage uses practically the same amount of
space. `jj op log` (the full outut) in my repo slowed down from 1.2 s
to 3.4 s. Luckily that's an uncommon operation. I couldn't measure any
difference in `jj status` (loading a single operation).
It's useful to know when you've modified a branch that exists on a
remote. A typical case is when you have pushed a branch to a remote
and then rewritten it. This commit adds an indication in the
`branches` template keyword. A branch that needs to be pushed to a
remote now has a `*` at the end (similar to how conflicted branches
have a `?` at the end). Note that the indication only considers
remotes where the branch currently exists, so there won't be an
indication that the branch has not been pushed to a remote.
Closes#254
Unfortunately, TOML requires quotes around the argument. So, the
usage is `jj --config-toml ui.color=\"always\"` in bash. The plan is
to eventually have a `--config` option with simpler syntax for
simple cases.
As discussed in https://github.com/martinvonz/jj/discussions/688.
It seems very likely that we're going to remove support for open
commits, but it's still useful to have a `commit` command that lets
the user enter a description and starts a new change. Calling it
`commit` seems good to make the transition from other VCSs simpler.
If you remove all refs from the backing Git repo and then run `jj git
import`, we would see that all commits disappeared from the Git repo,
so we would remove them from the jj repo too. However, we do that by
doing a history walk from old heads to the new heads, which includes
the root commit when the new heads is an empty set. That means that we
mark the root commit as abandoned, which led to a crash in
`rewrite.rs` (when we try pick the root commit's first parent to use
as parent for rebased commits).
I was trying to create a reproduction script for #412, but the script
ran into another bug first. The script removed all the local and
remote branches from the backing Git repo. I noticed that we would
then try to abandon all commits. We should still count Git HEAD's
target as visible and not try to abandon it. This patch fixes that.
Since 'merges()' just filters the candidates set per item, it doesn't need
a candidates argument. Perhaps, 'merges(x)' could be a predicate to select
merge commits within a subgraph 'x', but I don't know if that would be
useful.
In the current implementation, tree is diffed twice if both PATH and -p
are specified. If this adds significant cost, we'll need to reimplement
it without using a revset abstraction (or maybe adjust revset/graph API.)
Add the `jj interdiff` command for comparing only the diffs of commits.
Its args are identical to that of `jj diff`, minus `--revision` (because
interdiff always requires two commits).
Like `jj obslog -p`, Changes introduced by intervening commits are
ignored by rebasing `--from` onto `--to` 's parents.
`jj merge` just creates an empty change, which is practically the same
as `jj new`. The main difference is that the former requires more than
one argument and the latter requires at most one argument. It seems
cleaner to generalize them and make them aliases. This patch starts
doing that by making `jj new` accept more than one argument.
Instead of having `jj merge` be exactly an alias for `jj new`, we may
want to make it a thin wrapper that just checks that more than one
argument was given. That would probably be less confusing to users who
run `jj merge` without arguments to see what it does.
We should probably make `jj checkout` also be an alias for `jj new`,
but that will have to wait until we have removed support for open
commits (since `jj checkout` still has logic for dealing with open
commits).
I suppose it could be seen as a bug fix that we no longer discard a
description without asking, but it was intentionally done the way it
was before.
While at it, I also clarified that the source commit gets abandoned if
it becomes empty.
In 8ae9540f2c, I made `jj move/squash/unsquash` not abandon the
working copy if it became empty because that would lose any
description associated with it. It turned out that the new behavior
was also confusing because it made it unclear if the working-copy
commit was actually abandoned. Let's roll back that change and instead
ask the user for a combined description when both the source and
destination commits have non-empty descriptions. Not discarding a
non-empty description seems like a good improvement regardless of the
behavior related to working-copy commits. It's also how `hg fold`
behaves (though hg doesn't allow the description to be empty).
I was using a custom `jj log` command and had some trouble finding
the commit `jj merge` created. The default `jj log` command shows it
by default, but my custom one didn't.
