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I'm trying to figure out why Mercurial thinks I'm trying to create a new remote branch in this situation:

alt text http://a.yfrog.com/img716/8421/9vz.png

Is it just trying to inform me that the branch will show up in the meta-data as a closed branch?

I'm on Mercurial v1.6.1023

Edit: the only branch on the remote repository is named "default"

3 Answers 3

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By default hg push is going to push all changesets in your local repository that are not in the remote repository. If you have some changes on a local branch (Environment_Switching in your case) -- even a closed branch -- they'll go too unless you explicitly exclude them using hg push -b default (assuming you haven't merged that branch back onto default).

To answer your question, it's just a warning that you're creating a new remote branch.

EDIT: hg push -r default and hg push -b default are equivalent. From the output for hg help revs:

Mercurial supports several ways to specify individual revisions. ...text removed for brevity... A branch name denotes the tipmost revision of that branch.

Pushing the tipmost revision of a branch will also push its ancestors, which are the rest of the changesets on the branch.

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  • Your explanation does clarify what the message is telling me. However, I did try "hg push -b default" and I still got the message that I was going to push new branch(es). I did not try @Ry4an's suggestion of "hg push -r default", but I'm guessing they are equivalent.
    – Steve Horn
    Aug 13, 2010 at 12:07
  • It sounds like you merged the Environment_Switching branch back onto default already. In that case, you're either going to have to (a) push that branch to the remote repository (use the --new-branch option to hg push), or (b) use a combination of hg clone, hg export and hg import to create a local repository without the changes, then push from there, or (c) do some trickery with the Transplant extension to move the changes onto default before pushing.
    – Niall C.
    Aug 13, 2010 at 13:35
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Yes, even your closed branches are pushed when you do a hg push. If you want to push just default you can do a hg push -r default that then you won't see that message.

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EDIT: Misunderstood the question. The following is how you get multiple heads in one branch.


Normally a new head is created if you have a different base than the remote.
I've seen this in the following workflow:
R1 User A commits and pushes
R1 User B pulls
R2 User A commits and pushes
R? User B commits and pushes

Mercurial will decide that the push of User B is based on R1, while the server is on R2, so it will accept the changes of User B only on a different branch.
To prevent this, commit the changes of User B locally, then perform a hg pull, followed by a hg merge and merge your changes with the remote changes. Than you can push your changes to the remote server.

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  • 1
    What you describe are different heads on one branch.
    – Rudi
    Aug 13, 2010 at 8:25

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