##// END OF EJS Templates
hg: allow usage of XDG_CONFIG_HOME/hg/hgrc...
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@@ -0,0 +1,11 b''
1 #if no-windows no-osx
2
3 $ mkdir -p xdgconf/hg
4 $ echo '[ui]' > xdgconf/hg/hgrc
5 $ echo 'username = foobar' >> xdgconf/hg/hgrc
6 $ XDG_CONFIG_HOME="`pwd`/xdgconf" ; export XDG_CONFIG_HOME
7 $ unset HGRCPATH
8 $ hg config ui.username
9 foobar
10
11 #endif
@@ -1,2317 +1,2318 b''
1 1 The Mercurial system uses a set of configuration files to control
2 2 aspects of its behavior.
3 3
4 4 Troubleshooting
5 5 ===============
6 6
7 7 If you're having problems with your configuration,
8 8 :hg:`config --debug` can help you understand what is introducing
9 9 a setting into your environment.
10 10
11 11 See :hg:`help config.syntax` and :hg:`help config.files`
12 12 for information about how and where to override things.
13 13
14 14 Structure
15 15 =========
16 16
17 17 The configuration files use a simple ini-file format. A configuration
18 18 file consists of sections, led by a ``[section]`` header and followed
19 19 by ``name = value`` entries::
20 20
21 21 [ui]
22 22 username = Firstname Lastname <firstname.lastname@example.net>
23 23 verbose = True
24 24
25 25 The above entries will be referred to as ``ui.username`` and
26 26 ``ui.verbose``, respectively. See :hg:`help config.syntax`.
27 27
28 28 Files
29 29 =====
30 30
31 31 Mercurial reads configuration data from several files, if they exist.
32 32 These files do not exist by default and you will have to create the
33 33 appropriate configuration files yourself:
34 34
35 35 Local configuration is put into the per-repository ``<repo>/.hg/hgrc`` file.
36 36
37 37 Global configuration like the username setting is typically put into:
38 38
39 39 .. container:: windows
40 40
41 41 - ``%USERPROFILE%\mercurial.ini`` (on Windows)
42 42
43 43 .. container:: unix.plan9
44 44
45 45 - ``$HOME/.hgrc`` (on Unix, Plan9)
46 46
47 47 The names of these files depend on the system on which Mercurial is
48 48 installed. ``*.rc`` files from a single directory are read in
49 49 alphabetical order, later ones overriding earlier ones. Where multiple
50 50 paths are given below, settings from earlier paths override later
51 51 ones.
52 52
53 53 .. container:: verbose.unix
54 54
55 55 On Unix, the following files are consulted:
56 56
57 57 - ``<repo>/.hg/hgrc`` (per-repository)
58 58 - ``$HOME/.hgrc`` (per-user)
59 - ``${XDG_CONFIG_HOME:-$HOME/.config}/hg/hgrc`` (per-user)
59 60 - ``<install-root>/etc/mercurial/hgrc`` (per-installation)
60 61 - ``<install-root>/etc/mercurial/hgrc.d/*.rc`` (per-installation)
61 62 - ``/etc/mercurial/hgrc`` (per-system)
62 63 - ``/etc/mercurial/hgrc.d/*.rc`` (per-system)
63 64 - ``<internal>/default.d/*.rc`` (defaults)
64 65
65 66 .. container:: verbose.windows
66 67
67 68 On Windows, the following files are consulted:
68 69
69 70 - ``<repo>/.hg/hgrc`` (per-repository)
70 71 - ``%USERPROFILE%\.hgrc`` (per-user)
71 72 - ``%USERPROFILE%\Mercurial.ini`` (per-user)
72 73 - ``%HOME%\.hgrc`` (per-user)
73 74 - ``%HOME%\Mercurial.ini`` (per-user)
74 75 - ``HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Mercurial`` (per-installation)
75 76 - ``<install-dir>\hgrc.d\*.rc`` (per-installation)
76 77 - ``<install-dir>\Mercurial.ini`` (per-installation)
77 78 - ``<internal>/default.d/*.rc`` (defaults)
78 79
79 80 .. note::
80 81
81 82 The registry key ``HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Wow6432Node\Mercurial``
82 83 is used when running 32-bit Python on 64-bit Windows.
83 84
84 85 .. container:: windows
85 86
86 87 On Windows 9x, ``%HOME%`` is replaced by ``%APPDATA%``.
87 88
88 89 .. container:: verbose.plan9
89 90
90 91 On Plan9, the following files are consulted:
91 92
92 93 - ``<repo>/.hg/hgrc`` (per-repository)
93 94 - ``$home/lib/hgrc`` (per-user)
94 95 - ``<install-root>/lib/mercurial/hgrc`` (per-installation)
95 96 - ``<install-root>/lib/mercurial/hgrc.d/*.rc`` (per-installation)
96 97 - ``/lib/mercurial/hgrc`` (per-system)
97 98 - ``/lib/mercurial/hgrc.d/*.rc`` (per-system)
98 99 - ``<internal>/default.d/*.rc`` (defaults)
99 100
100 101 Per-repository configuration options only apply in a
101 102 particular repository. This file is not version-controlled, and
102 103 will not get transferred during a "clone" operation. Options in
103 104 this file override options in all other configuration files.
104 105
105 106 .. container:: unix.plan9
106 107
107 108 On Plan 9 and Unix, most of this file will be ignored if it doesn't
108 109 belong to a trusted user or to a trusted group. See
109 110 :hg:`help config.trusted` for more details.
110 111
111 112 Per-user configuration file(s) are for the user running Mercurial. Options
112 113 in these files apply to all Mercurial commands executed by this user in any
113 114 directory. Options in these files override per-system and per-installation
114 115 options.
115 116
116 117 Per-installation configuration files are searched for in the
117 118 directory where Mercurial is installed. ``<install-root>`` is the
118 119 parent directory of the **hg** executable (or symlink) being run.
119 120
120 121 .. container:: unix.plan9
121 122
122 123 For example, if installed in ``/shared/tools/bin/hg``, Mercurial
123 124 will look in ``/shared/tools/etc/mercurial/hgrc``. Options in these
124 125 files apply to all Mercurial commands executed by any user in any
125 126 directory.
126 127
127 128 Per-installation configuration files are for the system on
128 129 which Mercurial is running. Options in these files apply to all
129 130 Mercurial commands executed by any user in any directory. Registry
130 131 keys contain PATH-like strings, every part of which must reference
131 132 a ``Mercurial.ini`` file or be a directory where ``*.rc`` files will
132 133 be read. Mercurial checks each of these locations in the specified
133 134 order until one or more configuration files are detected.
134 135
135 136 Per-system configuration files are for the system on which Mercurial
136 137 is running. Options in these files apply to all Mercurial commands
137 138 executed by any user in any directory. Options in these files
138 139 override per-installation options.
139 140
140 141 Mercurial comes with some default configuration. The default configuration
141 142 files are installed with Mercurial and will be overwritten on upgrades. Default
142 143 configuration files should never be edited by users or administrators but can
143 144 be overridden in other configuration files. So far the directory only contains
144 145 merge tool configuration but packagers can also put other default configuration
145 146 there.
146 147
147 148 Syntax
148 149 ======
149 150
150 151 A configuration file consists of sections, led by a ``[section]`` header
151 152 and followed by ``name = value`` entries (sometimes called
152 153 ``configuration keys``)::
153 154
154 155 [spam]
155 156 eggs=ham
156 157 green=
157 158 eggs
158 159
159 160 Each line contains one entry. If the lines that follow are indented,
160 161 they are treated as continuations of that entry. Leading whitespace is
161 162 removed from values. Empty lines are skipped. Lines beginning with
162 163 ``#`` or ``;`` are ignored and may be used to provide comments.
163 164
164 165 Configuration keys can be set multiple times, in which case Mercurial
165 166 will use the value that was configured last. As an example::
166 167
167 168 [spam]
168 169 eggs=large
169 170 ham=serrano
170 171 eggs=small
171 172
172 173 This would set the configuration key named ``eggs`` to ``small``.
173 174
174 175 It is also possible to define a section multiple times. A section can
175 176 be redefined on the same and/or on different configuration files. For
176 177 example::
177 178
178 179 [foo]
179 180 eggs=large
180 181 ham=serrano
181 182 eggs=small
182 183
183 184 [bar]
184 185 eggs=ham
185 186 green=
186 187 eggs
187 188
188 189 [foo]
189 190 ham=prosciutto
190 191 eggs=medium
191 192 bread=toasted
192 193
193 194 This would set the ``eggs``, ``ham``, and ``bread`` configuration keys
194 195 of the ``foo`` section to ``medium``, ``prosciutto``, and ``toasted``,
195 196 respectively. As you can see there only thing that matters is the last
196 197 value that was set for each of the configuration keys.
197 198
198 199 If a configuration key is set multiple times in different
199 200 configuration files the final value will depend on the order in which
200 201 the different configuration files are read, with settings from earlier
201 202 paths overriding later ones as described on the ``Files`` section
202 203 above.
203 204
204 205 A line of the form ``%include file`` will include ``file`` into the
205 206 current configuration file. The inclusion is recursive, which means
206 207 that included files can include other files. Filenames are relative to
207 208 the configuration file in which the ``%include`` directive is found.
208 209 Environment variables and ``~user`` constructs are expanded in
209 210 ``file``. This lets you do something like::
210 211
211 212 %include ~/.hgrc.d/$HOST.rc
212 213
213 214 to include a different configuration file on each computer you use.
214 215
215 216 A line with ``%unset name`` will remove ``name`` from the current
216 217 section, if it has been set previously.
217 218
218 219 The values are either free-form text strings, lists of text strings,
219 220 or Boolean values. Boolean values can be set to true using any of "1",
220 221 "yes", "true", or "on" and to false using "0", "no", "false", or "off"
221 222 (all case insensitive).
222 223
223 224 List values are separated by whitespace or comma, except when values are
224 225 placed in double quotation marks::
225 226
226 227 allow_read = "John Doe, PhD", brian, betty
227 228
228 229 Quotation marks can be escaped by prefixing them with a backslash. Only
229 230 quotation marks at the beginning of a word is counted as a quotation
230 231 (e.g., ``foo"bar baz`` is the list of ``foo"bar`` and ``baz``).
231 232
232 233 Sections
233 234 ========
234 235
235 236 This section describes the different sections that may appear in a
236 237 Mercurial configuration file, the purpose of each section, its possible
237 238 keys, and their possible values.
238 239
239 240 ``alias``
240 241 ---------
241 242
242 243 Defines command aliases.
243 244
244 245 Aliases allow you to define your own commands in terms of other
245 246 commands (or aliases), optionally including arguments. Positional
246 247 arguments in the form of ``$1``, ``$2``, etc. in the alias definition
247 248 are expanded by Mercurial before execution. Positional arguments not
248 249 already used by ``$N`` in the definition are put at the end of the
249 250 command to be executed.
250 251
251 252 Alias definitions consist of lines of the form::
252 253
253 254 <alias> = <command> [<argument>]...
254 255
255 256 For example, this definition::
256 257
257 258 latest = log --limit 5
258 259
259 260 creates a new command ``latest`` that shows only the five most recent
260 261 changesets. You can define subsequent aliases using earlier ones::
261 262
262 263 stable5 = latest -b stable
263 264
264 265 .. note::
265 266
266 267 It is possible to create aliases with the same names as
267 268 existing commands, which will then override the original
268 269 definitions. This is almost always a bad idea!
269 270
270 271 An alias can start with an exclamation point (``!``) to make it a
271 272 shell alias. A shell alias is executed with the shell and will let you
272 273 run arbitrary commands. As an example, ::
273 274
274 275 echo = !echo $@
275 276
276 277 will let you do ``hg echo foo`` to have ``foo`` printed in your
277 278 terminal. A better example might be::
278 279
279 280 purge = !$HG status --no-status --unknown -0 re: | xargs -0 rm
280 281
281 282 which will make ``hg purge`` delete all unknown files in the
282 283 repository in the same manner as the purge extension.
283 284
284 285 Positional arguments like ``$1``, ``$2``, etc. in the alias definition
285 286 expand to the command arguments. Unmatched arguments are
286 287 removed. ``$0`` expands to the alias name and ``$@`` expands to all
287 288 arguments separated by a space. ``"$@"`` (with quotes) expands to all
288 289 arguments quoted individually and separated by a space. These expansions
289 290 happen before the command is passed to the shell.
290 291
291 292 Shell aliases are executed in an environment where ``$HG`` expands to
292 293 the path of the Mercurial that was used to execute the alias. This is
293 294 useful when you want to call further Mercurial commands in a shell
294 295 alias, as was done above for the purge alias. In addition,
295 296 ``$HG_ARGS`` expands to the arguments given to Mercurial. In the ``hg
296 297 echo foo`` call above, ``$HG_ARGS`` would expand to ``echo foo``.
297 298
298 299 .. note::
299 300
300 301 Some global configuration options such as ``-R`` are
301 302 processed before shell aliases and will thus not be passed to
302 303 aliases.