The two commands are very similar and we should probably make one an
alias of the other (or just delete one), but for now let's at least
make them more similar by supporting `-m` for both.
I currently think `jj new` is more natural when starting a new change
on top of the current one and `jj checkout` is more natural when
starting a new change on top of another one, as well as when you just
want to look around or run tests. `jj checkout` doesn't currently
default to the working copy like `jj new` does. Perhaps we should make
it do that. Will people eventually feel that it's natural to run `jj
checkout` to create a new change on top of the working copy, or will
they feel that it's natural to run `jj new` on an unrelated commit
even to just look around, or will we want them as synonyms forever?
I was initially worried about the cost of always snapshotting the
working copy, so that's why e.g. `jj diff -r <some hash>` doesn't do
it. However, there's been a few caused by missing snapshotting, and
there are still a few (I just noticed it in `jj undo` while writing
this patch). Let's always do the snapshotting and if the user really
doesn't want it, they can pass `--no-commit-working-copy` (which we
should probably rename to `--no-snapshot-working-copy` or maybe just
`--no-snapshot`). That should reduce bugs and make the CLI more
predictable.
Two test cases were affected becasue `jj merge` also didn't snapshot
the working copy.
Before this patch, e.g. `jj co --no-commit-working-copy` would error
out, but now it will succeed (without touching the working copy,
leaving the working copy stale). That may be confusing, but it should
be easy to recover from (e.g. by `jj undo`). We can consider adding a
check for it later if it seems too confusing (it's probably rarely
something the user wanted).
Since we now allow pushing open commits, we can implement support for
pushing the "current" branch by defining a "current" branch as any
branch pointing to `@`. That definition of a current/active seems to
have been the consensus in discussion #411.
Closes#246.
When rebasing commits after rewrites, we also update all workspaces'
checkouts. If the new commit is closed, we create a new commit on
top. Since we're hoping to remove the open/closed concept, we need a
new condition. I considered creating a new commit on top if the change
ID was different from before the rewrite. However, that would make at
least `jj split` more complicated because it makes the first commit
keep the change ID but it wants the second commit to be checked
out. This patch instead creates the new commit on top only when the
original commit was abandoned.
This patch adds `jj obslog -p` for including the diff compared to the
predecessor (the first predecessor if there are several). If the
predecessor's parents are different, then we create a temporary tree
by rebasing the predecessor to have the same parents and we use the
result as base for the diff. That way, we avoid polluting the diff
with the changes caused by the rebase. (I don't think we currently
have any commands that can change both parents and content, so the
diff should always be empty for rewrites caused by a rebase.)
Working on this also reminded me that it'll be really nice when we
replace `jj obslog` by something based on the operation log - I really
miss seeing information about the operation in the output (like `hg
obslog` gets from its obsmarkers).
I often redirect the jj output to pager, so I set ui.color = "always" in
config file. This patch allows me to remove such config, and instead specify
--color=always only when needed.
According to the NO_COLOR FAQ, "user-level configuration files [...] should
override $NO_COLOR." https://no-color.org/
Unfortunately this makes it harder to test the $NO_COLOR behavior since the
test environment isn't attached to a tty. We could allocate a pty or
LD_PRELOAD shim to intercept isatty(), but I feel it would be too much to do.
https://github.com/assert-rs/assert_cmd/issues/138
This patch prevents perhaps pushing commits with an empty description
or the placeholder "(no user/email configured)" values for
author/committer.
Closes#322.
If a commit's author field has the placeholder user/email values
(i.e. "(no name configured)" and "(no email configured)"), and they
have now configured their email and username, they probably want us to
update the author field with the new information, so that's what this
patch does. Thanks to durin42@ for the suggestion on #322.
If the source commit becomes empty as a result of
`move/squash/unsquash`, we abandon it. However, perhaps we shouldn't
do that if the source commit is a working-copy commit because
working-copy commits are often work-in-progress commits.
