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+<tr><th colspan="3" align="center">Chapter 14. Adding functionality with extensions</th></tr>
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+<a accesskey="p" href="advanced-uses-of-mercurial-queues.html">Prev</a> </td>
+<th width="60%" align="center"> </th>
+<td width="20%" align="right"> <a accesskey="n" href="migrating-to-mercurial.html">Next</a>
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+<hr>
+</div>
+<div class="chapter" title="Chapter 14. Adding functionality with extensions">
+<div class="titlepage"><div><div><h2 class="title">
+<a name="chap:hgext"></a>Chapter 14. Adding functionality with extensions</h2></div></div></div>
+<div class="toc">
+<p><b>Table of Contents</b></p>
+<dl>
+<dt><span class="sect1"><a href="adding-functionality-with-extensions.html#sec:hgext:inotify">14.1. Improve performance with the <code class="literal">inotify</code> extension</a></span></dt>
+<dt><span class="sect1"><a href="adding-functionality-with-extensions.html#sec:hgext:extdiff">14.2. Flexible diff support with the <code class="literal">extdiff</code> extension</a></span></dt>
+<dd><dl><dt><span class="sect2"><a href="adding-functionality-with-extensions.html#id3071699">14.2.1. Defining command aliases</a></span></dt></dl></dd>
+<dt><span class="sect1"><a href="adding-functionality-with-extensions.html#sec:hgext:transplant">14.3. Cherrypicking changes with the <code class="literal">transplant</code> extension</a></span></dt>
+<dt><span class="sect1"><a href="adding-functionality-with-extensions.html#sec:hgext:patchbomb">14.4. Send changes via email with the <code class="literal">patchbomb</code> extension</a></span></dt>
+<dd><dl><dt><span class="sect2"><a href="adding-functionality-with-extensions.html#id3072184">14.4.1. Changing the behavior of patchbombs</a></span></dt></dl></dd>
+</dl>
+</div>
+<p><a name="x_4fe"></a>While the core of Mercurial is quite complete from a
+ functionality standpoint, it's deliberately shorn of fancy
+ features. This approach of preserving simplicity keeps the
+ software easy to deal with for both maintainers and users.</p>
+<p><a name="x_4ff"></a>However, Mercurial doesn't box you in with an inflexible
+ command set: you can add features to it as
+ <span class="emphasis"><em>extensions</em></span> (sometimes known as
+ <span class="emphasis"><em>plugins</em></span>). We've already discussed a few of
+ these extensions in earlier chapters.</p>
+<p id="x_546"><a name="x_546"></a>When you provide a directory name, Mercurial will interpret
+ this as “<span class="quote">operate on every file in this directory and its
+ subdirectories</span>”. Mercurial traverses the files and
+ subdirectories in a directory in alphabetical order. When it
+ encounters a subdirectory, it will traverse that subdirectory
+ before continuing with the current directory.</p>
+
+
+
+<div class="itemizedlist"><ul class="itemizedlist" type="disc">
+<li class="listitem"><p><a name="x_500"></a><a class="xref" href="a-tour-of-mercurial-merging-work.html#sec:tour-merge:fetch" title="3.3. Simplifying the pull-merge-commit sequence">Section 3.3, “Simplifying the pull-merge-commit sequence”</a>
+ covers the <code class="literal">fetch</code> extension;
+ this combines pulling new changes and merging them with local
+ changes into a single command, <span class="command"><strong>fetch</strong></span>.</p></li>
+<li class="listitem"><p><a name="x_501"></a>In <a class="xref" href="handling-repository-events-with-hooks.html" title="Chapter 10. Handling repository events with hooks">Chapter 10, <i>Handling repository events with hooks</i></a>, we covered
+ several extensions that are useful for hook-related
+ functionality: <code class="literal">acl</code> adds
+ access control lists; <code class="literal">bugzilla</code> adds integration with the
+ Bugzilla bug tracking system; and <code class="literal">notify</code> sends notification emails on
+ new changes.</p></li>
+<li class="listitem"><p><a name="x_502"></a>The Mercurial Queues patch management extension is
+ so invaluable that it merits two chapters and an appendix all
+ to itself. <a class="xref" href="managing-change-with-mercurial-queues.html" title="Chapter 12. Managing change with Mercurial Queues">Chapter 12, <i>Managing change with Mercurial Queues</i></a> covers the
