First of all, I would separate the engine and the game in two repository. It helps if you want to use the modified engine elsewhere, if you want to contribute back to the original project, if you want to put someone on the engine but not on the game(s),... And to bring them back together, simply use the subrepo
feature.
Now in the field of the game engine modifications, as long as there is no conflicting change, you simply have to pull
, merge
then commit
.
Let's hypothesis a scenario:
1----2----4----5---------8----A----B <---- your changes
\ / / /
---3-------6----7----9----/ <---- original changes
One day you begin to use the engine (1). The engine is updated (2) but it is ok for you and you use it like that. In fact no, you have to change something (4), in the same time, changed are made on the original one (3). No problem, just fetch them (5) pull->merge->commit
. Oh, they made a change (6) and another one (7). OK, let's include them (8) pull->merge->commit
. And so on, they made changes (9), you make changes (A) and you merge them (B).
One unnatural thing to remember when switching from centralized to distributed version control is that branching and merging is a normal (and lightweight) process, not an exceptional one. Some people merge hundreds of time per day.
For more understanding try to search for "mercurial workflow" (here I exposed a minimal one) and read the excellent book Mercurial: The Definitive Guide by Bryan O'Sullivan
Follow up about comments
Consider a minimal project like this one:
mygame/
├── .hg/
├── .hgsub
├── lib/
│ └── engine/
│ ├── enginefile.cpp
│ └── .hg/
├── mygame.proj
└── src/
└── mygamefile.cpp
And now your comments:
Also, I would like to be able to work
on all my game's content in the same
repository[...]
If I understand well, in fact, you want to "be able to work on all [your] game's content in the same [project]". Correct me if I made a false guess.
Here, the two directories containing a .hg
subdirectory are separate repositories (mygame
and engine
). But you can nest them without making separated projects in your IDE. So two nested repositories, but only one project. In your build configuration (Makefile
s, solutions, ...), you can even make references from mygame
to engine
as the engine
sub-repository is always present (typically to use headers from the engine in your game).
[...] would it be possible to get it
slightly more specific? Example
commands, repositories, paths, etc?
- For the paths, look at the second figure.
- To update the engine, in the
engine
directory (cd lib/engine
): hg pull
, hg merge
, hg commit -m "merge new original with my modifications"
, cd ..
, hg commit -m "updated to new engine version"
, now you have the new version with your changes included.
- For other basic use, it looks like other version control system. In your case, this article could be useful to map perforce to mercurial commands.