303 304
304 305
305 306 ``annotate``
306 307 ------------
307 308
308 309 Settings used when displaying file annotations. All values are
309 310 Booleans and default to False. See :hg:`help config.diff` for
310 311 related options for the diff command.
311 312
312 313 ``ignorews``
313 314 Ignore white space when comparing lines.
314 315
315 316 ``ignorewsamount``
316 317 Ignore changes in the amount of white space.
317 318
318 319 ``ignoreblanklines``
319 320 Ignore changes whose lines are all blank.
320 321
321 322
322 323 ``auth``
323 324 --------
324 325
325 326 Authentication credentials for HTTP authentication. This section
326 327 allows you to store usernames and passwords for use when logging
327 328 *into* HTTP servers. See :hg:`help config.web` if
328 329 you want to configure *who* can login to your HTTP server.
329 330
330 331 Each line has the following format::
331 332
332 333 <name>.<argument> = <value>
333 334
334 335 where ``<name>`` is used to group arguments into authentication
335 336 entries. Example::
336 337
337 338 foo.prefix = hg.intevation.de/mercurial
338 339 foo.username = foo
339 340 foo.password = bar
340 341 foo.schemes = http https
341 342
342 343 bar.prefix = secure.example.org
343 344 bar.key = path/to/file.key
344 345 bar.cert = path/to/file.cert
345 346 bar.schemes = https
346 347
347 348 Supported arguments:
348 349
349 350 ``prefix``
350 351 Either ``*`` or a URI prefix with or without the scheme part.
351 352 The authentication entry with the longest matching prefix is used
352 353 (where ``*`` matches everything and counts as a match of length
353 354 1). If the prefix doesn't include a scheme, the match is performed
354 355 against the URI with its scheme stripped as well, and the schemes
355 356 argument, q.v., is then subsequently consulted.
356 357
357 358 ``username``
358 359 Optional. Username to authenticate with. If not given, and the
359 360 remote site requires basic or digest authentication, the user will
360 361 be prompted for it. Environment variables are expanded in the
361 362 username letting you do ``foo.username = $USER``. If the URI
362 363 includes a username, only ``[auth]`` entries with a matching
363 364 username or without a username will be considered.
364 365
365 366 ``password``
366 367 Optional. Password to authenticate with. If not given, and the
367 368 remote site requires basic or digest authentication, the user
368 369 will be prompted for it.
369 370
370 371 ``key``
371 372 Optional. PEM encoded client certificate key file. Environment
372 373 variables are expanded in the filename.
373 374
374 375 ``cert``
375 376 Optional. PEM encoded client certificate chain file. Environment
376 377 variables are expanded in the filename.
377 378
378 379 ``schemes``
379 380 Optional. Space separated list of URI schemes to use this
380 381 authentication entry with. Only used if the prefix doesn't include
381 382 a scheme. Supported schemes are http and https. They will match
382 383 static-http and static-https respectively, as well.
383 384 (default: https)
384 385
385 386 If no suitable authentication entry is found, the user is prompted
386 387 for credentials as usual if required by the remote.
387 388
388 389
389 390 ``committemplate``
390 391 ------------------
391 392
392 393 ``changeset``
393 394 String: configuration in this section is used as the template to
394 395 customize the text shown in the editor when committing.
395 396
396 397 In addition to pre-defined template keywords, commit log specific one
397 398 below can be used for customization:
398 399
399 400 ``extramsg``
400 401 String: Extra message (typically 'Leave message empty to abort
401 402 commit.'). This may be changed by some commands or extensions.
402 403
403 404 For example, the template configuration below shows as same text as
404 405 one shown by default::
405 406
406 407 [committemplate]
407 408 changeset = {desc}\n\n
408 409 HG: Enter commit message. Lines beginning with 'HG:' are removed.
409 410 HG: {extramsg}
410 411 HG: --
411 412 HG: user: {author}\n{ifeq(p2rev, "-1", "",
412 413 "HG: branch merge\n")
413 414 }HG: branch '{branch}'\n{if(activebookmark,
414 415 "HG: bookmark '{activebookmark}'\n") }{subrepos %
415 416 "HG: subrepo {subrepo}\n" }{file_adds %
416 417 "HG: added {file}\n" }{file_mods %
417 418 "HG: changed {file}\n" }{file_dels %
418 419 "HG: removed {file}\n" }{if(files, "",
419 420 "HG: no files changed\n")}
420 421
421 422 ``diff()``
422 423 String: show the diff (see :hg:`help templates` for detail)
423 424
424 425 Sometimes it is helpful to show the diff of the changeset in the editor without
425 426 having to prefix 'HG: ' to each line so that highlighting works correctly. For
426 427 this, Mercurial provides a special string which will ignore everything below
427 428 it::
428 429
429 430 HG: ------------------------ >8 ------------------------
430 431
431 432 For example, the template configuration below will show the diff below the
432 433 extra message::
433 434
434 435 [committemplate]
435 436 changeset = {desc}\n\n
436 437 HG: Enter commit message. Lines beginning with 'HG:' are removed.
437 438 HG: {extramsg}
438 439 HG: ------------------------ >8 ------------------------
439 440 HG: Do not touch the line above.
440 441 HG: Everything below will be removed.
441 442 {diff()}
442 443
443 444 .. note::
444 445
445 446 For some problematic encodings (see :hg:`help win32mbcs` for
446 447 detail), this customization should be configured carefully, to
447 448 avoid showing broken characters.
448 449
449 450 For example, if a multibyte character ending with backslash (0x5c) is
450 451 followed by the ASCII character 'n' in the customized template,
451 452 the sequence of backslash and 'n' is treated as line-feed unexpectedly
452 453 (and the multibyte character is broken, too).
453 454
454 455 Customized template is used for commands below (``--edit`` may be
455 456 required):
456 457
457 458 - :hg:`backout`
458 459 - :hg:`commit`
459 460 - :hg:`fetch` (for merge commit only)
460 461 - :hg:`graft`
461 462 - :hg:`histedit`
462 463 - :hg:`import`
463 464 - :hg:`qfold`, :hg:`qnew` and :hg:`qrefresh`
464 465 - :hg:`rebase`
465 466 - :hg:`shelve`
466 467 - :hg:`sign`
467 468 - :hg:`tag`
468 469 - :hg:`transplant`
469 470
470 471 Configuring items below instead of ``changeset`` allows showing
471 472 customized message only for specific actions, or showing different
472 473 messages for each action.
473 474
474 475 - ``changeset.backout`` for :hg:`backout`
475 476 - ``changeset.commit.amend.merge`` for :hg:`commit --amend` on merges
476 477 - ``changeset.commit.amend.normal`` for :hg:`commit --amend` on other
477 478 - ``changeset.commit.normal.merge`` for :hg:`commit` on merges
478 479 - ``changeset.commit.normal.normal`` for :hg:`commit` on other
479 480 - ``changeset.fetch`` for :hg:`fetch` (impling merge commit)
480 481 - ``changeset.gpg.sign`` for :hg:`sign`
481 482 - ``changeset.graft`` for :hg:`graft`
482 483 - ``changeset.histedit.edit`` for ``edit`` of :hg:`histedit`
483 484 - ``changeset.histedit.fold`` for ``fold`` of :hg:`histedit`
484 485 - ``changeset.histedit.mess`` for ``mess`` of :hg:`histedit`
485 486 - ``changeset.histedit.pick`` for ``pick`` of :hg:`histedit`
486 487 - ``changeset.import.bypass`` for :hg:`import --bypass`
487 488 - ``changeset.import.normal.merge`` for :hg:`import` on merges
488 489 - ``changeset.import.normal.normal`` for :hg:`import` on other
489 490 - ``changeset.mq.qnew`` for :hg:`qnew`
490 491 - ``changeset.mq.qfold`` for :hg:`qfold`
491 492 - ``changeset.mq.qrefresh`` for :hg:`qrefresh`
492 493 - ``changeset.rebase.collapse`` for :hg:`rebase --collapse`
493 494 - ``changeset.rebase.merge`` for :hg:`rebase` on merges
494 495 - ``changeset.rebase.normal`` for :hg:`rebase` on other
495 496 - ``changeset.shelve.shelve`` for :hg:`shelve`
496 497 - ``changeset.tag.add`` for :hg:`tag` without ``--remove``
497 498 - ``changeset.tag.remove`` for :hg:`tag --remove`
498 499 - ``changeset.transplant.merge`` for :hg:`transplant` on merges
499 500 - ``changeset.transplant.normal`` for :hg:`transplant` on other
500 501
501 502 These dot-separated lists of names are treated as hierarchical ones.
502 503 For example, ``changeset.tag.remove`` customizes the commit message
503 504 only for :hg:`tag --remove`, but ``changeset.tag`` customizes the
504 505 commit message for :hg:`tag` regardless of ``--remove`` option.
505 506
506 507 When the external editor is invoked for a commit, the corresponding
507 508 dot-separated list of names without the ``changeset.`` prefix
508 509 (e.g. ``commit.normal.normal``) is in the ``HGEDITFORM`` environment
509 510 variable.
510 511
511 512 In this section, items other than ``changeset`` can be referred from
512 513 others. For example, the configuration to list committed files up
513 514 below can be referred as ``{listupfiles}``::
514 515
515 516 [committemplate]
516 517 listupfiles = {file_adds %
517 518 "HG: added {file}\n" }{file_mods %
518 519 "HG: changed {file}\n" }{file_dels %
519 520 "HG: removed {file}\n" }{if(files, "",
520 521 "HG: no files changed\n")}
521 522
522 523 ``decode/encode``
523 524 -----------------
524 525
525 526 Filters for transforming files on checkout/checkin. This would
526 527 typically be used for newline processing or other
527 528 localization/canonicalization of files.
528 529
529 530 Filters consist of a filter pattern followed by a filter command.
530 531 Filter patterns are globs by default, rooted at the repository root.
531 532 For example, to match any file ending in ``.txt`` in the root
532 533 directory only, use the pattern ``*.txt``. To match any file ending
533 534 in ``.c`` anywhere in the repository, use the pattern ``**.c``.
534 535 For each file only the first matching filter applies.
535 536
536 537 The filter command can start with a specifier, either ``pipe:`` or
537 538 ``tempfile:``. If no specifier is given, ``pipe:`` is used by default.
538 539
539 540 A ``pipe:`` command must accept data on stdin and return the transformed
540 541 data on stdout.
541 542
542 543 Pipe example::
543 544
544 545 [encode]
545 546 # uncompress gzip files on checkin to improve delta compression
546 547 # note: not necessarily a good idea, just an example
547 548 *.gz = pipe: gunzip
548 549
549 550 [decode]
550 551 # recompress gzip files when writing them to the working dir (we
551 552 # can safely omit "pipe:", because it's the default)
552 553 *.gz = gzip
553 554
554 555 A ``tempfile:`` command is a template. The string ``INFILE`` is replaced
555 556 with the name of a temporary file that contains the data to be
556 557 filtered by the command. The string ``OUTFILE`` is replaced with the name
557 558 of an empty temporary file, where the filtered data must be written by
558 559 the command.
559 560
560 561 .. container:: windows
561 562
562 563 .. note::
563 564
564 565 The tempfile mechanism is recommended for Windows systems,
565 566 where the standard shell I/O redirection operators often have
566 567 strange effects and may corrupt the contents of your files.
567 568
568 569 This filter mechanism is used internally by the ``eol`` extension to
569 570 translate line ending characters between Windows (CRLF) and Unix (LF)
570 571 format. We suggest you use the ``eol`` extension for convenience.
571 572
572 573
573 574 ``defaults``
574 575 ------------
575 576
576 577 (defaults are deprecated. Don't use them. Use aliases instead.)
577 578
578 579 Use the ``[defaults]`` section to define command defaults, i.e. the
579 580 default options/arguments to pass to the specified commands.
580 581
581 582 The following example makes :hg:`log` run in verbose mode, and
582 583 :hg:`status` show only the modified files, by default::
583 584
584 585 [defaults]
585 586 log = -v
586 587 status = -m
587 588
588 589 The actual commands, instead of their aliases, must be used when
589 590 defining command defaults. The command defaults will also be applied
590 591 to the aliases of the commands defined.
591 592
592 593
593 594 ``diff``
594 595 --------
595 596
596 597 Settings used when displaying diffs. Everything except for ``unified``
597 598 is a Boolean and defaults to False. See :hg:`help config.annotate`
598 599 for related options for the annotate command.
599 600
600 601 ``git``
601 602 Use git extended diff format.
602 603
603 604 ``nobinary``
604 605 Omit git binary patches.
605 606
606 607 ``nodates``
607 608 Don't include dates in diff headers.
608 609
609 610 ``noprefix``
610 611 Omit 'a/' and 'b/' prefixes from filenames. Ignored in plain mode.
611 612
612 613 ``showfunc``
613 614 Show which function each change is in.
614 615
615 616 ``ignorews``
616 617 Ignore white space when comparing lines.
