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HGRC(5) Mercurial Manual HGRC(5)
hgrc - configuration files for Mercurial
The Mercurial system uses a set of configuration files to control
aspects of its behavior.
The configuration files use a simple ini-file format. A configuration
file consists of sections, led by a [section] header and followed by
name = value entries:
[ui]
username = Firstname Lastname <firstname.lastname@example.net>
verbose = True
The above entries will be referred to as ui.username and ui.verbose,
respectively. See the Syntax section below.
Mercurial reads configuration data from several files, if they exist.
These files do not exist by default and you will have to create the
appropriate configuration files yourself: global configuration like
the username setting is typically put into
%USERPROFILE%\mercurial.ini or $HOME/.hgrc and local configuration is
put into the per-repository <repo>/.hg/hgrc file.
The names of these files depend on the system on which Mercurial is
installed. *.rc files from a single directory are read in
alphabetical order, later ones overriding earlier ones. Where
multiple paths are given below, settings from earlier paths override
later ones.
(All) <repo>/.hg/hgrc
Per-repository configuration options that only apply in a
particular repository. This file is not version-controlled, and
will not get transferred during a "clone" operation. Options in
this file override options in all other configuration files. On
Plan 9 and Unix, most of this file will be ignored if it doesn't
belong to a trusted user or to a trusted group. See the
documentation for the [trusted] section below for more details.
(Plan 9) $home/lib/hgrc
(Unix) $HOME/.hgrc
(Windows) %USERPROFILE%\.hgrc
(Windows) %USERPROFILE%\Mercurial.ini
(Windows) %HOME%\.hgrc
(Windows) %HOME%\Mercurial.ini
Per-user configuration file(s), for the user running Mercurial. On
Windows 9x, %HOME% is replaced by %APPDATA%. Options in these
files apply to all Mercurial commands executed by this user in any
directory. Options in these files override per-system and
per-installation options.
(Plan 9) /lib/mercurial/hgrc
(Plan 9) /lib/mercurial/hgrc.d/*.rc
(Unix) /etc/mercurial/hgrc
(Unix) /etc/mercurial/hgrc.d/*.rc
Per-system configuration files, for the system on which Mercurial
is running. Options in these files apply to all Mercurial commands
executed by any user in any directory. Options in these files
override per-installation options.
(Plan 9) <install-root>/lib/mercurial/hgrc
(Plan 9) <install-root>/lib/mercurial/hgrc.d/*.rc
(Unix) <install-root>/etc/mercurial/hgrc
(Unix) <install-root>/etc/mercurial/hgrc.d/*.rc
Per-installation configuration files, searched for in the
directory where Mercurial is installed. <install-root> is the
parent directory of the hg executable (or symlink) being run. For
example, if installed in /shared/tools/bin/hg, Mercurial will look
in /shared/tools/etc/mercurial/hgrc. Options in these files apply
to all Mercurial commands executed by any user in any directory.
(Windows) <install-dir>\Mercurial.ini or
(Windows) <install-dir>\hgrc.d\*.rc or
(Windows) HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Mercurial
Per-installation/system configuration files, for the system on
which Mercurial is running. Options in these files apply to all
Mercurial commands executed by any user in any directory. Registry
keys contain PATH-like strings, every part of which must reference
a Mercurial.ini file or be a directory where *.rc files will be
read. Mercurial checks each of these locations in the specified
order until one or more configuration files are detected.
Note The registry key
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Wow6432Node\Mercurial is used when
running 32-bit Python on 64-bit Windows.
A configuration file consists of sections, led by a [section] header
and followed by name = value entries (sometimes called configuration
keys):
[spam]
eggs=ham
green=
eggs
Each line contains one entry. If the lines that follow are indented,
they are treated as continuations of that entry. Leading whitespace
is removed from values. Empty lines are skipped. Lines beginning with
# or ; are ignored and may be used to provide comments.
Configuration keys can be set multiple times, in which case Mercurial
will use the value that was configured last. As an example:
[spam]
eggs=large
ham=serrano
eggs=small
This would set the configuration key named eggs to small.
