Mercurial move changes to a new branch
For those inclined to use GUI
- Go to
Tortoise Hg
->File
->Settings
then tickrebase
.
Restart tortoise UI
Create new branch where you will be moving changes. Click on current branch name -> choose
Open a new named branch
-> choose branch name.
- If changes you want to move have not been made
public
(e.gdraft
) go to 5. (If changes have already been published and you are not a senior dev you should talk to someone senior (get a scapegoat) as you might screw things up big time, I don't take any responsibility :) ).
Go to View
-> Show Console
(or Ctrl + L)
then write in console hg phase -f -d 2
- where 2 is lowest revision you will be moving to new branch.
Go to branch and revision (should be topmost revision if you are moving changes to new branch created in step 3.)
Right Mouse
->Update
Go to branch and revsion you will be moving changes from
Right Mouse
->Modify History
->Rebase
Click
Rebase
and pray there are no conflicts, merge if you must.Push changes, at this point all revisions should still be
draft
.Go to topmost revision in branch you were moving changes to
Right Mouse
->Change Phase to
->Public
.
Hope this saves you some time.
You can use the MqExtension. Let's say the changesets to move are revisions 1-3:
hg qimport -r 1:3 # convert revisions to patches
hg qpop -a # remove all them from history
hg branch new # start a new branch
hg qpush -a # push them all back into history
hg qfin -a # finalize the patches
I prefer the patch solution describe here by Mark Tolonen
What I have:
hg log -G
#default branch
@ changeset: 3:cb292fcdbde1
|
o changeset: 2:e746dceba503
|
o changeset: 1:2d50c7ab6b8f
|
o changeset: 0:c22be856358b
What I want:
@ changeset: 3:0e85ae268e35
| branch: feature/my_feature
|
o changeset: 2:1450cb9ec349
| branch: feature/my_feature
|
o changeset: 1:7b9836f25f28
| branch: feature/my_feature
|
/
|
o changeset: 0:c22be856358b
mercurials commands:
hg export -o feature.diff 1 2 3
hg update 0
hg branch feature/my_feature
hg import feature.diff
Here is the state of my local repository
@ changeset: 6:0e85ae268e35
| branch: feature/my_feature
|
o changeset: 5:1450cb9ec349
| branch: feature/my_feature
|
o changeset: 4:7b9836f25f28
| branch: feature/my_feature
|
| o changeset: 3:cb292fcdbde1
| |
| o changeset: 2:e746dceba503
| |
| o changeset: 1:2d50c7ab6b8f
|/
|
o changeset: 0:c22be856358b
Now I need to delete the revisions 1 2 and 3 from my default branch.
You can do this with strip command from mq's extension.
hg strip
removes the changeset and all its descendants from the repository.
Enable the extension by adding following lines to your configuration file (.hgrc or Mercurial.ini):
vim ~/.hgrc
and add :
[extensions]
mq =
And now strip this repository on revision 1.
hg strip 1
and here we are
@ changeset: 3:0e85ae268e35
| branch: feature/my_feature
|
o changeset: 2:1450cb9ec349
| branch: feature/my_feature
|
o changeset: 1:7b9836f25f28
| branch: feature/my_feature
|
o changeset: 0:c22be856358b
note: changesets are different but revisions are the same
As suggested by Mark, the MqExtension is one solution for you problem. IMHO a simpler workflow is to use the rebase extension. Suppose you have a history like this:
@ changeset: 2:81b92083cb1d
| tag: tip
| summary: my new feature: edit file a
|
o changeset: 1:8bdc4508ac7b
| summary: my new feature: add file b
|
o changeset: 0:d554afd54164
summary: initial
This means, revision 0
is the base on which you started to work on your feature. Now you want to have revisions 1-2
on a named branch, let's say my-feature
. Update to revision 0
and create that branch:
$ hg up 0
$ hg branch my-feature
$ hg ci -m "start new branch my-feature"
The history now looks like this:
@ changeset: 3:b5939750b911
| branch: my-feature
| tag: tip
| parent: 0:d554afd54164
| summary: start new branch my-feature
|
| o changeset: 2:81b92083cb1d
| | summary: my new feature: edit file a
| |
| o changeset: 1:8bdc4508ac7b
|/ summary: my new feature: add file b
|
o changeset: 0:d554afd54164
summary: initial
Use the rebase
command to move revisions 1-2
onto revision 3
:
$ hg rebase -s 1 -d 3
This results in the following graph:
@ changeset: 3:88a90f9bbde7
| branch: my-feature
| tag: tip
| summary: my new feature: edit file a
|
o changeset: 2:38f5adf2cf4b
| branch: my-feature
| summary: my new feature: add file b
|
o changeset: 1:b5939750b911
| branch: my-feature
| summary: start new branch my-feature
|
o changeset: 0:d554afd54164
summary: initial
That's it .. as mentioned in the comments to Mark's answer, moving around already pushed changesets generally is a bad idea, unless you work in a small team where you are able to communicate and enforce your history manipulation.