Suppose we have the following (Visual Studio) projects (simplified):
- base-lib-1
- base-lib-2
- product-1: depending on base-lib-1
- product-2: depending on base-lib-1 and base-lib-2
- product-3: depending on base-lib-1 and base-lib-2 and used as a component in product-2
- product-4: like product-3
I wondered what would be a good way to organize this project structure in one or multiple Mercurial repositories. We currently use Subversion and include the dependent libraries as externals.
Now one way would be to put everything but product-1 in a single repository as all those products are always released together as a single package. I would feel most comfortable with this solution as then I would be pretty sure about how to handle the repository. But how would fit product-1 in this scheme without duplicating base-lib-1?
As an alternative I thought about using sub repositories that would be organized something like this:
- product-package-A
- base-lib-1
- product-1
- product-package-B
- base-lib-1
- base-lib-2
- product-2
- product-3
- product-4
The problem with this approach is that I've never used subrepos so I'm not sure about any pitfalls that would arise with this solution.
For example, do the subrepos behave like SVN externals in that you can decide whether to always use the latest or a fixed revision of each subrepo?
How do subrepos behave if you make changes e.g. in base-lib-1 and product-2 at the same time? Are those handled by Mercurial in the same step or do you have to commit/push and pull/update everything manually? And how would the subrepo of base-lib-1 behave in product-package-A in this case?
How does branching work in this scenario if I want to develop a new feature branch that requires changes in multiple subrepos? Do I have to branch and merge every repository manually or is this handled by Mercurial?
Are there any other pitfalls about using subrepos to organize a large project? What is the preferred way of handling larger projects with many dependencies in Mercurial?