617 618
618 619 ``ignorewsamount``
619 620 Ignore changes in the amount of white space.
620 621
621 622 ``ignoreblanklines``
622 623 Ignore changes whose lines are all blank.
623 624
624 625 ``unified``
625 626 Number of lines of context to show.
626 627
627 628 ``email``
628 629 ---------
629 630
630 631 Settings for extensions that send email messages.
631 632
632 633 ``from``
633 634 Optional. Email address to use in "From" header and SMTP envelope
634 635 of outgoing messages.
635 636
636 637 ``to``
637 638 Optional. Comma-separated list of recipients' email addresses.
638 639
639 640 ``cc``
640 641 Optional. Comma-separated list of carbon copy recipients'
641 642 email addresses.
642 643
643 644 ``bcc``
644 645 Optional. Comma-separated list of blind carbon copy recipients'
645 646 email addresses.
646 647
647 648 ``method``
648 649 Optional. Method to use to send email messages. If value is ``smtp``
649 650 (default), use SMTP (see the ``[smtp]`` section for configuration).
650 651 Otherwise, use as name of program to run that acts like sendmail
651 652 (takes ``-f`` option for sender, list of recipients on command line,
652 653 message on stdin). Normally, setting this to ``sendmail`` or
653 654 ``/usr/sbin/sendmail`` is enough to use sendmail to send messages.
654 655
655 656 ``charsets``
656 657 Optional. Comma-separated list of character sets considered
657 658 convenient for recipients. Addresses, headers, and parts not
658 659 containing patches of outgoing messages will be encoded in the
659 660 first character set to which conversion from local encoding
660 661 (``$HGENCODING``, ``ui.fallbackencoding``) succeeds. If correct
661 662 conversion fails, the text in question is sent as is.
662 663 (default: '')
663 664
664 665 Order of outgoing email character sets:
665 666
666 667 1. ``us-ascii``: always first, regardless of settings
667 668 2. ``email.charsets``: in order given by user
668 669 3. ``ui.fallbackencoding``: if not in email.charsets
669 670 4. ``$HGENCODING``: if not in email.charsets
670 671 5. ``utf-8``: always last, regardless of settings
671 672
672 673 Email example::
673 674
674 675 [email]
675 676 from = Joseph User <joe.user@example.com>
676 677 method = /usr/sbin/sendmail
677 678 # charsets for western Europeans
678 679 # us-ascii, utf-8 omitted, as they are tried first and last
679 680 charsets = iso-8859-1, iso-8859-15, windows-1252
680 681
681 682
682 683 ``extensions``
683 684 --------------
684 685
685 686 Mercurial has an extension mechanism for adding new features. To
686 687 enable an extension, create an entry for it in this section.
687 688
688 689 If you know that the extension is already in Python's search path,
689 690 you can give the name of the module, followed by ``=``, with nothing
690 691 after the ``=``.
691 692
692 693 Otherwise, give a name that you choose, followed by ``=``, followed by
693 694 the path to the ``.py`` file (including the file name extension) that
694 695 defines the extension.
695 696
696 697 To explicitly disable an extension that is enabled in an hgrc of
697 698 broader scope, prepend its path with ``!``, as in ``foo = !/ext/path``
698 699 or ``foo = !`` when path is not supplied.
699 700
700 701 Example for ``~/.hgrc``::
701 702
702 703 [extensions]
703 704 # (the color extension will get loaded from Mercurial's path)
704 705 color =
705 706 # (this extension will get loaded from the file specified)
706 707 myfeature = ~/.hgext/myfeature.py
707 708
708 709
709 710 ``format``
710 711 ----------
711 712
712 713 ``usegeneraldelta``
713 714 Enable or disable the "generaldelta" repository format which improves
714 715 repository compression by allowing "revlog" to store delta against arbitrary
715 716 revision instead of the previous stored one. This provides significant
716 717 improvement for repositories with branches.
717 718
718 719 Repositories with this on-disk format require Mercurial version 1.9.
719 720
720 721 Enabled by default.
721 722
722 723 ``dotencode``
723 724 Enable or disable the "dotencode" repository format which enhances
724 725 the "fncache" repository format (which has to be enabled to use
725 726 dotencode) to avoid issues with filenames starting with ._ on
726 727 Mac OS X and spaces on Windows.
727 728
728 729 Repositories with this on-disk format require Mercurial version 1.7.
729 730
730 731 Enabled by default.
731 732
732 733 ``usefncache``
733 734 Enable or disable the "fncache" repository format which enhances
734 735 the "store" repository format (which has to be enabled to use
735 736 fncache) to allow longer filenames and avoids using Windows
736 737 reserved names, e.g. "nul".
737 738
738 739 Repositories with this on-disk format require Mercurial version 1.1.
739 740
740 741 Enabled by default.
741 742
742 743 ``usestore``
743 744 Enable or disable the "store" repository format which improves
744 745 compatibility with systems that fold case or otherwise mangle
745 746 filenames. Disabling this option will allow you to store longer filenames
746 747 in some situations at the expense of compatibility.
747 748
748 749 Repositories with this on-disk format require Mercurial version 0.9.4.
749 750
750 751 Enabled by default.
751 752
752 753 ``graph``
753 754 ---------
754 755
755 756 Web graph view configuration. This section let you change graph
756 757 elements display properties by branches, for instance to make the
757 758 ``default`` branch stand out.
758 759
759 760 Each line has the following format::
760 761
761 762 <branch>.<argument> = <value>
762 763
763 764 where ``<branch>`` is the name of the branch being
764 765 customized. Example::
765 766
766 767 [graph]
767 768 # 2px width
768 769 default.width = 2
769 770 # red color
770 771 default.color = FF0000
771 772
772 773 Supported arguments:
773 774
774 775 ``width``
775 776 Set branch edges width in pixels.
776 777
777 778 ``color``
778 779 Set branch edges color in hexadecimal RGB notation.
779 780
780 781 ``hooks``
781 782 ---------
782 783
783 784 Commands or Python functions that get automatically executed by
784 785 various actions such as starting or finishing a commit. Multiple
785 786 hooks can be run for the same action by appending a suffix to the
786 787 action. Overriding a site-wide hook can be done by changing its
787 788 value or setting it to an empty string. Hooks can be prioritized
788 789 by adding a prefix of ``priority.`` to the hook name on a new line
789 790 and setting the priority. The default priority is 0.
790 791
791 792 Example ``.hg/hgrc``::
792 793
793 794 [hooks]
794 795 # update working directory after adding changesets
795 796 changegroup.update = hg update
796 797 # do not use the site-wide hook
797 798 incoming =
798 799 incoming.email = /my/email/hook
799 800 incoming.autobuild = /my/build/hook
800 801 # force autobuild hook to run before other incoming hooks
801 802 priority.incoming.autobuild = 1
802 803
803 804 Most hooks are run with environment variables set that give useful
804 805 additional information. For each hook below, the environment
805 806 variables it is passed are listed with names of the form ``$HG_foo``.
806 807
807 808 ``changegroup``
808 809 Run after a changegroup has been added via push, pull or unbundle. ID of the
809 810 first new changeset is in ``$HG_NODE`` and last in ``$HG_NODE_LAST``. URL
810 811 from which changes came is in ``$HG_URL``.
811 812
812 813 ``commit``
813 814 Run after a changeset has been created in the local repository. ID
814 815 of the newly created changeset is in ``$HG_NODE``. Parent changeset
815 816 IDs are in ``$HG_PARENT1`` and ``$HG_PARENT2``.
816 817
817 818 ``incoming``
818 819 Run after a changeset has been pulled, pushed, or unbundled into
819 820 the local repository. The ID of the newly arrived changeset is in
820 821 ``$HG_NODE``. URL that was source of changes came is in ``$HG_URL``.
821 822
822 823 ``outgoing``
823 824 Run after sending changes from local repository to another. ID of
824 825 first changeset sent is in ``$HG_NODE``. Source of operation is in
825 826 ``$HG_SOURCE``; Also see :hg:`help config.hooks.preoutgoing` hook.
826 827
827 828 ``post-<command>``
828 829 Run after successful invocations of the associated command. The
829 830 contents of the command line are passed as ``$HG_ARGS`` and the result
830 831 code in ``$HG_RESULT``. Parsed command line arguments are passed as
831 832 ``$HG_PATS`` and ``$HG_OPTS``. These contain string representations of
832 833 the python data internally passed to <command>. ``$HG_OPTS`` is a
833 834 dictionary of options (with unspecified options set to their defaults).
834 835 ``$HG_PATS`` is a list of arguments. Hook failure is ignored.
835 836
836 837 ``fail-<command>``
837 838 Run after a failed invocation of an associated command. The contents
838 839 of the command line are passed as ``$HG_ARGS``. Parsed command line
839 840 arguments are passed as ``$HG_PATS`` and ``$HG_OPTS``. These contain
840 841 string representations of the python data internally passed to
841 842 <command>. ``$HG_OPTS`` is a dictionary of options (with unspecified
842 843 options set to their defaults). ``$HG_PATS`` is a list of arguments.
843 844 Hook failure is ignored.
844 845
845 846 ``pre-<command>``
846 847 Run before executing the associated command. The contents of the
847 848 command line are passed as ``$HG_ARGS``. Parsed command line arguments
848 849 are passed as ``$HG_PATS`` and ``$HG_OPTS``. These contain string
849 850 representations of the data internally passed to <command>. ``$HG_OPTS``
850 851 is a dictionary of options (with unspecified options set to their
851 852 defaults). ``$HG_PATS`` is a list of arguments. If the hook returns
852 853 failure, the command doesn't execute and Mercurial returns the failure
853 854 code.
854 855
855 856 ``prechangegroup``
856 857 Run before a changegroup is added via push, pull or unbundle. Exit
857 858 status 0 allows the changegroup to proceed. Non-zero status will
858 859 cause the push, pull or unbundle to fail. URL from which changes
859 860 will come is in ``$HG_URL``.
860 861
861 862 ``precommit``
862 863 Run before starting a local commit. Exit status 0 allows the
863 864 commit to proceed. Non-zero status will cause the commit to fail.
864 865 Parent changeset IDs are in ``$HG_PARENT1`` and ``$HG_PARENT2``.
865 866
866 867 ``prelistkeys``
867 868 Run before listing pushkeys (like bookmarks) in the
868 869 repository. Non-zero status will cause failure. The key namespace is
869 870 in ``$HG_NAMESPACE``.
870 871
871 872 ``preoutgoing``
872 873 Run before collecting changes to send from the local repository to
873 874 another. Non-zero status will cause failure. This lets you prevent
874 875 pull over HTTP or SSH. Also prevents against local pull, push
875 876 (outbound) or bundle commands, but not effective, since you can
876 877 just copy files instead then. Source of operation is in
877 878 ``$HG_SOURCE``. If "serve", operation is happening on behalf of remote
878 879 SSH or HTTP repository. If "push", "pull" or "bundle", operation
879 880 is happening on behalf of repository on same system.
880 881
881 882 ``prepushkey``
882 883 Run before a pushkey (like a bookmark) is added to the
883 884 repository. Non-zero status will cause the key to be rejected. The
884 885 key namespace is in ``$HG_NAMESPACE``, the key is in ``$HG_KEY``,
885 886 the old value (if any) is in ``$HG_OLD``, and the new value is in
886 887 ``$HG_NEW``.
887 888
888 889 ``pretag``
889 890 Run before creating a tag. Exit status 0 allows the tag to be
890 891 created. Non-zero status will cause the tag to fail. ID of
891 892 changeset to tag is in ``$HG_NODE``. Name of tag is in ``$HG_TAG``. Tag is
892 893 local if ``$HG_LOCAL=1``, in repository if ``$HG_LOCAL=0``.
893 894
894 895 ``pretxnopen``
895 896 Run before any new repository transaction is open. The reason for the
896 897 transaction will be in ``$HG_TXNNAME`` and a unique identifier for the
897 898 transaction will be in ``HG_TXNID``. A non-zero status will prevent the
898 899 transaction from being opened.
899 900
900 901 ``pretxnclose``
901 902 Run right before the transaction is actually finalized. Any repository change
902 903 will be visible to the hook program. This lets you validate the transaction
903 904 content or change it. Exit status 0 allows the commit to proceed. Non-zero
904 905 status will cause the transaction to be rolled back. The reason for the
905 906 transaction opening will be in ``$HG_TXNNAME`` and a unique identifier for
906 907 the transaction will be in ``HG_TXNID``. The rest of the available data will
907 908 vary according the transaction type. New changesets will add ``$HG_NODE`` (id
908 909 of the first added changeset), ``$HG_NODE_LAST`` (id of the last added
909 910 changeset), ``$HG_URL`` and ``$HG_SOURCE`` variables, bookmarks and phases
910 911 changes will set ``HG_BOOKMARK_MOVED`` and ``HG_PHASES_MOVED`` to ``1``, etc.