+ basics; <a class="xref" href="advanced-uses-of-mercurial-queues.html" title="Chapter 13. Advanced uses of Mercurial Queues">Chapter 13, <i>Advanced uses of Mercurial Queues</i></a> discusses advanced topics;
+ and <a class="xref" href="mercurial-queues-reference.html" title="Appendix B. Mercurial Queues reference">Appendix B, <i>Mercurial Queues reference</i></a> goes into detail on
+ each
+ command.</p></li>
+</ul></div>
+<p><a name="x_503"></a>In this chapter, we'll cover some of the other extensions that
+ are available for Mercurial, and briefly touch on some of the
+ machinery you'll need to know about if you want to write an
+ extension of your own.</p>
+<div class="itemizedlist"><ul class="itemizedlist" type="disc"><li class="listitem"><p><a name="x_504"></a>In <a class="xref" href="adding-functionality-with-extensions.html#sec:hgext:inotify" title="14.1. Improve performance with the inotify extension">Section 14.1, “Improve performance with the <code class="literal">inotify</code> extension”</a>,
+ we'll discuss the possibility of <span class="emphasis"><em>huge</em></span>
+ performance improvements using the <code class="literal">inotify</code> extension.</p></li></ul></div>
+<div class="sect1" title="14.1. Improve performance with the inotify extension">
+<div class="titlepage"><div><div><h2 class="title" style="clear: both">
+<a name="sec:hgext:inotify"></a>14.1. Improve performance with the <code class="literal">inotify</code> extension</h2></div></div></div>
+<p><a name="x_505"></a>Are you interested in having some of the most common
+ Mercurial operations run as much as a hundred times faster?
+ Read on!</p>
+<p><a name="x_506"></a>Mercurial has great performance under normal circumstances.
+ For example, when you run the <span class="command"><strong>hg
+ status</strong></span> command, Mercurial has to scan almost every
+ directory and file in your repository so that it can display
+ file status. Many other Mercurial commands need to do the same
+ work behind the scenes; for example, the <span class="command"><strong>hg diff</strong></span> command uses the status
+ machinery to avoid doing an expensive comparison operation on
+ files that obviously haven't changed.</p>
+<p><a name="x_507"></a>Because obtaining file status is crucial to good
+ performance, the authors of Mercurial have optimised this code
+ to within an inch of its life. However, there's no avoiding the
+ fact that when you run <span class="command"><strong>hg
+ status</strong></span>, Mercurial is going to have to perform at
+ least one expensive system call for each managed file to
+ determine whether it's changed since the last time Mercurial
+ checked. For a sufficiently large repository, this can take a
+ long time.</p>
+<p><a name="x_508"></a>To put a number on the magnitude of this effect, I created a
+ repository containing 150,000 managed files. I timed <span class="command"><strong>hg status</strong></span> as taking ten seconds to
+ run, even when <span class="emphasis"><em>none</em></span> of those files had been
+ modified.</p>
+<p><a name="x_509"></a>Many modern operating systems contain a file notification
+ facility. If a program signs up to an appropriate service, the
+ operating system will notify it every time a file of interest is
+ created, modified, or deleted. On Linux systems, the kernel
+ component that does this is called
+ <code class="literal">inotify</code>.</p>
+<p><a name="x_50a"></a>Mercurial's <code class="literal">inotify</code>
+ extension talks to the kernel's <code class="literal">inotify</code>
+ component to optimise <span class="command"><strong>hg status</strong></span>
+ commands. The extension has two components. A daemon sits in
+ the background and receives notifications from the
+ <code class="literal">inotify</code> subsystem. It also listens for
+ connections from a regular Mercurial command. The extension
+ modifies Mercurial's behavior so that instead of scanning the
+ filesystem, it queries the daemon. Since the daemon has perfect
+ information about the state of the repository, it can respond
+ with a result instantaneously, avoiding the need to scan every
