40

Is there any way to ignore changes to some files on a commit with mercurial?

I've got a specific situation where we have a default oracle tnsnames.ora file that points to 127.0.0.1, but some developers will modify it to point to other systems, but we don't want to change the default file.

In subversion, I've simple added this to the ignore-on-commit changelist. Is there a way of doing this in mercurial?

4 Answers 4

52

If the files you want to omit from the "hg commit" command are already "tracked", you should use the -X option. The pattern passed to -X is pretty flexible, making it possible to run for example:

% hg stat
A etc/foo.conf
M src/bar.c
M lib/libbar/loader.c
% hg commit -X '**.conf'

to avoid committing any file with a ".conf" extension, regardless of how deep in the source tree it lives. In the workspace shown above this would commit "src/bar.c" and "lib/libbar/loader.c" but not "etc/foo.conf".

To exclude multiple patterns of filenames, use multiple -X options, i.e.:

% hg commit -X '**.conf' -X '**.sh'
8
  • 8
    See "hg help patterns" for information about the "**.conf" style patterns. May 31, 2009 at 8:44
  • Is there any way to make this permanent? I don't want to -X on each commit.
    – Kugel
    Jan 7, 2013 at 10:52
  • @Kugel Doesn't look like it. Mercurial is striking me as a lousy choice for a codebase with like 20 config files that all have user-specific stuff in them. I shouldn't have to write scripts to get version control to work for me rather than against me. And no, the 20 config files wasn't my idea either. I'm guessing that guy also chose Mercurial too. Feb 18, 2013 at 15:50
  • @Kugel: it's possible to create alias for the command with the same name, as described in selenic.com/mercurial/hgrc.5.html#alias thus overriding it. Despite it is said that it's almost always bad idea, this can be the case when it isn't.
    – Andriy K
    Sep 3, 2013 at 17:41
  • 1
    can't you try something in .hgignore?
    – rkm
    Sep 12, 2013 at 9:47
22

Traditionally, this is solved by not versioning the file itself, but by versioning a copy of it as a template for others to use.

So you would hg mv tnsnames.ora tnsnames.ora-template, then commit, then do a straight filesystem copy of tnsnames.ora-template to tnsnames.ora, and add tnsnames.ora to the .hgignore file.

Subsequent changes to the template will still get pushed out, but they won't actually change the working environment unless someone copies the template to the actual file.

2
  • 1
    So if you have app.config and you rename it to app.config-template there will no longer be an app.config in the repository. This will cause problems with an automated build. I presume the build process needs to be informed of this 'template' and rename it back. This isn't so great.
    – AndyM
    Jun 29, 2011 at 0:00
  • 2
    You don't want to rename, you want to copy and modify. You can either do that from your autobuild scripts or you can do it from a hook, but either way if you have files that are going to be different from clone to clone there is going to have to be some intelligence applied somewhere.
    – Zed
    Jul 7, 2011 at 23:32
1

You could alias commit to something like 'hg commit -X excluded_file.ext' I've never used mercurial, so I'm just going by the man page here.

-2

Look for .hgignore file in Mercurial's documentation.

Here is an example ignore file.

       # use glob syntax.
       syntax: glob

       *.elc
       *.pyc
       *~

       # switch to regexp syntax.
       syntax: regexp
       ^\.pc/
1
  • The tnsnames.ora file is already checked in. I want to ignore my local changes because they are for my machine only. This is why .hgignore doesn't work May 19, 2009 at 20:17

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