911 912
912 913 ``txnclose``
913 914 Run after any repository transaction has been committed. At this
914 915 point, the transaction can no longer be rolled back. The hook will run
915 916 after the lock is released. See :hg:`help config.hooks.pretxnclose` docs for
916 917 details about available variables.
917 918
918 919 ``txnabort``
919 920 Run when a transaction is aborted. See :hg:`help config.hooks.pretxnclose`
920 921 docs for details about available variables.
921 922
922 923 ``pretxnchangegroup``
923 924 Run after a changegroup has been added via push, pull or unbundle, but before
924 925 the transaction has been committed. Changegroup is visible to hook program.
925 926 This lets you validate incoming changes before accepting them. Passed the ID
926 927 of the first new changeset in ``$HG_NODE`` and last in ``$HG_NODE_LAST``.
927 928 Exit status 0 allows the transaction to commit. Non-zero status will cause
928 929 the transaction to be rolled back and the push, pull or unbundle will fail.
929 930 URL that was source of changes is in ``$HG_URL``.
930 931
931 932 ``pretxncommit``
932 933 Run after a changeset has been created but the transaction not yet
933 934 committed. Changeset is visible to hook program. This lets you
934 935 validate commit message and changes. Exit status 0 allows the
935 936 commit to proceed. Non-zero status will cause the transaction to
936 937 be rolled back. ID of changeset is in ``$HG_NODE``. Parent changeset
937 938 IDs are in ``$HG_PARENT1`` and ``$HG_PARENT2``.
938 939
939 940 ``preupdate``
940 941 Run before updating the working directory. Exit status 0 allows
941 942 the update to proceed. Non-zero status will prevent the update.
942 943 Changeset ID of first new parent is in ``$HG_PARENT1``. If merge, ID
943 944 of second new parent is in ``$HG_PARENT2``.
944 945
945 946 ``listkeys``
946 947 Run after listing pushkeys (like bookmarks) in the repository. The
947 948 key namespace is in ``$HG_NAMESPACE``. ``$HG_VALUES`` is a
948 949 dictionary containing the keys and values.
949 950
950 951 ``pushkey``
951 952 Run after a pushkey (like a bookmark) is added to the
952 953 repository. The key namespace is in ``$HG_NAMESPACE``, the key is in
953 954 ``$HG_KEY``, the old value (if any) is in ``$HG_OLD``, and the new
954 955 value is in ``$HG_NEW``.
955 956
956 957 ``tag``
957 958 Run after a tag is created. ID of tagged changeset is in ``$HG_NODE``.
958 959 Name of tag is in ``$HG_TAG``. Tag is local if ``$HG_LOCAL=1``, in
959 960 repository if ``$HG_LOCAL=0``.
960 961
961 962 ``update``
962 963 Run after updating the working directory. Changeset ID of first
963 964 new parent is in ``$HG_PARENT1``. If merge, ID of second new parent is
964 965 in ``$HG_PARENT2``. If the update succeeded, ``$HG_ERROR=0``. If the
965 966 update failed (e.g. because conflicts not resolved), ``$HG_ERROR=1``.
966 967
967 968 .. note::
968 969
969 970 It is generally better to use standard hooks rather than the
970 971 generic pre- and post- command hooks as they are guaranteed to be
971 972 called in the appropriate contexts for influencing transactions.
972 973 Also, hooks like "commit" will be called in all contexts that
973 974 generate a commit (e.g. tag) and not just the commit command.
974 975
975 976 .. note::
976 977
977 978 Environment variables with empty values may not be passed to
978 979 hooks on platforms such as Windows. As an example, ``$HG_PARENT2``
979 980 will have an empty value under Unix-like platforms for non-merge
980 981 changesets, while it will not be available at all under Windows.
981 982
982 983 The syntax for Python hooks is as follows::
983 984
984 985 hookname = python:modulename.submodule.callable
985 986 hookname = python:/path/to/python/module.py:callable
986 987
987 988 Python hooks are run within the Mercurial process. Each hook is
988 989 called with at least three keyword arguments: a ui object (keyword
989 990 ``ui``), a repository object (keyword ``repo``), and a ``hooktype``
990 991 keyword that tells what kind of hook is used. Arguments listed as
991 992 environment variables above are passed as keyword arguments, with no
992 993 ``HG_`` prefix, and names in lower case.
993 994
994 995 If a Python hook returns a "true" value or raises an exception, this
995 996 is treated as a failure.
996 997
997 998
998 999 ``hostfingerprints``
999 1000 --------------------
1000 1001
1001 1002 (Deprecated. Use ``[hostsecurity]``'s ``fingerprints`` options instead.)
1002 1003
1003 1004 Fingerprints of the certificates of known HTTPS servers.
1004 1005
1005 1006 A HTTPS connection to a server with a fingerprint configured here will
1006 1007 only succeed if the servers certificate matches the fingerprint.
1007 1008 This is very similar to how ssh known hosts works.
1008 1009
1009 1010 The fingerprint is the SHA-1 hash value of the DER encoded certificate.
1010 1011 Multiple values can be specified (separated by spaces or commas). This can
1011 1012 be used to define both old and new fingerprints while a host transitions
1012 1013 to a new certificate.
1013 1014
1014 1015 The CA chain and web.cacerts is not used for servers with a fingerprint.
1015 1016
1016 1017 For example::
1017 1018
1018 1019 [hostfingerprints]
1019 1020 hg.intevation.de = fc:e2:8d:d9:51:cd:cb:c1:4d:18:6b:b7:44:8d:49:72:57:e6:cd:33
1020 1021 hg.intevation.org = fc:e2:8d:d9:51:cd:cb:c1:4d:18:6b:b7:44:8d:49:72:57:e6:cd:33
1021 1022
1022 1023 ``hostsecurity``
1023 1024 ----------------
1024 1025
1025 1026 Used to specify global and per-host security settings for connecting to
1026 1027 other machines.
1027 1028
1028 1029 The following options control default behavior for all hosts.
1029 1030
1030 1031 ``ciphers``
1031 1032 Defines the cryptographic ciphers to use for connections.
1032 1033
1033 1034 Value must be a valid OpenSSL Cipher List Format as documented at
1034 1035 https://www.openssl.org/docs/manmaster/apps/ciphers.html#CIPHER-LIST-FORMAT.
1035 1036
1036 1037 This setting is for advanced users only. Setting to incorrect values
1037 1038 can significantly lower connection security or decrease performance.
1038 1039 You have been warned.
1039 1040
1040 1041 This option requires Python 2.7.
1041 1042
1042 1043 ``minimumprotocol``
1043 1044 Defines the minimum channel encryption protocol to use.
1044 1045
1045 1046 By default, the highest version of TLS supported by both client and server
1046 1047 is used.
1047 1048
1048 1049 Allowed values are: ``tls1.0``, ``tls1.1``, ``tls1.2``.
1049 1050
1050 1051 When running on an old Python version, only ``tls1.0`` is allowed since
1051 1052 old versions of Python only support up to TLS 1.0.
1052 1053
1053 1054 When running a Python that supports modern TLS versions, the default is
1054 1055 ``tls1.1``. ``tls1.0`` can still be used to allow TLS 1.0. However, this
1055 1056 weakens security and should only be used as a feature of last resort if
1056 1057 a server does not support TLS 1.1+.
1057 1058
1058 1059 Options in the ``[hostsecurity]`` section can have the form
1059 1060 ``hostname``:``setting``. This allows multiple settings to be defined on a
1060 1061 per-host basis.
1061 1062
1062 1063 The following per-host settings can be defined.
1063 1064
1064 1065 ``ciphers``
1065 1066 This behaves like ``ciphers`` as described above except it only applies
1066 1067 to the host on which it is defined.
1067 1068
1068 1069 ``fingerprints``
1069 1070 A list of hashes of the DER encoded peer/remote certificate. Values have
1070 1071 the form ``algorithm``:``fingerprint``. e.g.
1071 1072 ``sha256:c3ab8ff13720e8ad9047dd39466b3c8974e592c2fa383d4a3960714caef0c4f2``.
1072 1073
1073 1074 The following algorithms/prefixes are supported: ``sha1``, ``sha256``,
1074 1075 ``sha512``.
1075 1076
1076 1077 Use of ``sha256`` or ``sha512`` is preferred.
1077 1078
1078 1079 If a fingerprint is specified, the CA chain is not validated for this
1079 1080 host and Mercurial will require the remote certificate to match one
1080 1081 of the fingerprints specified. This means if the server updates its
1081 1082 certificate, Mercurial will abort until a new fingerprint is defined.
1082 1083 This can provide stronger security than traditional CA-based validation
1083 1084 at the expense of convenience.
1084 1085
1085 1086 This option takes precedence over ``verifycertsfile``.
1086 1087
1087 1088 ``minimumprotocol``
1088 1089 This behaves like ``minimumprotocol`` as described above except it
1089 1090 only applies to the host on which it is defined.
1090 1091
1091 1092 ``verifycertsfile``
1092 1093 Path to file a containing a list of PEM encoded certificates used to
1093 1094 verify the server certificate. Environment variables and ``~user``
1094 1095 constructs are expanded in the filename.
1095 1096
1096 1097 The server certificate or the certificate's certificate authority (CA)
1097 1098 must match a certificate from this file or certificate verification
1098 1099 will fail and connections to the server will be refused.
1099 1100
1100 1101 If defined, only certificates provided by this file will be used:
1101 1102 ``web.cacerts`` and any system/default certificates will not be
1102 1103 used.
1103 1104
1104 1105 This option has no effect if the per-host ``fingerprints`` option
1105 1106 is set.
1106 1107
1107 1108 The format of the file is as follows::
1108 1109
1109 1110 -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
1110 1111 ... (certificate in base64 PEM encoding) ...
1111 1112 -----END CERTIFICATE-----
1112 1113 -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
1113 1114 ... (certificate in base64 PEM encoding) ...
1114 1115 -----END CERTIFICATE-----
1115 1116
1116 1117 For example::
1117 1118
1118 1119 [hostsecurity]
1119 1120 hg.example.com:fingerprints = sha256:c3ab8ff13720e8ad9047dd39466b3c8974e592c2fa383d4a3960714caef0c4f2
1120 1121 hg2.example.com:fingerprints = sha1:914f1aff87249c09b6859b88b1906d30756491ca, sha1:fc:e2:8d:d9:51:cd:cb:c1:4d:18:6b:b7:44:8d:49:72:57:e6:cd:33
1121 1122 foo.example.com:verifycertsfile = /etc/ssl/trusted-ca-certs.pem
1122 1123
1123 1124 To change the default minimum protocol version to TLS 1.2 but to allow TLS 1.1
1124 1125 when connecting to ``hg.example.com``::
1125 1126
1126 1127 [hostsecurity]
1127 1128 minimumprotocol = tls1.2
1128 1129 hg.example.com:minimumprotocol = tls1.1
1129 1130
1130 1131 ``http_proxy``
1131 1132 --------------
1132 1133
1133 1134 Used to access web-based Mercurial repositories through a HTTP
1134 1135 proxy.
1135 1136
1136 1137 ``host``
1137 1138 Host name and (optional) port of the proxy server, for example
1138 1139 "myproxy:8000".
1139 1140
1140 1141 ``no``
1141 1142 Optional. Comma-separated list of host names that should bypass
1142 1143 the proxy.
1143 1144
1144 1145 ``passwd``
1145 1146 Optional. Password to authenticate with at the proxy server.
1146 1147
1147 1148 ``user``
1148 1149 Optional. User name to authenticate with at the proxy server.
1149 1150
1150 1151 ``always``
1151 1152 Optional. Always use the proxy, even for localhost and any entries
1152 1153 in ``http_proxy.no``. (default: False)
1153 1154
1154 1155 ``merge``
1155 1156 ---------
1156 1157
1157 1158 This section specifies behavior during merges and updates.
1158 1159
1159 1160 ``checkignored``
1160 1161 Controls behavior when an ignored file on disk has the same name as a tracked
1161 1162 file in the changeset being merged or updated to, and has different
1162 1163 contents. Options are ``abort``, ``warn`` and ``ignore``. With ``abort``,
1163 1164 abort on such files. With ``warn``, warn on such files and back them up as
1164 1165 ``.orig``. With ``ignore``, don't print a warning and back them up as
1165 1166 ``.orig``. (default: ``abort``)
1166 1167
1167 1168 ``checkunknown``
1168 1169 Controls behavior when an unknown file that isn't ignored has the same name
1169 1170 as a tracked file in the changeset being merged or updated to, and has
1170 1171 different contents. Similar to ``merge.checkignored``, except for files that
1171 1172 are not ignored. (default: ``abort``)
1172 1173
1173 1174 ``merge-patterns``
1174 1175 ------------------
1175 1176
1176 1177 This section specifies merge tools to associate with particular file
1177 1178 patterns. Tools matched here will take precedence over the default
1178 1179 merge tool. Patterns are globs by default, rooted at the repository
1179 1180 root.
