We now have two `cmd_show` in the repo. I think this one should become
`cmd_file_show`, but this should be done uniformly over all the commands
for consistency.
I did *not* keep `print` as an alias (I couldn't find a compelling
reason to do it), but let me know if anyone feels like keeping it.
Since "set <thing>" often adds a <thing> if not exists, it make some sense
that "branch set" does upsert. The current "branch set" use case is now covered
by "branch move", so it's okay to change the "set" behavior.
If new branch is created by "branch set", status message and hint will be
printed to help migration. The user should be able to undo creation if it was
a mistake.
Closes#3584
This allows users to jump to the next conflict in the ancestors or children of
the start commit.
Continues work on #2126
Co-Authored-By: Noah Mayr <dev@noahmayr.com>
This basically supersedes the current "branch set" command. The plan is to turn
"branch set" into an "upsert" command, and deprecate "branch create". (#3584)
Maybe we can also add "branch set --new" flag to only allow creation of new
branches. One reason behind this proposed change is that "set" usually allows
both "creation" and "update". However, we also need a typo-safe version of
"set" to not create new branches by accident.
"jj branch move" is useful when advancing ancestor branches. Let's say you've
added a couple of commits on top of an existing PR branch, you can advance the
branch by "jj branch move --from 'heads(::@- & branches())' --to @-". If this
pattern is super common, maybe we can add --advance flag for short.
One drawback of this change is that "git branch --move" is equivalent to
"jj branch rename". I personally don't find this is confusing, but it's true
that "move" sometimes means "rename".
Otherwise they wouldn't be sorted in help. I also reordered the match statement.
Since subcommands are split to per-file modules, there's no point to keep some
logical ordering.
Most of the value of `jj fix` over a shell script is in formatting commits
other than `@`. `@::` often doesn't contain those other commits, so `-s @` is a
bad default.
We could get the same effect from `-s 'mutable() & ::@'`, but `reachable()` is
a bit more explicit and simple to read.
We could also base this on excluding `trunk()`, but that just seems like an
indirection for `mutable()` that might ignore the user's intent if they have
configured part of trunk to be mutable.
This commit adds an optional flag to be able to push commits with an
empty description to a remote git repo. While the default behavior is
ideal we might need to interact with a repo that has an empty commit
description in it. I ran into this issue a few weeks ago pushing commits
from an open source repo to an empty repo and had to go back to using
git for that push as I would not want to rewrite the history which was
many many years long just for that.
This flag allows users an escape hatch for pushing empty descriptions
for commits and they're sure that they want that behavior.
This commit adds the flag to the `git push` command and updates the docs
for the command. It also updates the original test to make sure that the
flag works as intended to reject the commit when not set and to allow
the commit when the flag is set.
Closes#2633
Previously, it sounded like `jj git` might only include highly-technical
commands, while IMO the most important commands in here are `jj git
fetch` and `jj git push`.
When using `ui.color = "debug"`, changes in the output style
additionally include delimiters << and >>, as well as all active labels
at this point separated by ::. The output is otherwise unformatted and
the delimiters and labels inherit the style of the content they apply
to.
Perhaps, this can be used to generate parsable branches list.
The hint for deleted branches isn't migrated to the template. I'm thinking of
moving it out of the loop and printed once at the end. If we want to generate
a hint in template, we'll probably need local_ref.tracking_remote_refs(), etc.
that return a list of RefNames.
I'm going to add more detailed output there. This is a step towards "branch
list" template. "tag list -T" wouldn't be that useful, but it shares primitives
with "branch list -T".
I'm not sure if this was an intentional omission, but I think it would be
useful to have `-e` as a short flag for `--edit`. I don't usually edit commits,
but I do use `prev` and `next` with edit to navigate to a commit that I want to
squash. Often this is easier than typing `--from` and `--into` plus the change
IDs.
If people want to edit commits we shouldn't stand in their way.
This is the last non-debug command that doesn't support file patterns. It
wouldn't make much sense to "cat" multiple files (despite the command name),
but doing that should be harmless.
if `--use-destination-message/-u` is passed to `jj squash`, the resulting
revision will use the description of the destination revision and the
description(s) of the source revision(s) will be discarded.