+ directory and file in the repository.</p>
+<p><a name="x_50b"></a>Recall the ten seconds that I measured plain Mercurial as
+ taking to run <span class="command"><strong>hg status</strong></span> on a
+ 150,000 file repository. With the <code class="literal">inotify</code> extension enabled, the time
+ dropped to 0.1 seconds, a factor of <span class="emphasis"><em>one
+ hundred</em></span> faster.</p>
+<p><a name="x_50c"></a>Before we continue, please pay attention to some
+ caveats.</p>
+<div class="itemizedlist"><ul class="itemizedlist" type="disc">
+<li class="listitem"><p><a name="x_50d"></a>The <code class="literal">inotify</code>
+ extension is Linux-specific. Because it interfaces directly
+ to the Linux kernel's <code class="literal">inotify</code> subsystem,
+ it does not work on other operating systems.</p></li>
+<li class="listitem"><p><a name="x_50e"></a>It should work on any Linux distribution that
+ was released after early 2005. Older distributions are
+ likely to have a kernel that lacks
+ <code class="literal">inotify</code>, or a version of
+ <code class="literal">glibc</code> that does not have the necessary
+ interfacing support.</p></li>
+<li class="listitem"><p><a name="x_50f"></a>Not all filesystems are suitable for use with
+ the <code class="literal">inotify</code> extension.
+ Network filesystems such as NFS are a non-starter, for
+ example, particularly if you're running Mercurial on several
+ systems, all mounting the same network filesystem. The
+ kernel's <code class="literal">inotify</code> system has no way of
+ knowing about changes made on another system. Most local
+ filesystems (e.g. ext3, XFS, ReiserFS) should work
+ fine.</p></li>
+</ul></div>
+<p><a name="x_510"></a>The <code class="literal">inotify</code> extension is
+ not yet shipped with Mercurial as of May 2007, so it's a little
+ more involved to set up than other extensions. But the
+ performance improvement is worth it!</p>
+<p><a name="x_511"></a>The extension currently comes in two parts: a set of patches
+ to the Mercurial source code, and a library of Python bindings
+ to the <code class="literal">inotify</code> subsystem.</p>
+<div class="note" title="Note" style="margin-left: 0.5in; margin-right: 0.5in;"><table border="0" summary="Note">
+<tr>
+<td rowspan="2" align="center" valign="top" width="25"><img alt="[Note]" src="figs/note.png"></td>
+<th align="left">Note</th>
+</tr>
+<tr><td align="left" valign="top"><p><a name="x_512"></a> There are <span class="emphasis"><em>two</em></span> Python
+ <code class="literal">inotify</code> binding libraries. One of them is
+ called <code class="literal">pyinotify</code>, and is packaged by some
+ Linux distributions as <code class="literal">python-inotify</code>.
+ This is <span class="emphasis"><em>not</em></span> the one you'll need, as it is
+ too buggy and inefficient to be practical.</p></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+<p><a name="x_513"></a>To get going, it's best to already have a functioning copy
+ of Mercurial installed.</p>
+<div class="note" title="Note" style="margin-left: 0.5in; margin-right: 0.5in;"><table border="0" summary="Note">
+<tr>
+<td rowspan="2" align="center" valign="top" width="25"><img alt="[Note]" src="figs/note.png"></td>
+<th align="left">Note</th>
+</tr>
+<tr><td align="left" valign="top"><p><a name="x_514"></a> If you follow the instructions below, you'll be
+ <span class="emphasis"><em>replacing</em></span> and overwriting any existing
+ installation of Mercurial that you might already have, using
+ the latest <span class="quote">“<span class="quote">bleeding edge</span>”</span> Mercurial code. Don't
+ say you weren't warned!</p></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+<div class="orderedlist"><ol class="orderedlist" type="1">
+<li class="listitem">
+<p><a name="x_515"></a>Clone the Python <code class="literal">inotify</code>
+ binding repository. Build and install it.</p>
+<pre class="programlisting">hg clone http://hg.kublai.com/python/inotify
+cd inotify
+python setup.py build --force
+sudo python setup.py install --skip-build</pre>
+</li>
+<li class="listitem">
+<p><a name="x_516"></a>Clone the <code class="filename">crew</code> Mercurial repository.
