scripting.txt
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Gregory Szorc
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r25881 | It is common for machines (as opposed to humans) to consume Mercurial. | ||
This help topic describes some of the considerations for interfacing | ||||
machines with Mercurial. | ||||
Choosing an Interface | ||||
===================== | ||||
Machines have a choice of several methods to interface with Mercurial. | ||||
These include: | ||||
- Executing the ``hg`` process | ||||
- Querying a HTTP server | ||||
- Calling out to a command server | ||||
Executing ``hg`` processes is very similar to how humans interact with | ||||
Javi Merino
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r25900 | Mercurial in the shell. It should already be familiar to you. | ||
Gregory Szorc
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r25881 | |||
:hg:`serve` can be used to start a server. By default, this will start | ||||
a "hgweb" HTTP server. This HTTP server has support for machine-readable | ||||
output, such as JSON. For more, see :hg:`help hgweb`. | ||||
:hg:`serve` can also start a "command server." Clients can connect | ||||
to this server and issue Mercurial commands over a special protocol. | ||||
For more details on the command server, including links to client | ||||
libraries, see https://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/CommandServer. | ||||
:hg:`serve` based interfaces (the hgweb and command servers) have the | ||||
advantage over simple ``hg`` process invocations in that they are | ||||
likely more efficient. This is because there is significant overhead | ||||
to spawn new Python processes. | ||||
.. tip:: | ||||
If you need to invoke several ``hg`` processes in short order and/or | ||||
performance is important to you, use of a server-based interface | ||||
is highly recommended. | ||||
Environment Variables | ||||
===================== | ||||
As documented in :hg:`help environment`, various environment variables | ||||
influence the operation of Mercurial. The following are particularly | ||||
relevant for machines consuming Mercurial: | ||||
HGPLAIN | ||||
If not set, Mercurial's output could be influenced by configuration | ||||
settings that impact its encoding, verbose mode, localization, etc. | ||||
It is highly recommended for machines to set this variable when | ||||
invoking ``hg`` processes. | ||||
HGENCODING | ||||
If not set, the locale used by Mercurial will be detected from the | ||||
environment. If the determined locale does not support display of | ||||
certain characters, Mercurial may render these character sequences | ||||
incorrectly (often by using "?" as a placeholder for invalid | ||||
characters in the current locale). | ||||
Wagner Bruna
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r26027 | Explicitly setting this environment variable is a good practice to | ||
Gregory Szorc
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r25881 | guarantee consistent results. "utf-8" is a good choice on UNIX-like | ||
environments. | ||||
HGRCPATH | ||||
If not set, Mercurial will inherit config options from config files | ||||
using the process described in :hg:`help config`. This includes | ||||
inheriting user or system-wide config files. | ||||
When utmost control over the Mercurial configuration is desired, the | ||||
value of ``HGRCPATH`` can be set to an explicit file with known good | ||||
configs. In rare cases, the value can be set to an empty file or the | ||||
null device (often ``/dev/null``) to bypass loading of any user or | ||||
system config files. Note that these approaches can have unintended | ||||
consequences, as the user and system config files often define things | ||||
like the username and extensions that may be required to interface | ||||
with a repository. | ||||
Consuming Command Output | ||||
======================== | ||||
It is common for machines to need to parse the output of Mercurial | ||||
commands for relevant data. This section describes the various | ||||
techniques for doing so. | ||||
Parsing Raw Command Output | ||||
-------------------------- | ||||
Likely the simplest and most effective solution for consuming command | ||||
output is to simply invoke ``hg`` commands as you would as a user and | ||||
parse their output. | ||||
The output of many commands can easily be parsed with tools like | ||||
``grep``, ``sed``, and ``awk``. | ||||
A potential downside with parsing command output is that the output | ||||
of commands can change when Mercurial is upgraded. While Mercurial | ||||
does generally strive for strong backwards compatibility, command | ||||
output does occasionally change. Having tests for your automated | ||||
interactions with ``hg`` commands is generally recommended, but is | ||||
even more important when raw command output parsing is involved. | ||||
Using Templates to Control Output | ||||
--------------------------------- | ||||
Many ``hg`` commands support templatized output via the | ||||
``-T/--template`` argument. For more, see :hg:`help templates`. | ||||
Templates are useful for explicitly controlling output so that | ||||
you get exactly the data you want formatted how you want it. For | ||||
example, ``log -T {node}\n`` can be used to print a newline | ||||
delimited list of changeset nodes instead of a human-tailored | ||||
output containing authors, dates, descriptions, etc. | ||||
.. tip:: | ||||
If parsing raw command output is too complicated, consider | ||||
using templates to make your life easier. | ||||
The ``-T/--template`` argument allows specifying pre-defined styles. | ||||
Mercurial ships with the machine-readable styles ``json`` and ``xml``, | ||||
which provide JSON and XML output, respectively. These are useful for | ||||
producing output that is machine readable as-is. | ||||
.. important:: | ||||
The ``json`` and ``xml`` styles are considered experimental. While | ||||
they may be attractive to use for easily obtaining machine-readable | ||||
output, their behavior may change in subsequent versions. | ||||
These styles may also exhibit unexpected results when dealing with | ||||
certain encodings. Mercurial treats things like filenames as a | ||||
series of bytes and normalizing certain byte sequences to JSON | ||||
or XML with certain encoding settings can lead to surprises. | ||||
Command Server Output | ||||
--------------------- | ||||
If using the command server to interact with Mercurial, you are likely | ||||
using an existing library/API that abstracts implementation details of | ||||
the command server. If so, this interface layer may perform parsing for | ||||
you, saving you the work of implementing it yourself. | ||||
Output Verbosity | ||||
---------------- | ||||
Commands often have varying output verbosity, even when machine | ||||
readable styles are being used (e.g. ``-T json``). Adding | ||||
``-v/--verbose`` and ``--debug`` to the command's arguments can | ||||
increase the amount of data exposed by Mercurial. | ||||
An alternate way to get the data you need is by explicitly specifying | ||||
a template. | ||||
Other Topics | ||||
============ | ||||
revsets | ||||
Revisions sets is a functional query language for selecting a set | ||||
of revisions. Think of it as SQL for Mercurial repositories. Revsets | ||||
are useful for querying repositories for specific data. | ||||
See :hg:`help revsets` for more. | ||||
share extension | ||||
The ``share`` extension provides functionality for sharing | ||||
repository data across several working copies. It can even | ||||
automatically "pool" storage for logically related repositories when | ||||
cloning. | ||||
Configuring the ``share`` extension can lead to significant resource | ||||
utilization reduction, particularly around disk space and the | ||||
network. This is especially true for continuous integration (CI) | ||||
environments. | ||||
See :hg:`help -e share` for more. | ||||