My initial situation is similar to the one in this question. Coming from a strong Git background, I wanted to force-push a cleaned-up version of my private branch (under the same name) where I've squashed / folded some commits (using the histedit extension). What I did again is similar to this answer, but I did things in a different order:
$ hg clone -b private_branch <url>
$ hg histedit -r <some_rev> # Fold some commits
$ hg push -f # This creates a second branch head on the server
$ hg update -r <rev_of_original_branch_head>
$ hg commit --close-branch -m 'Closing this branch in favor of a cleaned-up version'
$ hg push
The thing I don't understand is, if I now set up a new working tree, I get
$ hg clone -b private_branch <url>
$ hg log -l 1
changeset: <rev>:<sha1>
branch: private_branch
tag: tip
parent: <tip_rev_of_branch_before_folding>:<sha1>
user: <name> <email>
date: Wed Aug 08 11:48:25 2012 +0200
summary: Closing this branch in favor of a cleaned-up version
Why is tip
pointing to the closed branch? hg heads
is only showing my force-pushed head as expected. However, hg heads -t
is showing both heads for private_branch
. I've also verified that my closing commit is indeed a closing one, hg log --debug
shows extra: close=1
.
EDIT: The problem with this is, if I do a commit on a fresh clone, I get
$ hg ci -m "test"
created new head
reopening closed branch head <rev>
But I do not want to reopen the closed branch head, I want to commit on top of the open branch head.
How can I fix this, preferably without doing a no-op merge?