+ Clone the <code class="literal">inotify</code> patch
+ repository so that Mercurial Queues will be able to apply
+ patches to your cope of the <code class="filename">crew</code> repository.</p>
+<pre class="programlisting">hg clone http://hg.intevation.org/mercurial/crew
+hg clone crew inotify
+hg clone http://hg.kublai.com/mercurial/patches/inotify inotify/.hg/patches</pre>
+</li>
+<li class="listitem"><p><a name="x_517"></a>Make sure that you have the Mercurial Queues
+ extension, <code class="literal">mq</code>, enabled. If
+ you've never used MQ, read <a class="xref" href="managing-change-with-mercurial-queues.html#sec:mq:start" title="12.5. Getting started with Mercurial Queues">Section 12.5, “Getting started with Mercurial Queues”</a> to get started
+ quickly.</p></li>
+<li class="listitem">
+<p><a name="x_518"></a>Go into the <code class="filename">inotify</code> repo, and apply all
+ of the <code class="literal">inotify</code> patches
+ using the <code class="option">hg
+ -a</code> option to the <span class="command"><strong>qpush</strong></span> command.</p>
+<pre class="programlisting">cd inotify
+hg qpush -a</pre>
+</li>
+<li class="listitem"><p><a name="x_519"></a> If you get an error message from <span class="command"><strong>qpush</strong></span>, you should not continue.
+ Instead, ask for help.</p></li>
+<li class="listitem">
+<p><a name="x_51a"></a>Build and install the patched version of
+ Mercurial.</p>
+<pre class="programlisting">python setup.py build --force
+sudo python setup.py install --skip-build</pre>
+</li>
+</ol></div>
+<p><a name="x_51b"></a>Once you've build a suitably patched version of Mercurial,
+ all you need to do to enable the <code class="literal">inotify</code> extension is add an entry to
+ your <code class="filename">~/.hgrc</code>.</p>
+<pre class="programlisting">[extensions] inotify =</pre>
+<p><a name="x_51c"></a>When the <code class="literal">inotify</code> extension
+ is enabled, Mercurial will automatically and transparently start
+ the status daemon the first time you run a command that needs
+ status in a repository. It runs one status daemon per
+ repository.</p>
+<p><a name="x_51d"></a>The status daemon is started silently, and runs in the
+ background. If you look at a list of running processes after
+ you've enabled the <code class="literal">inotify</code>
+ extension and run a few commands in different repositories,
+ you'll thus see a few <code class="literal">hg</code> processes sitting
+ around, waiting for updates from the kernel and queries from
+ Mercurial.</p>
+<p><a name="x_51e"></a>The first time you run a Mercurial command in a repository
+ when you have the <code class="literal">inotify</code>
+ extension enabled, it will run with about the same performance
+ as a normal Mercurial command. This is because the status
+ daemon needs to perform a normal status scan so that it has a
+ baseline against which to apply later updates from the kernel.
+ However, <span class="emphasis"><em>every</em></span> subsequent command that does
+ any kind of status check should be noticeably faster on
+ repositories of even fairly modest size. Better yet, the bigger
+ your repository is, the greater a performance advantage you'll
+ see. The <code class="literal">inotify</code> daemon makes
+ status operations almost instantaneous on repositories of all
+ sizes!</p>
+<p><a name="x_51f"></a>If you like, you can manually start a status daemon using
+ the <span class="command"><strong>inserve</strong></span> command.