1180 1181
1181 1182 Example::
1182 1183
1183 1184 [merge-patterns]
1184 1185 **.c = kdiff3
1185 1186 **.jpg = myimgmerge
1186 1187
1187 1188 ``merge-tools``
1188 1189 ---------------
1189 1190
1190 1191 This section configures external merge tools to use for file-level
1191 1192 merges. This section has likely been preconfigured at install time.
1192 1193 Use :hg:`config merge-tools` to check the existing configuration.
1193 1194 Also see :hg:`help merge-tools` for more details.
1194 1195
1195 1196 Example ``~/.hgrc``::
1196 1197
1197 1198 [merge-tools]
1198 1199 # Override stock tool location
1199 1200 kdiff3.executable = ~/bin/kdiff3
1200 1201 # Specify command line
1201 1202 kdiff3.args = $base $local $other -o $output
1202 1203 # Give higher priority
1203 1204 kdiff3.priority = 1
1204 1205
1205 1206 # Changing the priority of preconfigured tool
1206 1207 meld.priority = 0
1207 1208
1208 1209 # Disable a preconfigured tool
1209 1210 vimdiff.disabled = yes
1210 1211
1211 1212 # Define new tool
1212 1213 myHtmlTool.args = -m $local $other $base $output
1213 1214 myHtmlTool.regkey = Software\FooSoftware\HtmlMerge
1214 1215 myHtmlTool.priority = 1
1215 1216
1216 1217 Supported arguments:
1217 1218
1218 1219 ``priority``
1219 1220 The priority in which to evaluate this tool.
1220 1221 (default: 0)
1221 1222
1222 1223 ``executable``
1223 1224 Either just the name of the executable or its pathname.
1224 1225
1225 1226 .. container:: windows
1226 1227
1227 1228 On Windows, the path can use environment variables with ${ProgramFiles}
1228 1229 syntax.
1229 1230
1230 1231 (default: the tool name)
1231 1232
1232 1233 ``args``
1233 1234 The arguments to pass to the tool executable. You can refer to the
1234 1235 files being merged as well as the output file through these
1235 1236 variables: ``$base``, ``$local``, ``$other``, ``$output``. The meaning
1236 1237 of ``$local`` and ``$other`` can vary depending on which action is being
1237 1238 performed. During and update or merge, ``$local`` represents the original
1238 1239 state of the file, while ``$other`` represents the commit you are updating
1239 1240 to or the commit you are merging with. During a rebase ``$local``
1240 1241 represents the destination of the rebase, and ``$other`` represents the
1241 1242 commit being rebased.
1242 1243 (default: ``$local $base $other``)
1243 1244
1244 1245 ``premerge``
1245 1246 Attempt to run internal non-interactive 3-way merge tool before
1246 1247 launching external tool. Options are ``true``, ``false``, ``keep`` or
1247 1248 ``keep-merge3``. The ``keep`` option will leave markers in the file if the
1248 1249 premerge fails. The ``keep-merge3`` will do the same but include information
1249 1250 about the base of the merge in the marker (see internal :merge3 in
1250 1251 :hg:`help merge-tools`).
1251 1252 (default: True)
1252 1253
1253 1254 ``binary``
1254 1255 This tool can merge binary files. (default: False, unless tool
1255 1256 was selected by file pattern match)
1256 1257
1257 1258 ``symlink``
1258 1259 This tool can merge symlinks. (default: False)
1259 1260
1260 1261 ``check``
1261 1262 A list of merge success-checking options:
1262 1263
1263 1264 ``changed``
1264 1265 Ask whether merge was successful when the merged file shows no changes.
1265 1266 ``conflicts``
1266 1267 Check whether there are conflicts even though the tool reported success.
1267 1268 ``prompt``
1268 1269 Always prompt for merge success, regardless of success reported by tool.
1269 1270
1270 1271 ``fixeol``
1271 1272 Attempt to fix up EOL changes caused by the merge tool.
1272 1273 (default: False)
1273 1274
1274 1275 ``gui``
1275 1276 This tool requires a graphical interface to run. (default: False)
1276 1277
1277 1278 .. container:: windows
1278 1279
1279 1280 ``regkey``
1280 1281 Windows registry key which describes install location of this
1281 1282 tool. Mercurial will search for this key first under
1282 1283 ``HKEY_CURRENT_USER`` and then under ``HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE``.
1283 1284 (default: None)
1284 1285
1285 1286 ``regkeyalt``
1286 1287 An alternate Windows registry key to try if the first key is not
1287 1288 found. The alternate key uses the same ``regname`` and ``regappend``
1288 1289 semantics of the primary key. The most common use for this key
1289 1290 is to search for 32bit applications on 64bit operating systems.
1290 1291 (default: None)
1291 1292
1292 1293 ``regname``
1293 1294 Name of value to read from specified registry key.
1294 1295 (default: the unnamed (default) value)
1295 1296
1296 1297 ``regappend``
1297 1298 String to append to the value read from the registry, typically
1298 1299 the executable name of the tool.
1299 1300 (default: None)
1300 1301
1301 1302
1302 1303 ``patch``
1303 1304 ---------
1304 1305
1305 1306 Settings used when applying patches, for instance through the 'import'
1306 1307 command or with Mercurial Queues extension.
1307 1308
1308 1309 ``eol``
1309 1310 When set to 'strict' patch content and patched files end of lines
1310 1311 are preserved. When set to ``lf`` or ``crlf``, both files end of
1311 1312 lines are ignored when patching and the result line endings are
1312 1313 normalized to either LF (Unix) or CRLF (Windows). When set to
1313 1314 ``auto``, end of lines are again ignored while patching but line
1314 1315 endings in patched files are normalized to their original setting
1315 1316 on a per-file basis. If target file does not exist or has no end
1316 1317 of line, patch line endings are preserved.
1317 1318 (default: strict)
1318 1319
1319 1320 ``fuzz``
1320 1321 The number of lines of 'fuzz' to allow when applying patches. This
1321 1322 controls how much context the patcher is allowed to ignore when
1322 1323 trying to apply a patch.
1323 1324 (default: 2)
1324 1325
1325 1326 ``paths``
1326 1327 ---------
1327 1328
1328 1329 Assigns symbolic names and behavior to repositories.
1329 1330
1330 1331 Options are symbolic names defining the URL or directory that is the
1331 1332 location of the repository. Example::
1332 1333
1333 1334 [paths]
1334 1335 my_server = https://example.com/my_repo
1335 1336 local_path = /home/me/repo
1336 1337
1337 1338 These symbolic names can be used from the command line. To pull
1338 1339 from ``my_server``: :hg:`pull my_server`. To push to ``local_path``:
1339 1340 :hg:`push local_path`.
1340 1341
1341 1342 Options containing colons (``:``) denote sub-options that can influence
1342 1343 behavior for that specific path. Example::
1343 1344
1344 1345 [paths]
1345 1346 my_server = https://example.com/my_path
1346 1347 my_server:pushurl = ssh://example.com/my_path
1347 1348
1348 1349 The following sub-options can be defined:
1349 1350
1350 1351 ``pushurl``
1351 1352 The URL to use for push operations. If not defined, the location
1352 1353 defined by the path's main entry is used.
1353 1354
1354 1355 ``pushrev``
1355 1356 A revset defining which revisions to push by default.
1356 1357
1357 1358 When :hg:`push` is executed without a ``-r`` argument, the revset
1358 1359 defined by this sub-option is evaluated to determine what to push.
1359 1360
1360 1361 For example, a value of ``.`` will push the working directory's
1361 1362 revision by default.
1362 1363
1363 1364 Revsets specifying bookmarks will not result in the bookmark being
1364 1365 pushed.
1365 1366
1366 1367 The following special named paths exist:
1367 1368
1368 1369 ``default``
1369 1370 The URL or directory to use when no source or remote is specified.
1370 1371
1371 1372 :hg:`clone` will automatically define this path to the location the
1372 1373 repository was cloned from.
1373 1374
1374 1375 ``default-push``
1375 1376 (deprecated) The URL or directory for the default :hg:`push` location.
1376 1377 ``default:pushurl`` should be used instead.
1377 1378
1378 1379 ``phases``
1379 1380 ----------
1380 1381
1381 1382 Specifies default handling of phases. See :hg:`help phases` for more
1382 1383 information about working with phases.
1383 1384
1384 1385 ``publish``
1385 1386 Controls draft phase behavior when working as a server. When true,
1386 1387 pushed changesets are set to public in both client and server and
1387 1388 pulled or cloned changesets are set to public in the client.
1388 1389 (default: True)
1389 1390
1390 1391 ``new-commit``
1391 1392 Phase of newly-created commits.
1392 1393 (default: draft)
1393 1394
1394 1395 ``checksubrepos``
1395 1396 Check the phase of the current revision of each subrepository. Allowed
1396 1397 values are "ignore", "follow" and "abort". For settings other than
1397 1398 "ignore", the phase of the current revision of each subrepository is
1398 1399 checked before committing the parent repository. If any of those phases is
1399 1400 greater than the phase of the parent repository (e.g. if a subrepo is in a
1400 1401 "secret" phase while the parent repo is in "draft" phase), the commit is
1401 1402 either aborted (if checksubrepos is set to "abort") or the higher phase is
1402 1403 used for the parent repository commit (if set to "follow").
1403 1404 (default: follow)
1404 1405
1405 1406
1406 1407 ``profiling``
1407 1408 -------------
1408 1409
1409 1410 Specifies profiling type, format, and file output. Two profilers are
1410 1411 supported: an instrumenting profiler (named ``ls``), and a sampling
1411 1412 profiler (named ``stat``).
1412 1413
1413 1414 In this section description, 'profiling data' stands for the raw data
1414 1415 collected during profiling, while 'profiling report' stands for a
1415 1416 statistical text report generated from the profiling data. The
1416 1417 profiling is done using lsprof.
1417 1418
1418 1419 ``enabled``
1419 1420 Enable the profiler.
1420 1421 (default: false)
1421 1422
1422 1423 This is equivalent to passing ``--profile`` on the command line.
1423 1424
1424 1425 ``type``
1425 1426 The type of profiler to use.
1426 1427 (default: stat)
1427 1428
1428 1429 ``ls``
1429 1430 Use Python's built-in instrumenting profiler. This profiler
1430 1431 works on all platforms, but each line number it reports is the
1431 1432 first line of a function. This restriction makes it difficult to
1432 1433 identify the expensive parts of a non-trivial function.
1433 1434 ``stat``
1434 1435 Use a statistical profiler, statprof. This profiler is most
1435 1436 useful for profiling commands that run for longer than about 0.1
1436 1437 seconds.
1437 1438
1438 1439 ``format``
1439 1440 Profiling format. Specific to the ``ls`` instrumenting profiler.
1440 1441 (default: text)
1441 1442
1442 1443 ``text``
1443 1444 Generate a profiling report. When saving to a file, it should be
1444 1445 noted that only the report is saved, and the profiling data is
1445 1446 not kept.
1446 1447 ``kcachegrind``
1447 1448 Format profiling data for kcachegrind use: when saving to a
1448 1449 file, the generated file can directly be loaded into
1449 1450 kcachegrind.
1450 1451
1451 1452 ``statformat``
1452 1453 Profiling format for the ``stat`` profiler.
1453 1454 (default: hotpath)
1454 1455
1455 1456 ``hotpath``
1456 1457 Show a tree-based display containing the hot path of execution (where
1457 1458 most time was spent).
1458 1459 ``bymethod``
1459 1460 Show a table of methods ordered by how frequently they are active.
1460 1461 ``byline``
1461 1462 Show a table of lines in files ordered by how frequently they are active.
1462 1463 ``json``
1463 1464 Render profiling data as JSON.
1464 1465
1465 1466 ``frequency``
1466 1467 Sampling frequency. Specific to the ``stat`` sampling profiler.
1467 1468 (default: 1000)
1468 1469
1469 1470 ``output``
1470 1471 File path where profiling data or report should be saved. If the
1471 1472 file exists, it is replaced. (default: None, data is printed on
1472 1473 stderr)
1473 1474
1474 1475 ``sort``
1475 1476 Sort field. Specific to the ``ls`` instrumenting profiler.
1476 1477 One of ``callcount``, ``reccallcount``, ``totaltime`` and
1477 1478 ``inlinetime``.
1478 1479 (default: inlinetime)
1479 1480
1480 1481 ``limit``
1481 1482 Number of lines to show. Specific to the ``ls`` instrumenting profiler.
1482 1483 (default: 30)
1483 1484
1484 1485 ``nested``
1485 1486 Show at most this number of lines of drill-down info after each main entry.
1486 1487 This can help explain the difference between Total and Inline.
1487 1488 Specific to the ``ls`` instrumenting profiler.
1488 1489 (default: 5)
1489 1490
1490 1491 ``progress``
1491 1492 ------------
1492 1493
1493 1494 Mercurial commands can draw progress bars that are as informative as
1494 1495 possible. Some progress bars only offer indeterminate information, while others
1495 1496 have a definite end point.