It is also possible to define a section multiple times. A section can
be redefined on the same and/or on different configuration files. For
example:
[foo]
eggs=large
ham=serrano
eggs=small
[bar]
eggs=ham
green=
eggs
[foo]
ham=prosciutto
eggs=medium
bread=toasted
This would set the eggs, ham, and bread configuration keys of the foo
section to medium, prosciutto, and toasted, respectively. As you can
see there only thing that matters is the last value that was set for
each of the configuration keys.
If a configuration key is set multiple times in different
configuration files the final value will depend on the order in which
the different configuration files are read, with settings from
earlier paths overriding later ones as described on the Files section
above.
A line of the form %include file will include file into the current
configuration file. The inclusion is recursive, which means that
included files can include other files. Filenames are relative to the
configuration file in which the %include directive is found.
Environment variables and ~user constructs are expanded in file. This
lets you do something like:
%include ~/.hgrc.d/$HOST.rc
to include a different configuration file on each computer you use.
A line with %unset name will remove name from the current section, if
it has been set previously.
The values are either free-form text strings, lists of text strings,
or Boolean values. Boolean values can be set to true using any of
"1", "yes", "true", or "on" and to false using "0", "no", "false", or
"off" (all case insensitive).
List values are separated by whitespace or comma, except when values
are placed in double quotation marks:
allow_read = "John Doe, PhD", brian, betty
Quotation marks can be escaped by prefixing them with a backslash.
Only quotation marks at the beginning of a word is counted as a
quotation (e.g., foo"bar baz is the list of foo"bar and baz).
This section describes the different sections that may appear in a
Mercurial configuration file, the purpose of each section, its
possible keys, and their possible values.
alias
Defines command aliases. Aliases allow you to define your own
commands in terms of other commands (or aliases), optionally
including arguments. Positional arguments in the form of $1, $2, etc
in the alias definition are expanded by Mercurial before execution.
Positional arguments not already used by $N in the definition are put
at the end of the command to be executed.
Alias definitions consist of lines of the form:
<alias> = <command> [<argument>]...
For example, this definition:
latest = log --limit 5
creates a new command latest that shows only the five most recent
changesets. You can define subsequent aliases using earlier ones:
stable5 = latest -b stable
Note It is possible to create aliases with the same names as
existing commands, which will then override the original
definitions. This is almost always a bad idea!
An alias can start with an exclamation point (!) to make it a shell
alias. A shell alias is executed with the shell and will let you run
arbitrary commands. As an example,
echo = !echo $@
will let you do hg echo foo to have foo printed in your terminal. A
better example might be:
purge = !$HG status --no-status --unknown -0 | xargs -0 rm
which will make hg purge delete all unknown files in the repository
in the same manner as the purge extension.
Positional arguments like $1, $2, etc. in the alias definition expand
to the command arguments. Unmatched arguments are removed. $0 expands
to the alias name and $@ expands to all arguments separated by a
space. These expansions happen before the command is passed to the
shell.
Shell aliases are executed in an environment where $HG expands to the
path of the Mercurial that was used to execute the alias. This is
useful when you want to call further Mercurial commands in a shell
alias, as was done above for the purge alias. In addition, $HG_ARGS
expands to the arguments given to Mercurial. In the hg echo foo call
above, $HG_ARGS would expand to echo foo.
Note Some global configuration options such as -R are processed
before shell aliases and will thus not be passed to aliases.
annotate
Settings used when displaying file annotations. All values are
Booleans and default to False. See diff section for related options
for the diff command.
ignorews
Ignore white space when comparing lines.
ignorewsamount
Ignore changes in the amount of white space.
ignoreblanklines
Ignore changes whose lines are all blank.
auth
Authentication credentials for HTTP authentication. This section
allows you to store usernames and passwords for use when logging into
HTTP servers. See the [web] configuration section if you want to
configure who can login to your HTTP server.
Each line has the following format:
<name>.<argument> = <value>
where <name> is used to group arguments into authentication entries.
