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shelve: use rebase instead of merge (issue4068)...
shelve: use rebase instead of merge (issue4068) Previously, shelve used merge to unshelve things. This meant that if you shelved changes on one branch, then unshelved on another, all the changes from the first branch would be present in the second branch, and not just the shelved changes. The fix is to use rebase to pick the shelve commit off the original branch and place it on top of the new branch. This means only the shelved changes are brought across. This has the side effect of fixing several other issues in shelve: - you can now unshelve into a file that already has pending changes - unshelve a mv/cp now has the correct dirstate value (A instead of M) - you can now unshelve to an ancestor of the shelve - unshelve now no longer deletes untracked .orig files Updates tests and adds a new one to cover the issue. The test changes fall into a few categories: - I removed some excess output - The --continue/--abort state is a little different, so the parents and dirstate needed updating - Removed some untracked files at certain points that cluttered the output

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r17424:e7cfe358 default
r19961:1d7a36ff stable
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hgweb.txt
50 lines | 1.9 KiB | text/plain | TextLexer
Mercurial's internal web server, hgweb, can serve either a single
repository, or a tree of repositories. In the second case, repository
paths and global options can be defined using a dedicated
configuration file common to :hg:`serve`, ``hgweb.wsgi``,
``hgweb.cgi`` and ``hgweb.fcgi``.
This file uses the same syntax as other Mercurial configuration files
but recognizes only the following sections:
- web
- paths
- collections
The ``web`` options are thoroughly described in :hg:`help config`.
The ``paths`` section maps URL paths to paths of repositories in the
filesystem. hgweb will not expose the filesystem directly - only
Mercurial repositories can be published and only according to the
configuration.
The left hand side is the path in the URL. Note that hgweb reserves
subpaths like ``rev`` or ``file``, try using different names for
nested repositories to avoid confusing effects.
The right hand side is the path in the filesystem. If the specified
path ends with ``*`` or ``**`` the filesystem will be searched
recursively for repositories below that point.
With ``*`` it will not recurse into the repositories it finds (except for
``.hg/patches``).
With ``**`` it will also search inside repository working directories
and possibly find subrepositories.
In this example::
[paths]
/projects/a = /srv/tmprepos/a
/projects/b = c:/repos/b
/ = /srv/repos/*
/user/bob = /home/bob/repos/**
- The first two entries make two repositories in different directories
appear under the same directory in the web interface
- The third entry will publish every Mercurial repository found in
``/srv/repos/``, for instance the repository ``/srv/repos/quux/``
will appear as ``http://server/quux/``
- The fourth entry will publish both ``http://server/user/bob/quux/``
and ``http://server/user/bob/quux/testsubrepo/``
The ``collections`` section is deprecated and has been superseded by
``paths``.