1496 1497
1497 1498 ``delay``
1498 1499 Number of seconds (float) before showing the progress bar. (default: 3)
1499 1500
1500 1501 ``changedelay``
1501 1502 Minimum delay before showing a new topic. When set to less than 3 * refresh,
1502 1503 that value will be used instead. (default: 1)
1503 1504
1504 1505 ``refresh``
1505 1506 Time in seconds between refreshes of the progress bar. (default: 0.1)
1506 1507
1507 1508 ``format``
1508 1509 Format of the progress bar.
1509 1510
1510 1511 Valid entries for the format field are ``topic``, ``bar``, ``number``,
1511 1512 ``unit``, ``estimate``, ``speed``, and ``item``. ``item`` defaults to the
1512 1513 last 20 characters of the item, but this can be changed by adding either
1513 1514 ``-<num>`` which would take the last num characters, or ``+<num>`` for the
1514 1515 first num characters.
1515 1516
1516 1517 (default: topic bar number estimate)
1517 1518
1518 1519 ``width``
1519 1520 If set, the maximum width of the progress information (that is, min(width,
1520 1521 term width) will be used).
1521 1522
1522 1523 ``clear-complete``
1523 1524 Clear the progress bar after it's done. (default: True)
1524 1525
1525 1526 ``disable``
1526 1527 If true, don't show a progress bar.
1527 1528
1528 1529 ``assume-tty``
1529 1530 If true, ALWAYS show a progress bar, unless disable is given.
1530 1531
1531 1532 ``rebase``
1532 1533 ----------
1533 1534
1534 1535 ``allowdivergence``
1535 1536 Default to False, when True allow creating divergence when performing
1536 1537 rebase of obsolete changesets.
1537 1538
1538 1539 ``revsetalias``
1539 1540 ---------------
1540 1541
1541 1542 Alias definitions for revsets. See :hg:`help revsets` for details.
1542 1543
1543 1544 ``server``
1544 1545 ----------
1545 1546
1546 1547 Controls generic server settings.
1547 1548
1548 1549 ``compressionengines``
1549 1550 List of compression engines and their relative priority to advertise
1550 1551 to clients.
1551 1552
1552 1553 The order of compression engines determines their priority, the first
1553 1554 having the highest priority. If a compression engine is not listed
1554 1555 here, it won't be advertised to clients.
1555 1556
1556 1557 If not set (the default), built-in defaults are used. Run
1557 1558 :hg:`debuginstall` to list available compression engines and their
1558 1559 default wire protocol priority.
1559 1560
1560 1561 Older Mercurial clients only support zlib compression and this setting
1561 1562 has no effect for legacy clients.
1562 1563
1563 1564 ``uncompressed``
1564 1565 Whether to allow clients to clone a repository using the
1565 1566 uncompressed streaming protocol. This transfers about 40% more
1566 1567 data than a regular clone, but uses less memory and CPU on both
1567 1568 server and client. Over a LAN (100 Mbps or better) or a very fast
1568 1569 WAN, an uncompressed streaming clone is a lot faster (~10x) than a
1569 1570 regular clone. Over most WAN connections (anything slower than
1570 1571 about 6 Mbps), uncompressed streaming is slower, because of the
1571 1572 extra data transfer overhead. This mode will also temporarily hold
1572 1573 the write lock while determining what data to transfer.
1573 1574 (default: True)
1574 1575
1575 1576 ``preferuncompressed``
1576 1577 When set, clients will try to use the uncompressed streaming
1577 1578 protocol. (default: False)
1578 1579
1579 1580 ``validate``
1580 1581 Whether to validate the completeness of pushed changesets by
1581 1582 checking that all new file revisions specified in manifests are
1582 1583 present. (default: False)
1583 1584
1584 1585 ``maxhttpheaderlen``
1585 1586 Instruct HTTP clients not to send request headers longer than this
1586 1587 many bytes. (default: 1024)
1587 1588
1588 1589 ``bundle1``
1589 1590 Whether to allow clients to push and pull using the legacy bundle1
1590 1591 exchange format. (default: True)
1591 1592
1592 1593 ``bundle1gd``
1593 1594 Like ``bundle1`` but only used if the repository is using the
1594 1595 *generaldelta* storage format. (default: True)
1595 1596
1596 1597 ``bundle1.push``
1597 1598 Whether to allow clients to push using the legacy bundle1 exchange
1598 1599 format. (default: True)
1599 1600
1600 1601 ``bundle1gd.push``
1601 1602 Like ``bundle1.push`` but only used if the repository is using the
1602 1603 *generaldelta* storage format. (default: True)
1603 1604
1604 1605 ``bundle1.pull``
1605 1606 Whether to allow clients to pull using the legacy bundle1 exchange
1606 1607 format. (default: True)
1607 1608
1608 1609 ``bundle1gd.pull``
1609 1610 Like ``bundle1.pull`` but only used if the repository is using the
1610 1611 *generaldelta* storage format. (default: True)
1611 1612
1612 1613 Large repositories using the *generaldelta* storage format should
1613 1614 consider setting this option because converting *generaldelta*
1614 1615 repositories to the exchange format required by the bundle1 data
1615 1616 format can consume a lot of CPU.
1616 1617
1617 1618 ``zliblevel``
1618 1619 Integer between ``-1`` and ``9`` that controls the zlib compression level
1619 1620 for wire protocol commands that send zlib compressed output (notably the
1620 1621 commands that send repository history data).
1621 1622
1622 1623 The default (``-1``) uses the default zlib compression level, which is
1623 1624 likely equivalent to ``6``. ``0`` means no compression. ``9`` means
1624 1625 maximum compression.
1625 1626
1626 1627 Setting this option allows server operators to make trade-offs between
1627 1628 bandwidth and CPU used. Lowering the compression lowers CPU utilization
1628 1629 but sends more bytes to clients.
1629 1630
1630 1631 This option only impacts the HTTP server.
1631 1632
1632 1633 ``zstdlevel``
1633 1634 Integer between ``1`` and ``22`` that controls the zstd compression level
1634 1635 for wire protocol commands. ``1`` is the minimal amount of compression and
1635 1636 ``22`` is the highest amount of compression.
1636 1637
1637 1638 The default (``3``) should be significantly faster than zlib while likely
1638 1639 delivering better compression ratios.
1639 1640
1640 1641 This option only impacts the HTTP server.
1641 1642
1642 1643 See also ``server.zliblevel``.
1643 1644
1644 1645 ``smtp``
1645 1646 --------
1646 1647
1647 1648 Configuration for extensions that need to send email messages.
1648 1649
1649 1650 ``host``
1650 1651 Host name of mail server, e.g. "mail.example.com".
1651 1652
1652 1653 ``port``
1653 1654 Optional. Port to connect to on mail server. (default: 465 if
1654 1655 ``tls`` is smtps; 25 otherwise)
1655 1656
1656 1657 ``tls``
1657 1658 Optional. Method to enable TLS when connecting to mail server: starttls,
1658 1659 smtps or none. (default: none)
1659 1660
1660 1661 ``username``
1661 1662 Optional. User name for authenticating with the SMTP server.
1662 1663 (default: None)
1663 1664
1664 1665 ``password``
1665 1666 Optional. Password for authenticating with the SMTP server. If not
1666 1667 specified, interactive sessions will prompt the user for a
1667 1668 password; non-interactive sessions will fail. (default: None)
1668 1669
1669 1670 ``local_hostname``
1670 1671 Optional. The hostname that the sender can use to identify
1671 1672 itself to the MTA.
1672 1673
1673 1674
1674 1675 ``subpaths``
1675 1676 ------------
1676 1677
1677 1678 Subrepository source URLs can go stale if a remote server changes name
1678 1679 or becomes temporarily unavailable. This section lets you define
1679 1680 rewrite rules of the form::
1680 1681
1681 1682 <pattern> = <replacement>
1682 1683
1683 1684 where ``pattern`` is a regular expression matching a subrepository
1684 1685 source URL and ``replacement`` is the replacement string used to
1685 1686 rewrite it. Groups can be matched in ``pattern`` and referenced in
1686 1687 ``replacements``. For instance::
1687 1688
1688 1689 http://server/(.*)-hg/ = http://hg.server/\1/
1689 1690
1690 1691 rewrites ``http://server/foo-hg/`` into ``http://hg.server/foo/``.
1691 1692
1692 1693 Relative subrepository paths are first made absolute, and the
1693 1694 rewrite rules are then applied on the full (absolute) path. If ``pattern``
1694 1695 doesn't match the full path, an attempt is made to apply it on the
1695 1696 relative path alone. The rules are applied in definition order.
1696 1697
1697 1698 ``templatealias``
1698 1699 -----------------
1699 1700
1700 1701 Alias definitions for templates. See :hg:`help templates` for details.
1701 1702
1702 1703 ``templates``
1703 1704 -------------
1704 1705
1705 1706 Use the ``[templates]`` section to define template strings.
1706 1707 See :hg:`help templates` for details.
1707 1708
1708 1709 ``trusted``
1709 1710 -----------
1710 1711
1711 1712 Mercurial will not use the settings in the
1712 1713 ``.hg/hgrc`` file from a repository if it doesn't belong to a trusted
1713 1714 user or to a trusted group, as various hgrc features allow arbitrary
1714 1715 commands to be run. This issue is often encountered when configuring
1715 1716 hooks or extensions for shared repositories or servers. However,
1716 1717 the web interface will use some safe settings from the ``[web]``
1717 1718 section.
1718 1719
1719 1720 This section specifies what users and groups are trusted. The
1720 1721 current user is always trusted. To trust everybody, list a user or a
1721 1722 group with name ``*``. These settings must be placed in an
1722 1723 *already-trusted file* to take effect, such as ``$HOME/.hgrc`` of the
1723 1724 user or service running Mercurial.
1724 1725
1725 1726 ``users``
1726 1727 Comma-separated list of trusted users.
1727 1728
1728 1729 ``groups``
1729 1730 Comma-separated list of trusted groups.
1730 1731
1731 1732
1732 1733 ``ui``
1733 1734 ------
1734 1735
1735 1736 User interface controls.
1736 1737
1737 1738 ``archivemeta``
1738 1739 Whether to include the .hg_archival.txt file containing meta data
1739 1740 (hashes for the repository base and for tip) in archives created
1740 1741 by the :hg:`archive` command or downloaded via hgweb.
1741 1742 (default: True)
1742 1743
1743 1744 ``askusername``
1744 1745 Whether to prompt for a username when committing. If True, and
1745 1746 neither ``$HGUSER`` nor ``$EMAIL`` has been specified, then the user will
1746 1747 be prompted to enter a username. If no username is entered, the
1747 1748 default ``USER@HOST`` is used instead.
1748 1749 (default: False)
1749 1750
1750 1751 ``clonebundles``
1751 1752 Whether the "clone bundles" feature is enabled.
1752 1753
1753 1754 When enabled, :hg:`clone` may download and apply a server-advertised
1754 1755 bundle file from a URL instead of using the normal exchange mechanism.
1755 1756
1756 1757 This can likely result in faster and more reliable clones.
1757 1758
1758 1759 (default: True)
1759 1760
1760 1761 ``clonebundlefallback``
1761 1762 Whether failure to apply an advertised "clone bundle" from a server
1762 1763 should result in fallback to a regular clone.
1763 1764
1764 1765 This is disabled by default because servers advertising "clone
1765 1766 bundles" often do so to reduce server load. If advertised bundles
1766 1767 start mass failing and clients automatically fall back to a regular
1767 1768 clone, this would add significant and unexpected load to the server
1768 1769 since the server is expecting clone operations to be offloaded to
1769 1770 pre-generated bundles. Failing fast (the default behavior) ensures
1770 1771 clients don't overwhelm the server when "clone bundle" application
1771 1772 fails.
1772 1773
1773 1774 (default: False)
1774 1775
1775 1776 ``clonebundleprefers``
1776 1777 Defines preferences for which "clone bundles" to use.
1777 1778
1778 1779 Servers advertising "clone bundles" may advertise multiple available
1779 1780 bundles. Each bundle may have different attributes, such as the bundle
1780 1781 type and compression format. This option is used to prefer a particular
1781 1782 bundle over another.
1782 1783
1783 1784 The following keys are defined by Mercurial:
1784 1785
1785 1786 BUNDLESPEC
1786 1787 A bundle type specifier. These are strings passed to :hg:`bundle -t`.
1787 1788 e.g. ``gzip-v2`` or ``bzip2-v1``.
1788 1789
1789 1790 COMPRESSION
1790 1791 The compression format of the bundle. e.g. ``gzip`` and ``bzip2``.
1791 1792
1792 1793 Server operators may define custom keys.
1793 1794
1794 1795 Example values: ``COMPRESSION=bzip2``,
1795 1796 ``BUNDLESPEC=gzip-v2, COMPRESSION=gzip``.
1796 1797
1797 1798 By default, the first bundle advertised by the server is used.
1798 1799
1799 1800 ``commitsubrepos``
1800 1801 Whether to commit modified subrepositories when committing the
1801 1802 parent repository. If False and one subrepository has uncommitted
1802 1803 changes, abort the commit.