The background for this change is that @arxanas had just started a new
change and had set a description on it, and then decided to make some
changes in the working copy that should be in the parent
commit. Running `jj squash` then abandoned the working-copy commit,
resuling in the description getting lost.
Before this change, `jj new` would check out the new commit only if it
was created on top of the current commit. I never liked that
special-casing, and after thinking more about how the open/closed
should work (see discussion #321), I think we want `jj new` to behave
similar to how `git/hg checkout` works, so it can effectively replace
the current `jj checkout` command for the use case of starting new
work on top of an existing commit.
This adds a `--reversed` flag to `jj log` to show commits with later
commits further down. It works both with and without the graph.
Since the graph-drawing code is already independent of the
relationship between commits, it doesn't need any updating.
The default log output of showing all commits is not very useful when
contributing to an existing repo. Let's have it default to showing
commits not on any remote branch instead. I think that's the best we
can do since we don't have a configurable main branch yet, and we
don't even have per-repo configuration..
Closes#250.
Our support for aliases is very naively implemented; it assumes the
alias is the first argument in argv. It therefore fails to resolve
aliases after global arguments such as `--at-op`.
This patch fixes that by modifying the command defintion to have an
"external subcommand" in the list of available commands. That makes
`clap` give us the remainder of the arguments when it runs into an
unknown command. The first in the list will then be an alias or simply
an unknown command. Thanks to @epage for the suggestion on in
clap-rs/clap#3672.
With the new structure, it was easy to handle recursive alias
definitions, so I added support for that too.
Closes#292.
With this patch, the order is this:
`$JJ_EDITOR` environement variable
`ui.editor` config
`$VISUAL` environement variable
`$EDITOR` environement variable
`pico`
That matches git, except that git falls back to an editor determined
at compile time (usually `vi`) instead of using `pico`.
As I said in 095fb9fef4, removing support for `~/.jjconfig` was an
experiment. I've heard from a few people (including in #233) that they
would prefer to have configs in the home directory. This patch
therefore restores that functionality, except I added a `.toml`
extension to the file to clarify the expected format to users and
editors.
After this patch, we still allow configs in `$XDG_CONFIG_HOME` (and
the other paths used by `dirs::config_dir()`), but we error out there
are config files in both that location and `~/.jjconfig.toml`.
Apparently, I need to pass `--merge` option to use kdiff3 as a diff editor.
We could add `diff-editor-args` or extend `diff-editor` to a list of command
arguments, but we'll eventually add stock merge tools and the configuration
would look like:
[merge-tools.<name>]
program = ...
diff-args = [...]
edit-args = [...]
merge-args = [...]
This adds `jj git push --change <revision>` which creates a branch
with a name based on the revision's change ID, and then pushes that
like with `--branch`. That can be useful so you don't have to manually
add the branch (and come up with a name for it). The created branch
behaves like any other branch, so it's possible to make it point to a
commit with a different change ID.
As requested by @talpr. I added this is a separate new command `jj git
remote list`. One could also imagine showing the listing when there is
no sub-command specified to `jj git remote`, but we don't have other
commands that behave that way yet.
Closes#243
Now that I'm using GitHub PRs instead of pushing directly to the main
branch, it's quite annoying to have to abandon the old commits after
GitHub rebases them. This patch makes it so we compare the remote's
previous heads to the new heads and abandons any commits that were
removed on the remote. As usual, that means that descendants get
rebased onto the closest remaining commit.
This is half of #241. The other half is to detect rewritten branches
and rebase on top.
This adds a `jj sparse` command with options to list and manage the
set of paths to include in the working copy. It only supports includes
(postive matches) for now.
I'm not sure "sparse" is the best name for the feature. Perhaps it
would make sense as a subcommand under `jj workspace` - maybe `jj
workspace track`? However, there's also `jj untrack` for removing a
file from the working copy and leaving it in the working copy. I'm
happy to hear suggestions, or we can get back to the naming later.