+ This gives you slightly finer control over how the daemon ought
+ to run. This command will of course only be available when the
+ <code class="literal">inotify</code> extension is
+ enabled.</p>
+<p><a name="x_520"></a>When you're using the <code class="literal">inotify</code> extension, you should notice
+ <span class="emphasis"><em>no difference at all</em></span> in Mercurial's
+ behavior, with the sole exception of status-related commands
+ running a whole lot faster than they used to. You should
+ specifically expect that commands will not print different
+ output; neither should they give different results. If either of
+ these situations occurs, please report a bug.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="sect1" title="14.2. Flexible diff support with the extdiff extension">
+<div class="titlepage"><div><div><h2 class="title" style="clear: both">
+<a name="sec:hgext:extdiff"></a>14.2. Flexible diff support with the <code class="literal">extdiff</code> extension</h2></div></div></div>
+<p><a name="x_521"></a>Mercurial's built-in <span class="command"><strong>hg
+ diff</strong></span> command outputs plaintext unified diffs.</p>
+<pre class="screen"><code class="prompt">$</code> <strong class="userinput"><code>hg diff</code></strong>
+diff -r 80997726a0ea myfile
+--- a/myfile Wed Jan 06 06:50:18 2010 +0000
++++ b/myfile Wed Jan 06 06:50:18 2010 +0000
+@@ -1,1 +1,2 @@
+ The first line.
++The second line.
+</pre>
+<p><a name="x_522"></a>If you would like to use an external tool to display
+ modifications, you'll want to use the <code class="literal">extdiff</code> extension. This will let you
+ use, for example, a graphical diff tool.</p>
+<p><a name="x_523"></a>The <code class="literal">extdiff</code> extension is
+ bundled with Mercurial, so it's easy to set up. In the <code class="literal">extensions</code> section of your
+ <code class="filename">~/.hgrc</code>, simply add a
+ one-line entry to enable the extension.</p>
+<pre class="programlisting">[extensions]
+extdiff =</pre>
+<p><a name="x_524"></a>This introduces a command named <span class="command"><strong>extdiff</strong></span>, which by default uses
+ your system's <span class="command"><strong>diff</strong></span> command to generate a
+ unified diff in the same form as the built-in <span class="command"><strong>hg diff</strong></span> command.</p>
+<pre class="screen"><code class="prompt">$</code> <strong class="userinput"><code>hg extdiff</code></strong>
+--- a.80997726a0ea/myfile 2010-01-06 06:50:18.613674526 +0000
++++ /tmp/extdiffNErQlu/a/myfile 2010-01-06 06:50:18.437687076 +0000
+@@ -1 +1,2 @@
+ The first line.
++The second line.
+</pre>
+<p><a name="x_525"></a>The result won't be exactly the same as with the built-in
+ <span class="command"><strong>hg diff</strong></span> variations, because the
+ output of <span class="command"><strong>diff</strong></span> varies from one system to
+ another, even when passed the same options.</p>
+<p><a name="x_526"></a>As the <span class="quote">“<span class="quote"><code class="literal">making snapshot</code></span>”</span>
+ lines of output above imply, the <span class="command"><strong>extdiff</strong></span> command works by
+ creating two snapshots of your source tree. The first snapshot
+ is of the source revision; the second, of the target revision or
+ working directory. The <span class="command"><strong>extdiff</strong></span> command generates
+ these snapshots in a temporary directory, passes the name of
+ each directory to an external diff viewer, then deletes the
+ temporary directory. For efficiency, it only snapshots the
+ directories and files that have changed between the two
+ revisions.</p>
+<p><a name="x_527"></a>Snapshot directory names have the same base name as your
+ repository. If your repository path is <code class="filename">/quux/bar/foo</code>, then <code class="filename">foo</code> will be the name of each
+ snapshot directory. Each snapshot directory name has its
+ changeset ID appended, if appropriate. If a snapshot is of
+ revision <code class="literal">a631aca1083f</code>, the directory will be
+ named <code class="filename">foo.a631aca1083f</code>.
