Repository

(for a short intro of the basic concepts of Mercurial, see UnderstandingMercurial)

Strictly speaking, the term repository refers to the directory named .hg (dot hg) in the repository root directory. The repository root directory is the parent directory of the .hg directory. Mercurial stores its internal data structures – the metadata – inside that .hg directory.

All of the files and directories that coexist with the .hg directory in the repository root are said to live in the working directory.

An easy way to remember the distinction is that the repository contains the history of your project, while the working directory contains a snapshot of your project at a particular point in history.

Local Mercurial repositories are adressed by specifying the path to the repository root (global option -R for commands).

Sometimes Mercurial users and developers also use the term "repository" when referring to the repository root. But strictly speaking, the .hg directory is the "real" repository.

1. Creation

Repositories can be cloned with hg clone, which creates a copy of an existing repository. If possible, mercurial uses hardlinks to save space and speedup the cloning (see HardlinkedClones).

An existing, already populated but yet untracked directory can be transformed into a repository with hg init, which creates and initializes the .hg subdirectory.

2. Tracking files

A file in the working directory that shall be tracked by Mercurial must be added with hg add. Local modifications to tracked files in the working directory can be committed with hg commit, which adds a new changeset to the repository by recording it in the .hg directory.

The working directory can be restored with hg update to any previously committed state by specifying the requested changeset with its changeset ID (see Update). Use hg parents to see the currently checked out revision (see Parent).

The last commit in a repository can be undone with hg rollback (see Rollback).

3. Transferring changesets

Changesets can be transferred from one repository to another with hg pull, hg push, hg export and hg import (see Pull, Push, Export, Import, CommunicatingChanges).

4. Checking integrity

Checking the internal integrity of a repository (the contents of .hg) can be done with hg verify.

5. Structure

The .hg directory of a repository contains (incomplete listing):

Note that for small revlogs, the revlog data file (*.d) may be missing, because its content may be interleaved into the corresponding index file (*.i) (see also RevlogNG).

6. Backup

Backing up a repository can be done by using push/pull/clone to a backup repository. A repository which is not actively written to (by other processes concurrently running on the computer) can be backed-up by backing-up the repo directory using normal directory/file backup procedures (like tar, zip, etc). The .hg directory is case folding tolerant, which means, it can for example be copied onto a FAT filesystem (see also BackUp, CaseFoldingPlan).

7. See also


CategoryGlossary