Example:
foo.prefix = hg.intevation.org/mercurial
foo.username = foo
foo.password = bar
foo.schemes = http https
bar.prefix = secure.example.org
bar.key = path/to/file.key
bar.cert = path/to/file.cert
bar.schemes = https
Supported arguments:
prefix
Either * or a URI prefix with or without the scheme part. The
authentication entry with the longest matching prefix is used
(where * matches everything and counts as a match of length
1). If the prefix doesn't include a scheme, the match is
performed against the URI with its scheme stripped as well,
and the schemes argument, q.v., is then subsequently
consulted.
username
Optional. Username to authenticate with. If not given, and the
remote site requires basic or digest authentication, the user
will be prompted for it. Environment variables are expanded in
the username letting you do foo.username = $USER. If the URI
includes a username, only [auth] entries with a matching
username or without a username will be considered.
password
Optional. Password to authenticate with. If not given, and the
remote site requires basic or digest authentication, the user
will be prompted for it.
key
Optional. PEM encoded client certificate key file. Environment
variables are expanded in the filename.
cert
Optional. PEM encoded client certificate chain file.
Environment variables are expanded in the filename.
schemes
Optional. Space separated list of URI schemes to use this
authentication entry with. Only used if the prefix doesn't
include a scheme. Supported schemes are http and https. They
will match static-http and static-https respectively, as well.
Default: https.
If no suitable authentication entry is found, the user is prompted
for credentials as usual if required by the remote.
decode/encode
Filters for transforming files on checkout/checkin. This would
typically be used for newline processing or other
localization/canonicalization of files.
Filters consist of a filter pattern followed by a filter command.
Filter patterns are globs by default, rooted at the repository root.
For example, to match any file ending in .txt in the root directory
only, use the pattern *.txt. To match any file ending in .c anywhere
in the repository, use the pattern **.c. For each file only the
first matching filter applies.
The filter command can start with a specifier, either pipe: or
tempfile:. If no specifier is given, pipe: is used by default.
A pipe: command must accept data on stdin and return the transformed
data on stdout.
Pipe example:
[encode]
# uncompress gzip files on checkin to improve delta compression
# note: not necessarily a good idea, just an example
*.gz = pipe: gunzip
[decode]
# recompress gzip files when writing them to the working dir (we
# can safely omit "pipe:", because it's the default)
*.gz = gzip
A tempfile: command is a template. The string INFILE is replaced with
the name of a temporary file that contains the data to be filtered by
the command. The string OUTFILE is replaced with the name of an empty
temporary file, where the filtered data must be written by the
command.
Note The tempfile mechanism is recommended for Windows systems,
where the standard shell I/O redirection operators often have
strange effects and may corrupt the contents of your files.
This filter mechanism is used internally by the eol extension to
translate line ending characters between Windows (CRLF) and Unix (LF)
format. We suggest you use the eol extension for convenience.
defaults
(defaults are deprecated. Don't use them. Use aliases instead)
Use the [defaults] section to define command defaults, i.e. the
default options/arguments to pass to the specified commands.
The following example makes hg log run in verbose mode, and hg status
show only the modified files, by default:
[defaults]
log = -v
status = -m
The actual commands, instead of their aliases, must be used when
defining command defaults. The command defaults will also be applied
to the aliases of the commands defined.
diff
Settings used when displaying diffs. Everything except for unified is
a Boolean and defaults to False. See annotate section for related
options for the annotate command.
git
Use git extended diff format.
nodates
Don't include dates in diff headers.
showfunc
Show which function each change is in.
ignorews
Ignore white space when comparing lines.
ignorewsamount
Ignore changes in the amount of white space.
ignoreblanklines
Ignore changes whose lines are all blank.
unified
Number of lines of context to show.
email
Settings for extensions that send email messages.
from
Optional. Email address to use in "From" header and SMTP
envelope of outgoing messages.
to
Optional. Comma-separated list of recipients' email addresses.
cc
Optional. Comma-separated list of carbon copy recipients'
email addresses.
bcc
Optional. Comma-separated list of blind carbon copy
recipients' email addresses.
method
Optional. Method to use to send email messages. If value is
smtp (default), use SMTP (see the [smtp] section for
configuration). Otherwise, use as name of program to run that
acts like sendmail (takes -f option for sender, list of
recipients on command line, message on stdin). Normally,
setting this to sendmail or /usr/sbin/sendmail is enough to
use sendmail to send messages.
charsets
Optional. Comma-separated list of character sets considered
convenient for recipients. Addresses, headers, and parts not
containing patches of outgoing messages will be encoded in the
first character set to which conversion from local encoding
($HGENCODING, ui.fallbackencoding) succeeds. If correct
conversion fails, the text in question is sent as is. Defaults
to empty (explicit) list.