+ A snapshot of the working directory won't have a changeset ID
+ appended, so it would just be <code class="filename">foo</code> in this example. To see what
+ this looks like in practice, look again at the <span class="command"><strong>extdiff</strong></span> example above. Notice
+ that the diff has the snapshot directory names embedded in its
+ header.</p>
+<p><a name="x_528"></a>The <span class="command"><strong>extdiff</strong></span> command
+ accepts two important options. The <code class="option">hg -p</code> option
+ lets you choose a program to view differences with, instead of
+ <span class="command"><strong>diff</strong></span>. With the <code class="option">hg -o</code> option,
+ you can change the options that <span class="command"><strong>extdiff</strong></span> passes to the program
+ (by default, these options are
+ <span class="quote">“<span class="quote"><code class="literal">-Npru</code></span>”</span>, which only make sense
+ if you're running <span class="command"><strong>diff</strong></span>). In other respects,
+ the <span class="command"><strong>extdiff</strong></span> command
+ acts similarly to the built-in <span class="command"><strong>hg
+ diff</strong></span> command: you use the same option names, syntax,
+ and arguments to specify the revisions you want, the files you
+ want, and so on.</p>
+<p><a name="x_529"></a>As an example, here's how to run the normal system
+ <span class="command"><strong>diff</strong></span> command, getting it to generate context
+ diffs (using the <code class="option">-c</code> option)
+ instead of unified diffs, and five lines of context instead of
+ the default three (passing <code class="literal">5</code> as the argument
+ to the <code class="option">-C</code> option).</p>
+<pre class="screen"><code class="prompt">$</code> <strong class="userinput"><code>hg extdiff -o -NprcC5</code></strong>
+*** a.80997726a0ea/myfile Wed Jan 6 06:50:18 2010
+--- /tmp/extdiffNErQlu/a/myfile Wed Jan 6 06:50:18 2010
+***************
+*** 1 ****
+--- 1,2 ----
+ The first line.
++ The second line.
+</pre>
+<p><a name="x_52a"></a>Launching a visual diff tool is just as easy. Here's how to
+ launch the <span class="command"><strong>kdiff3</strong></span> viewer.</p>
+<pre class="programlisting">hg extdiff -p kdiff3 -o</pre>
+<p><a name="x_52b"></a>If your diff viewing command can't deal with directories,
+ you can easily work around this with a little scripting. For an
+ example of such scripting in action with the <code class="literal">mq</code> extension and the
+ <span class="command"><strong>interdiff</strong></span> command, see <a class="xref" href="advanced-uses-of-mercurial-queues.html#mq-collab:tips:interdiff" title="13.9.2. Viewing the history of a patch">Section 13.9.2, “Viewing the history of a patch”</a>.</p>
+<div class="sect2" title="14.2.1. Defining command aliases">
+<div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 class="title">
+<a name="id3071699"></a>14.2.1. Defining command aliases</h3></div></div></div>
+<p><a name="x_52c"></a>It can be cumbersome to remember the options to both the
+ <span class="command"><strong>extdiff</strong></span> command and
+ the diff viewer you want to use, so the <code class="literal">extdiff</code> extension lets you define
+ <span class="emphasis"><em>new</em></span> commands that will invoke your diff
+ viewer with exactly the right options.</p>
+<p><a name="x_52d"></a>All you need to do is edit your <code class="filename">~/.hgrc</code>, and add a section named
+ <code class="literal">extdiff</code>. Inside this
+ section, you can define multiple commands. Here's how to add
+ a <code class="literal">kdiff3</code> command. Once you've defined
+ this, you can type <span class="quote">“<span class="quote"><code class="literal">hg kdiff3</code></span>”</span>
+ and the <code class="literal">extdiff</code> extension
+ will run <span class="command"><strong>kdiff3</strong></span> for you.</p>
+<pre class="programlisting">[extdiff]
+cmd.kdiff3 =</pre>
+<p><a name="x_52e"></a>If you leave the right hand side of the definition empty,
+ as above, the <code class="literal">extdiff</code>
+ extension uses the name of the command you defined as the name
+ of the external program to run. But these names don't have to
+ be the same. Here, we define a command named
+ <span class="quote">“<span class="quote"><code class="literal">hg wibble</code></span>”</span>, which runs
+ <span class="command"><strong>kdiff3</strong></span>.</p>