I originally made the operation argument a named argument
(`--operation`) to allow for a change ID to be passed as a positional
argument, matching e.g. `hg revert -r <rev> <path>`. However, even if
we add support for undoing changes only to certain change IDs, it's
going to be done much less frequently than full undo/restore. We can
therefore make that a named argument if we ever add it.
The `DescendantRebaser` keeps a map of branches from the source
commit, so it gets efficient lookup of branches to update when a
commit has been rebased. This map was not kept up to date as we
rebased. That could lead to branches getting left on hidden
intermediate commits. Specifically, if a commit with a branch was
rewritten by some command, and an ancestor of it was also rewritten,
then we'd only update the branch only the first step and not update it
again when rebasing onto the rewritten ancestor.
When a directory is missing in one merge input (base or one side), we
would consider that a merge conflict. This patch changes that so we
instead merge trees by treating the missing tree as empty.
This introduces a `connected(x)` function, which is simply the same as
`x:x`. It's occasionally useful if `x` is a long expression. It's also
useful as a building block for `root(x)` (coming soon).
It's annoying especially for tests to not be able to append to a
config file without knowing the contents (as you have to do with
TOML). Let's read all files in a directory if `$JJ_CONFIG` points to a
directory. Mercurial does that for its `$HGRCPATH` variable.
I quite often want to move the changes to a particular file from one
commit to another. We already support that using `jj move -i`, but
that can be annoying to run because we don't have a TUI for it
(#48). Let's make it possible to do `jj move --from X --to Y <path>`.
It seems very unlikely that the user would want to untrack all paths
(that's still possible with `jj untrack .`, if they really want to,
and have added all their current paths to the `.gitignore`).
I'm adding this mostly because it's useful for testing. That's also
the reason it supports displaying conflicts. I didn't call it `cat`
like `hg cat` because I haven't found `hg cat` on multiple files
useful.
This release is mostly about the fix for #177, which looks pretty bad
even though I think it is actually harmless. It also has `jj log -p`
contributed by @yuja!
When initializing a workspace that shares its working copy with a Git
repo (i.e. `jj init --git-repo=.`), we import refs and HEAD when
creating the `WorkspaceCommandHelper` (as we do for all commands when
the working copy is shared). That makes the explicit import we do in
`cmd_init()` unnecessary. It also makes the checkout of HEAD I added
for the fix of #102 unnecessary. More importantly, as @yuja reported
in #177, it makes the command crash (at least if the repo is small
enough that the two checkouts happen within a second). I think the
problem is that the second checkout tries to create the same commit
except that the Change ID is different (the problem is not the
predecessors as I speculated in the issue tracker). The fix is to
simply avoid doing the redundant work. We still need a proper fix for
#27 eventually.
Closes#177.
This patch adds a very simple e2e test of having a working copy shared
with Git. The test initially failed on Windows. The symptom was that
the "master" branch did not get updated when we create a commit using
`jj`. That suggested that we didn't correctly detect that the working
copy was shared. After a lot of troubleshooting, I think I mostly
understand what we going on here (thanks to @arxanas for suggesting
https://github.com/mxschmitt/action-tmate). The path we get from
`git2::Repository::workdir()` seems to not be canonicalized in the
same way as `std::fs::canonicalize()` canonicalizes. Specifically, it
does not have the "\\?\" prefix we get from that function. I suppose
that's because libgit2 is a C library and canonicalizes the path using
some other system call.
"log -p | less" is the option I often use with hg/git to find interesting
bits from the changelog, and I think it's also valid with jj. Unlike
"hg log -p --stat", "jj log -p --summary" does not show both diff summary
and patch to reflect the internal structure. This behavoir is arguable and
may be changed later.
The logic of show_patch() is extracted from cmd_show().
It's unusual for the current commit to have descendants, but it can
happen. In particular, it can easily happen when you run `jj new`. You
probably don't want to abandon it in those cases.