1803 1804 (default: False)
1804 1805
1805 1806 ``debug``
1806 1807 Print debugging information. (default: False)
1807 1808
1808 1809 ``editor``
1809 1810 The editor to use during a commit. (default: ``$EDITOR`` or ``vi``)
1810 1811
1811 1812 ``fallbackencoding``
1812 1813 Encoding to try if it's not possible to decode the changelog using
1813 1814 UTF-8. (default: ISO-8859-1)
1814 1815
1815 1816 ``graphnodetemplate``
1816 1817 The template used to print changeset nodes in an ASCII revision graph.
1817 1818 (default: ``{graphnode}``)
1818 1819
1819 1820 ``ignore``
1820 1821 A file to read per-user ignore patterns from. This file should be
1821 1822 in the same format as a repository-wide .hgignore file. Filenames
1822 1823 are relative to the repository root. This option supports hook syntax,
1823 1824 so if you want to specify multiple ignore files, you can do so by
1824 1825 setting something like ``ignore.other = ~/.hgignore2``. For details
1825 1826 of the ignore file format, see the ``hgignore(5)`` man page.
1826 1827
1827 1828 ``interactive``
1828 1829 Allow to prompt the user. (default: True)
1829 1830
1830 1831 ``interface``
1831 1832 Select the default interface for interactive features (default: text).
1832 1833 Possible values are 'text' and 'curses'.
1833 1834
1834 1835 ``interface.chunkselector``
1835 1836 Select the interface for change recording (e.g. :hg:`commit -i`).
1836 1837 Possible values are 'text' and 'curses'.
1837 1838 This config overrides the interface specified by ui.interface.
1838 1839
1839 1840 ``logtemplate``
1840 1841 Template string for commands that print changesets.
1841 1842
1842 1843 ``merge``
1843 1844 The conflict resolution program to use during a manual merge.
1844 1845 For more information on merge tools see :hg:`help merge-tools`.
1845 1846 For configuring merge tools see the ``[merge-tools]`` section.
1846 1847
1847 1848 ``mergemarkers``
1848 1849 Sets the merge conflict marker label styling. The ``detailed``
1849 1850 style uses the ``mergemarkertemplate`` setting to style the labels.
1850 1851 The ``basic`` style just uses 'local' and 'other' as the marker label.
1851 1852 One of ``basic`` or ``detailed``.
1852 1853 (default: ``basic``)
1853 1854
1854 1855 ``mergemarkertemplate``
1855 1856 The template used to print the commit description next to each conflict
1856 1857 marker during merge conflicts. See :hg:`help templates` for the template
1857 1858 format.
1858 1859
1859 1860 Defaults to showing the hash, tags, branches, bookmarks, author, and
1860 1861 the first line of the commit description.
1861 1862
1862 1863 If you use non-ASCII characters in names for tags, branches, bookmarks,
1863 1864 authors, and/or commit descriptions, you must pay attention to encodings of
1864 1865 managed files. At template expansion, non-ASCII characters use the encoding
1865 1866 specified by the ``--encoding`` global option, ``HGENCODING`` or other
1866 1867 environment variables that govern your locale. If the encoding of the merge
1867 1868 markers is different from the encoding of the merged files,
1868 1869 serious problems may occur.
1869 1870
1870 1871 ``origbackuppath``
1871 1872 The path to a directory used to store generated .orig files. If the path is
1872 1873 not a directory, one will be created.
1873 1874
1874 1875 ``patch``
1875 1876 An optional external tool that ``hg import`` and some extensions
1876 1877 will use for applying patches. By default Mercurial uses an
1877 1878 internal patch utility. The external tool must work as the common
1878 1879 Unix ``patch`` program. In particular, it must accept a ``-p``
1879 1880 argument to strip patch headers, a ``-d`` argument to specify the
1880 1881 current directory, a file name to patch, and a patch file to take
1881 1882 from stdin.
1882 1883
1883 1884 It is possible to specify a patch tool together with extra
1884 1885 arguments. For example, setting this option to ``patch --merge``
1885 1886 will use the ``patch`` program with its 2-way merge option.
1886 1887
1887 1888 ``portablefilenames``
1888 1889 Check for portable filenames. Can be ``warn``, ``ignore`` or ``abort``.
1889 1890 (default: ``warn``)
1890 1891
1891 1892 ``warn``
1892 1893 Print a warning message on POSIX platforms, if a file with a non-portable
1893 1894 filename is added (e.g. a file with a name that can't be created on
1894 1895 Windows because it contains reserved parts like ``AUX``, reserved
1895 1896 characters like ``:``, or would cause a case collision with an existing
1896 1897 file).
1897 1898
1898 1899 ``ignore``
1899 1900 Don't print a warning.
1900 1901
1901 1902 ``abort``
1902 1903 The command is aborted.
1903 1904
1904 1905 ``true``
1905 1906 Alias for ``warn``.
1906 1907
1907 1908 ``false``
1908 1909 Alias for ``ignore``.
1909 1910
1910 1911 .. container:: windows
1911 1912
1912 1913 On Windows, this configuration option is ignored and the command aborted.
1913 1914
1914 1915 ``quiet``
1915 1916 Reduce the amount of output printed.
1916 1917 (default: False)
1917 1918
1918 1919 ``remotecmd``
1919 1920 Remote command to use for clone/push/pull operations.
1920 1921 (default: ``hg``)
1921 1922
1922 1923 ``report_untrusted``
1923 1924 Warn if a ``.hg/hgrc`` file is ignored due to not being owned by a
1924 1925 trusted user or group.
1925 1926 (default: True)
1926 1927
1927 1928 ``slash``
1928 1929 Display paths using a slash (``/``) as the path separator. This
1929 1930 only makes a difference on systems where the default path
1930 1931 separator is not the slash character (e.g. Windows uses the
1931 1932 backslash character (``\``)).
1932 1933 (default: False)
1933 1934
1934 1935 ``statuscopies``
1935 1936 Display copies in the status command.
1936 1937
1937 1938 ``ssh``
1938 1939 Command to use for SSH connections. (default: ``ssh``)
1939 1940
1940 1941 ``strict``
1941 1942 Require exact command names, instead of allowing unambiguous
1942 1943 abbreviations. (default: False)
1943 1944
1944 1945 ``style``
1945 1946 Name of style to use for command output.
1946 1947
1947 1948 ``supportcontact``
1948 1949 A URL where users should report a Mercurial traceback. Use this if you are a
1949 1950 large organisation with its own Mercurial deployment process and crash
1950 1951 reports should be addressed to your internal support.
1951 1952
1952 1953 ``textwidth``
1953 1954 Maximum width of help text. A longer line generated by ``hg help`` or
1954 1955 ``hg subcommand --help`` will be broken after white space to get this
1955 1956 width or the terminal width, whichever comes first.
1956 1957 A non-positive value will disable this and the terminal width will be
1957 1958 used. (default: 78)
1958 1959
1959 1960 ``timeout``
1960 1961 The timeout used when a lock is held (in seconds), a negative value
1961 1962 means no timeout. (default: 600)
1962 1963
1963 1964 ``traceback``
1964 1965 Mercurial always prints a traceback when an unknown exception
1965 1966 occurs. Setting this to True will make Mercurial print a traceback
1966 1967 on all exceptions, even those recognized by Mercurial (such as
1967 1968 IOError or MemoryError). (default: False)
1968 1969
1969 1970 ``username``
1970 1971 The committer of a changeset created when running "commit".
1971 1972 Typically a person's name and email address, e.g. ``Fred Widget
1972 1973 <fred@example.com>``. Environment variables in the
1973 1974 username are expanded.
1974 1975
1975 1976 (default: ``$EMAIL`` or ``username@hostname``. If the username in
1976 1977 hgrc is empty, e.g. if the system admin set ``username =`` in the
1977 1978 system hgrc, it has to be specified manually or in a different
1978 1979 hgrc file)
1979 1980
1980 1981 ``verbose``
1981 1982 Increase the amount of output printed. (default: False)
1982 1983
1983 1984
1984 1985 ``web``
1985 1986 -------
1986 1987
1987 1988 Web interface configuration. The settings in this section apply to
1988 1989 both the builtin webserver (started by :hg:`serve`) and the script you
1989 1990 run through a webserver (``hgweb.cgi`` and the derivatives for FastCGI
1990 1991 and WSGI).
1991 1992
1992 1993 The Mercurial webserver does no authentication (it does not prompt for
1993 1994 usernames and passwords to validate *who* users are), but it does do
1994 1995 authorization (it grants or denies access for *authenticated users*
1995 1996 based on settings in this section). You must either configure your
1996 1997 webserver to do authentication for you, or disable the authorization
1997 1998 checks.
1998 1999
1999 2000 For a quick setup in a trusted environment, e.g., a private LAN, where
2000 2001 you want it to accept pushes from anybody, you can use the following
2001 2002 command line::
2002 2003
2003 2004 $ hg --config web.allow_push=* --config web.push_ssl=False serve
2004 2005
2005 2006 Note that this will allow anybody to push anything to the server and
2006 2007 that this should not be used for public servers.
2007 2008
2008 2009 The full set of options is:
2009 2010
2010 2011 ``accesslog``
2011 2012 Where to output the access log. (default: stdout)
2012 2013
2013 2014 ``address``
2014 2015 Interface address to bind to. (default: all)
2015 2016
2016 2017 ``allow_archive``
2017 2018 List of archive format (bz2, gz, zip) allowed for downloading.
2018 2019 (default: empty)
2019 2020
2020 2021 ``allowbz2``
2021 2022 (DEPRECATED) Whether to allow .tar.bz2 downloading of repository
2022 2023 revisions.
2023 2024 (default: False)
2024 2025
2025 2026 ``allowgz``
2026 2027 (DEPRECATED) Whether to allow .tar.gz downloading of repository
2027 2028 revisions.
2028 2029 (default: False)
2029 2030
2030 2031 ``allowpull``
2031 2032 Whether to allow pulling from the repository. (default: True)
2032 2033
2033 2034 ``allow_push``
2034 2035 Whether to allow pushing to the repository. If empty or not set,
2035 2036 pushing is not allowed. If the special value ``*``, any remote
2036 2037 user can push, including unauthenticated users. Otherwise, the
2037 2038 remote user must have been authenticated, and the authenticated
2038 2039 user name must be present in this list. The contents of the
2039 2040 allow_push list are examined after the deny_push list.
2040 2041
2041 2042 ``allow_read``
2042 2043 If the user has not already been denied repository access due to
2043 2044 the contents of deny_read, this list determines whether to grant
2044 2045 repository access to the user. If this list is not empty, and the
2045 2046 user is unauthenticated or not present in the list, then access is
2046 2047 denied for the user. If the list is empty or not set, then access
2047 2048 is permitted to all users by default. Setting allow_read to the
2048 2049 special value ``*`` is equivalent to it not being set (i.e. access
2049 2050 is permitted to all users). The contents of the allow_read list are
2050 2051 examined after the deny_read list.
2051 2052
2052 2053 ``allowzip``
2053 2054 (DEPRECATED) Whether to allow .zip downloading of repository
2054 2055 revisions. This feature creates temporary files.
2055 2056 (default: False)
2056 2057
2057 2058 ``archivesubrepos``
2058 2059 Whether to recurse into subrepositories when archiving.
2059 2060 (default: False)
2060 2061
2061 2062 ``baseurl``
2062 2063 Base URL to use when publishing URLs in other locations, so
2063 2064 third-party tools like email notification hooks can construct
2064 2065 URLs. Example: ``http://hgserver/repos/``.
2065 2066
2066 2067 ``cacerts``
2067 2068 Path to file containing a list of PEM encoded certificate
2068 2069 authority certificates. Environment variables and ``~user``
2069 2070 constructs are expanded in the filename. If specified on the
2070 2071 client, then it will verify the identity of remote HTTPS servers
2071 2072 with these certificates.
2072 2073
2073 2074 To disable SSL verification temporarily, specify ``--insecure`` from
2074 2075 command line.
2075 2076
2076 2077 You can use OpenSSL's CA certificate file if your platform has
2077 2078 one. On most Linux systems this will be
2078 2079 ``/etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt``. Otherwise you will have to
2079 2080 generate this file manually. The form must be as follows::
2080 2081
2081 2082 -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
2082 2083 ... (certificate in base64 PEM encoding) ...
2083 2084 -----END CERTIFICATE-----
2084 2085 -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
2085 2086 ... (certificate in base64 PEM encoding) ...
2086 2087 -----END CERTIFICATE-----
2087 2088
2088 2089 ``cache``
2089 2090 Whether to support caching in hgweb. (default: True)
2090 2091
2091 2092 ``certificate``
2092 2093 Certificate to use when running :hg:`serve`.