+<pre class="programlisting">[extdiff]
+ cmd.wibble = kdiff3</pre>
+<p><a name="x_52f"></a>You can also specify the default options that you want to
+ invoke your diff viewing program with. The prefix to use is
+ <span class="quote">“<span class="quote"><code class="literal">opts.</code></span>”</span>, followed by the name
+ of the command to which the options apply. This example
+ defines a <span class="quote">“<span class="quote"><code class="literal">hg vimdiff</code></span>”</span> command
+ that runs the <span class="command"><strong>vim</strong></span> editor's
+ <code class="literal">DirDiff</code> extension.</p>
+<pre class="programlisting">[extdiff]
+ cmd.vimdiff = vim
+opts.vimdiff = -f '+next' '+execute "DirDiff" argv(0) argv(1)'</pre>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="sect1" title="14.3. Cherrypicking changes with the transplant extension">
+<div class="titlepage"><div><div><h2 class="title" style="clear: both">
+<a name="sec:hgext:transplant"></a>14.3. Cherrypicking changes with the <code class="literal">transplant</code> extension</h2></div></div></div>
+<p><a name="x_530"></a>Need to have a long chat with Brendan about this.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="sect1" title="14.4. Send changes via email with the patchbomb extension">
+<div class="titlepage"><div><div><h2 class="title" style="clear: both">
+<a name="sec:hgext:patchbomb"></a>14.4. Send changes via email with the <code class="literal">patchbomb</code> extension</h2></div></div></div>
+<p><a name="x_531"></a>Many projects have a culture of <span class="quote">“<span class="quote">change
+ review</span>”</span>, in which people send their modifications to a
+ mailing list for others to read and comment on before they
+ commit the final version to a shared repository. Some projects
+ have people who act as gatekeepers; they apply changes from
+ other people to a repository to which those others don't have
+ access.</p>
+<p><a name="x_532"></a>Mercurial makes it easy to send changes over email for
+ review or application, via its <code class="literal">patchbomb</code> extension. The extension is
+ so named because changes are formatted as patches, and it's usual
+ to send one changeset per email message. Sending a long series
+ of changes by email is thus much like <span class="quote">“<span class="quote">bombing</span>”</span> the
+ recipient's inbox, hence <span class="quote">“<span class="quote">patchbomb</span>”</span>.</p>
+<p><a name="x_533"></a>As usual, the basic configuration of the <code class="literal">patchbomb</code> extension takes just one or
+ two lines in your <code class="filename">
+ /.hgrc</code>.</p>
+<pre class="programlisting">[extensions]
+patchbomb =</pre>
+<p><a name="x_534"></a>Once you've enabled the extension, you will have a new
+ command available, named <span class="command"><strong>email</strong></span>.</p>
+<p><a name="x_535"></a>The safest and best way to invoke the <span class="command"><strong>email</strong></span> command is to
+ <span class="emphasis"><em>always</em></span> run it first with the <code class="option">hg -n</code> option.
+ This will show you what the command <span class="emphasis"><em>would</em></span>
+ send, without actually sending anything. Once you've had a
+ quick glance over the changes and verified that you are sending
+ the right ones, you can rerun the same command, with the <code class="option">hg -n</code> option
+ removed.</p>
+<p><a name="x_536"></a>The <span class="command"><strong>email</strong></span> command
+ accepts the same kind of revision syntax as every other
+ Mercurial command. For example, this command will send every
+ revision between 7 and <code class="literal">tip</code>, inclusive.</p>
+<pre class="programlisting">hg email -n 7:tip</pre>
+<p><a name="x_537"></a>You can also specify a <span class="emphasis"><em>repository</em></span> to
+ compare with. If you provide a repository but no revisions, the
+ <span class="command"><strong>email</strong></span> command will
+ send all revisions in the local repository that are not present
+ in the remote repository. If you additionally specify revisions
+ or a branch name (the latter using the <code class="option">hg -b</code> option),
+ this will constrain the revisions sent.</p>
+<p><a name="x_538"></a>It's perfectly safe to run the <span class="command"><strong>email</strong></span> command without the
+ names of the people you want to send to: if you do this, it will
+ just prompt you for those values interactively. (If you're
+ using a Linux or Unix-like system, you should have enhanced
+ <code class="literal">readline</code>-style editing capabilities when
+ entering those headers, too, which is useful.)</p>
+<p><a name="x_539"></a>When you are sending just one revision, the <span class="command"><strong>email</strong></span> command will by
+ default use the first line of the changeset description as the
+ subject of the single email message it sends.</p>
+<p><a name="x_53a"></a>If you send multiple revisions, the <span class="command"><strong>email</strong></span> command will usually
+ send one message per changeset. It will preface the series with
+ an introductory message, in which you should describe the
+ purpose of the series of changes you're sending.</p>
+<div class="sect2" title="14.4.1. Changing the behavior of patchbombs">
+<div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 class="title">
+<a name="id3072184"></a>14.4.1. Changing the behavior of patchbombs</h3></div></div></div>
+<p><a name="x_53b"></a>Not every project has exactly the same conventions for
+ sending changes in email; the <code class="literal">patchbomb</code> extension tries to
+ accommodate a number of variations through command line
+ options.</p>
+<div class="itemizedlist"><ul class="itemizedlist" type="disc">
+<li class="listitem"><p><a name="x_53c"></a>You can write a subject for the introductory
+ message on the command line using the <code class="option">hg -s</code>
+ option. This takes one argument, the text of the subject
+ to use.</p></li>
+<li class="listitem"><p><a name="x_53d"></a>To change the email address from which the
+ messages originate, use the <code class="option">hg -f</code>
+ option. This takes one argument, the email address to
+ use.</p></li>
+<li class="listitem"><p><a name="x_53e"></a>The default behavior is to send unified diffs
+ (see <a class="xref" href="managing-change-with-mercurial-queues.html#sec:mq:patch" title="12.4. Understanding patches">Section 12.4, “Understanding patches”</a> for a
+ description of the
+ format), one per message. You can send a binary bundle
+ instead with the <code class="option">hg -b</code>
+ option.</p></li>
+<li class="listitem"><p><a name="x_53f"></a>Unified diffs are normally prefaced with a
+ metadata header. You can omit this, and send unadorned
+ diffs, with the <code class="option">hg
+ --plain</code> option.</p></li>
+<li class="listitem"><p><a name="x_540"></a>Diffs are normally sent <span class="quote">“<span class="quote">inline</span>”</span>,
+ in the same body part as the description of a patch. This
+ makes it easiest for the largest number of readers to
+ quote and respond to parts of a diff, as some mail clients
+ will only quote the first MIME body part in a message. If
+ you'd prefer to send the description and the diff in
+ separate body parts, use the <code class="option">hg -a</code>
+ option.</p></li>
+<li class="listitem"><p><a name="x_541"></a>Instead of sending mail messages, you can
+ write them to an <code class="literal">mbox</code>-format mail
+ folder using the <code class="option">hg -m</code>
+ option. That option takes one argument, the name of the
+ file to write to.</p></li>
+<li class="listitem"><p><a name="x_542"></a>If you would like to add a
+ <span class="command"><strong>diffstat</strong></span>-format summary to each patch,
+ and one to the introductory message, use the <code class="option">hg -d</code>
+ option. The <span class="command"><strong>diffstat</strong></span> command displays
+ a table containing the name of each file patched, the
+ number of lines affected, and a histogram showing how much
+ each file is modified. This gives readers a qualitative
+ glance at how complex a patch is.</p></li>
+</ul></div>
+</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="navfooter">
+<hr>
+<table width="100%" summary="Navigation footer">
+<tr>
+<td width="40%" align="left">
+<a accesskey="p" href="advanced-uses-of-mercurial-queues.html">Prev</a> </td>
+<td width="20%" align="center"> </td>
+<td width="40%" align="right"> <a accesskey="n" href="migrating-to-mercurial.html">Next</a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td width="40%" align="left" valign="top">Chapter 13. Advanced uses of Mercurial Queues </td>
+<td width="20%" align="center"><a accesskey="h" href="index.html">Home</a></td>
+<td width="40%" align="right" valign="top"> Appendix A. Migrating to Mercurial</td>
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