2093 2094
2094 2095 ``collapse``
2095 2096 With ``descend`` enabled, repositories in subdirectories are shown at
2096 2097 a single level alongside repositories in the current path. With
2097 2098 ``collapse`` also enabled, repositories residing at a deeper level than
2098 2099 the current path are grouped behind navigable directory entries that
2099 2100 lead to the locations of these repositories. In effect, this setting
2100 2101 collapses each collection of repositories found within a subdirectory
2101 2102 into a single entry for that subdirectory. (default: False)
2102 2103
2103 2104 ``comparisoncontext``
2104 2105 Number of lines of context to show in side-by-side file comparison. If
2105 2106 negative or the value ``full``, whole files are shown. (default: 5)
2106 2107
2107 2108 This setting can be overridden by a ``context`` request parameter to the
2108 2109 ``comparison`` command, taking the same values.
2109 2110
2110 2111 ``contact``
2111 2112 Name or email address of the person in charge of the repository.
2112 2113 (default: ui.username or ``$EMAIL`` or "unknown" if unset or empty)
2113 2114
2114 2115 ``csp``
2115 2116 Send a ``Content-Security-Policy`` HTTP header with this value.
2116 2117
2117 2118 The value may contain a special string ``%nonce%``, which will be replaced
2118 2119 by a randomly-generated one-time use value. If the value contains
2119 2120 ``%nonce%``, ``web.cache`` will be disabled, as caching undermines the
2120 2121 one-time property of the nonce. This nonce will also be inserted into
2121 2122 ``<script>`` elements containing inline JavaScript.
2122 2123
2123 2124 Note: lots of HTML content sent by the server is derived from repository
2124 2125 data. Please consider the potential for malicious repository data to
2125 2126 "inject" itself into generated HTML content as part of your security
2126 2127 threat model.
2127 2128
2128 2129 ``deny_push``
2129 2130 Whether to deny pushing to the repository. If empty or not set,
2130 2131 push is not denied. If the special value ``*``, all remote users are
2131 2132 denied push. Otherwise, unauthenticated users are all denied, and
2132 2133 any authenticated user name present in this list is also denied. The
2133 2134 contents of the deny_push list are examined before the allow_push list.
2134 2135
2135 2136 ``deny_read``
2136 2137 Whether to deny reading/viewing of the repository. If this list is
2137 2138 not empty, unauthenticated users are all denied, and any
2138 2139 authenticated user name present in this list is also denied access to
2139 2140 the repository. If set to the special value ``*``, all remote users
2140 2141 are denied access (rarely needed ;). If deny_read is empty or not set,
2141 2142 the determination of repository access depends on the presence and
2142 2143 content of the allow_read list (see description). If both
2143 2144 deny_read and allow_read are empty or not set, then access is
2144 2145 permitted to all users by default. If the repository is being
2145 2146 served via hgwebdir, denied users will not be able to see it in
2146 2147 the list of repositories. The contents of the deny_read list have
2147 2148 priority over (are examined before) the contents of the allow_read
2148 2149 list.
2149 2150
2150 2151 ``descend``
2151 2152 hgwebdir indexes will not descend into subdirectories. Only repositories
2152 2153 directly in the current path will be shown (other repositories are still
2153 2154 available from the index corresponding to their containing path).
2154 2155
2155 2156 ``description``
2156 2157 Textual description of the repository's purpose or contents.
2157 2158 (default: "unknown")
2158 2159
2159 2160 ``encoding``
2160 2161 Character encoding name. (default: the current locale charset)
2161 2162 Example: "UTF-8".
2162 2163
2163 2164 ``errorlog``
2164 2165 Where to output the error log. (default: stderr)
2165 2166
2166 2167 ``guessmime``
2167 2168 Control MIME types for raw download of file content.
2168 2169 Set to True to let hgweb guess the content type from the file
2169 2170 extension. This will serve HTML files as ``text/html`` and might
2170 2171 allow cross-site scripting attacks when serving untrusted
2171 2172 repositories. (default: False)
2172 2173
2173 2174 ``hidden``
2174 2175 Whether to hide the repository in the hgwebdir index.
2175 2176 (default: False)
2176 2177
2177 2178 ``ipv6``
2178 2179 Whether to use IPv6. (default: False)
2179 2180
2180 2181 ``labels``
2181 2182 List of string *labels* associated with the repository.
2182 2183
2183 2184 Labels are exposed as a template keyword and can be used to customize
2184 2185 output. e.g. the ``index`` template can group or filter repositories
2185 2186 by labels and the ``summary`` template can display additional content
2186 2187 if a specific label is present.
2187 2188
2188 2189 ``logoimg``
2189 2190 File name of the logo image that some templates display on each page.
2190 2191 The file name is relative to ``staticurl``. That is, the full path to
2191 2192 the logo image is "staticurl/logoimg".
2192 2193 If unset, ``hglogo.png`` will be used.
2193 2194
2194 2195 ``logourl``
2195 2196 Base URL to use for logos. If unset, ``https://mercurial-scm.org/``
2196 2197 will be used.
2197 2198
2198 2199 ``maxchanges``
2199 2200 Maximum number of changes to list on the changelog. (default: 10)
2200 2201
2201 2202 ``maxfiles``
2202 2203 Maximum number of files to list per changeset. (default: 10)
2203 2204
2204 2205 ``maxshortchanges``
2205 2206 Maximum number of changes to list on the shortlog, graph or filelog
2206 2207 pages. (default: 60)
2207 2208
2208 2209 ``name``
2209 2210 Repository name to use in the web interface.
2210 2211 (default: current working directory)
2211 2212
2212 2213 ``port``
2213 2214 Port to listen on. (default: 8000)
2214 2215
2215 2216 ``prefix``
2216 2217 Prefix path to serve from. (default: '' (server root))
2217 2218
2218 2219 ``push_ssl``
2219 2220 Whether to require that inbound pushes be transported over SSL to
2220 2221 prevent password sniffing. (default: True)
2221 2222
2222 2223 ``refreshinterval``
2223 2224 How frequently directory listings re-scan the filesystem for new
2224 2225 repositories, in seconds. This is relevant when wildcards are used
2225 2226 to define paths. Depending on how much filesystem traversal is
2226 2227 required, refreshing may negatively impact performance.
2227 2228
2228 2229 Values less than or equal to 0 always refresh.
2229 2230 (default: 20)
2230 2231
2231 2232 ``staticurl``
2232 2233 Base URL to use for static files. If unset, static files (e.g. the
2233 2234 hgicon.png favicon) will be served by the CGI script itself. Use
2234 2235 this setting to serve them directly with the HTTP server.
2235 2236 Example: ``http://hgserver/static/``.
2236 2237
2237 2238 ``stripes``
2238 2239 How many lines a "zebra stripe" should span in multi-line output.
2239 2240 Set to 0 to disable. (default: 1)
2240 2241
2241 2242 ``style``
2242 2243 Which template map style to use. The available options are the names of
2243 2244 subdirectories in the HTML templates path. (default: ``paper``)
2244 2245 Example: ``monoblue``.
2245 2246
2246 2247 ``templates``
2247 2248 Where to find the HTML templates. The default path to the HTML templates
2248 2249 can be obtained from ``hg debuginstall``.
2249 2250
2250 2251 ``websub``
2251 2252 ----------
2252 2253
2253 2254 Web substitution filter definition. You can use this section to
2254 2255 define a set of regular expression substitution patterns which
2255 2256 let you automatically modify the hgweb server output.
2256 2257
2257 2258 The default hgweb templates only apply these substitution patterns
2258 2259 on the revision description fields. You can apply them anywhere
2259 2260 you want when you create your own templates by adding calls to the
2260 2261 "websub" filter (usually after calling the "escape" filter).
2261 2262
2262 2263 This can be used, for example, to convert issue references to links
2263 2264 to your issue tracker, or to convert "markdown-like" syntax into
2264 2265 HTML (see the examples below).
2265 2266
2266 2267 Each entry in this section names a substitution filter.
2267 2268 The value of each entry defines the substitution expression itself.
2268 2269 The websub expressions follow the old interhg extension syntax,
2269 2270 which in turn imitates the Unix sed replacement syntax::
2270 2271
2271 2272 patternname = s/SEARCH_REGEX/REPLACE_EXPRESSION/[i]
2272 2273
2273 2274 You can use any separator other than "/". The final "i" is optional
2274 2275 and indicates that the search must be case insensitive.
2275 2276
2276 2277 Examples::
2277 2278
2278 2279 [websub]
2279 2280 issues = s|issue(\d+)|<a href="http://bts.example.org/issue\1">issue\1</a>|i
2280 2281 italic = s/\b_(\S+)_\b/<i>\1<\/i>/
2281 2282 bold = s/\*\b(\S+)\b\*/<b>\1<\/b>/
2282 2283
2283 2284 ``worker``
2284 2285 ----------
2285 2286
2286 2287 Parallel master/worker configuration. We currently perform working
2287 2288 directory updates in parallel on Unix-like systems, which greatly
2288 2289 helps performance.
2289 2290
2290 2291 ``numcpus``
2291 2292 Number of CPUs to use for parallel operations. A zero or
2292 2293 negative value is treated as ``use the default``.
2293 2294 (default: 4 or the number of CPUs on the system, whichever is larger)
2294 2295
2295 2296 ``backgroundclose``
2296 2297 Whether to enable closing file handles on background threads during certain
2297 2298 operations. Some platforms aren't very efficient at closing file
2298 2299 handles that have been written or appended to. By performing file closing
2299 2300 on background threads, file write rate can increase substantially.
2300 2301 (default: true on Windows, false elsewhere)
2301 2302
2302 2303 ``backgroundcloseminfilecount``
2303 2304 Minimum number of files required to trigger background file closing.
2304 2305 Operations not writing this many files won't start background close
2305 2306 threads.
2306 2307 (default: 2048)
2307 2308
2308 2309 ``backgroundclosemaxqueue``
2309 2310 The maximum number of opened file handles waiting to be closed in the
2310 2311 background. This option only has an effect if ``backgroundclose`` is
2311 2312 enabled.
2312 2313 (default: 384)
2313 2314
2314 2315 ``backgroundclosethreadcount``
2315 2316 Number of threads to process background file closes. Only relevant if
2316 2317 ``backgroundclose`` is enabled.
2317 2318 (default: 4)
@@ -1,72 +1,79 b''
1 1 from __future__ import absolute_import
2 2
3 3 import array
4 4 import errno
5 5 import fcntl
6 6 import os
7 7 import sys
8 8
9 9 from . import (
10 10 encoding,
11 11 osutil,
12 12 pycompat,
13 13 )
14 14
15 15 def _rcfiles(path):
16 16 rcs = [os.path.join(path, 'hgrc')]
17 17 rcdir = os.path.join(path, 'hgrc.d')
18 18 try:
19 19 rcs.extend([os.path.join(rcdir, f)
20 20 for f, kind in osutil.listdir(rcdir)
21 21 if f.endswith(".rc")])
22 22 except OSError:
23 23 pass
24 24 return rcs
25 25
26 26 def systemrcpath():
27 27 path = []
28 28 if pycompat.sysplatform == 'plan9':
29 29 root = 'lib/mercurial'
30 30 else:
31 31 root = 'etc/mercurial'
32 32 # old mod_python does not set sys.argv
33 33 if len(getattr(sys, 'argv', [])) > 0:
34 34 p = os.path.dirname(os.path.dirname(pycompat.sysargv[0]))
35 35 if p != '/':
36 36 path.extend(_rcfiles(os.path.join(p, root)))
37 37 path.extend(_rcfiles('/' + root))
38 38 return path
39 39
40 40 def userrcpath():
41 41 if pycompat.sysplatform == 'plan9':
42 42 return [encoding.environ['home'] + '/lib/hgrc']
43 elif pycompat.sysplatform == 'darwin':
44 return [os.path.expanduser('~/.hgrc')]
43 45 else:
44 return [os.path.expanduser('~/.hgrc')]
46 confighome = encoding.environ.get('XDG_CONFIG_HOME')
47 if confighome is None or not os.path.isabs(confighome):
48 confighome = os.path.expanduser('~/.config')
49
50 return [os.path.expanduser('~/.hgrc'),
51 os.path.join(confighome, 'hg', 'hgrc')]
45 52
46 53 def termsize(ui):
47 54 try:
48 55 import termios
49 56 TIOCGWINSZ = termios.TIOCGWINSZ # unavailable on IRIX (issue3449)
50 57 except (AttributeError, ImportError):
51 58 return 80, 24
52 59
53 60 for dev in (ui.ferr, ui.fout, ui.fin):
54 61 try:
55 62 try:
56 63 fd = dev.fileno()
57 64 except AttributeError:
58 65 continue
59 66 if not os.isatty(fd):
60 67 continue
61 68 arri = fcntl.ioctl(fd, TIOCGWINSZ, '\0' * 8)
62 69 height, width = array.array('h', arri)[:2]
63 70 if width > 0 and height > 0:
64 71 return width, height
65 72 except ValueError:
66 73 pass
67 74 except IOError as e:
68 75 if e[0] == errno.EINVAL:
69 76 pass
70 77 else:
71 78 raise
72 79 return 80, 24
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