Order of outgoing email character sets:
1. us-ascii: always first, regardless of settings
2. email.charsets: in order given by user
3. ui.fallbackencoding: if not in email.charsets
4. $HGENCODING: if not in email.charsets
5. utf-8: always last, regardless of settings
Email example:
[email]
from = Joseph User <joe.user@example.com>
method = /usr/sbin/sendmail
# charsets for western Europeans
# us-ascii, utf-8 omitted, as they are tried first and last
charsets = iso-8859-1, iso-8859-15, windows-1252
extensions
Mercurial has an extension mechanism for adding new features. To
enable an extension, create an entry for it in this section.
If you know that the extension is already in Python's search path,
you can give the name of the module, followed by =, with nothing
after the =.
Otherwise, give a name that you choose, followed by =, followed by
the path to the .py file (including the file name extension) that
defines the extension.
To explicitly disable an extension that is enabled in an hgrc of
broader scope, prepend its path with !, as in foo = !/ext/path or foo
= ! when path is not supplied.
Example for ~/.hgrc:
[extensions]
# (the mq extension will get loaded from Mercurial's path)
mq =
# (this extension will get loaded from the file specified)
myfeature = ~/.hgext/myfeature.py
format
usestore
Enable or disable the "store" repository format which improves
compatibility with systems that fold case or otherwise mangle
filenames. Enabled by default. Disabling this option will
allow you to store longer filenames in some situations at the
expense of compatibility and ensures that the on-disk format
of newly created repositories will be compatible with
Mercurial before version 0.9.4.
usefncache
Enable or disable the "fncache" repository format which
enhances the "store" repository format (which has to be
enabled to use fncache) to allow longer filenames and avoids
using Windows reserved names, e.g. "nul". Enabled by default.
Disabling this option ensures that the on-disk format of newly
created repositories will be compatible with Mercurial before
version 1.1.
dotencode
Enable or disable the "dotencode" repository format which
enhances the "fncache" repository format (which has to be
enabled to use dotencode) to avoid issues with filenames
starting with ._ on Mac OS X and spaces on Windows. Enabled by
default. Disabling this option ensures that the on-disk format
of newly created repositories will be compatible with
Mercurial before version 1.7.
graph
Web graph view configuration. This section let you change graph
elements display properties by branches, for instance to make the
default branch stand out.
Each line has the following format:
<branch>.<argument> = <value>
where <branch> is the name of the branch being customized. Example:
[graph]
# 2px width
default.width = 2
# red color
default.color = FF0000
Supported arguments:
width
Set branch edges width in pixels.
color
Set branch edges color in hexadecimal RGB notation.
hooks
Commands or Python functions that get automatically executed by
various actions such as starting or finishing a commit. Multiple
hooks can be run for the same action by appending a suffix to the
action. Overriding a site-wide hook can be done by changing its value
or setting it to an empty string. Hooks can be prioritized by adding
a prefix of priority to the hook name on a new line and setting the
priority. The default priority is 0 if not specified.
Example .hg/hgrc:
[hooks]
# update working directory after adding changesets
changegroup.update = hg update
# do not use the site-wide hook
incoming =
incoming.email = /my/email/hook
incoming.autobuild = /my/build/hook
# force autobuild hook to run before other incoming hooks
priority.incoming.autobuild = 1
Most hooks are run with environment variables set that give useful
additional information. For each hook below, the environment
variables it is passed are listed with names of the form $HG_foo.
changegroup
Run after a changegroup has been added via push, pull or
unbundle. ID of the first new changeset is in $HG_NODE. URL
from which changes came is in $HG_URL.
commit
Run after a changeset has been created in the local
repository. ID of the newly created changeset is in $HG_NODE.
Parent changeset IDs are in $HG_PARENT1 and $HG_PARENT2.
incoming
Run after a changeset has been pulled, pushed, or unbundled
into the local repository. The ID of the newly arrived
changeset is in $HG_NODE. URL that was source of changes came
is in $HG_URL.
outgoing
Run after sending changes from local repository to another. ID
of first changeset sent is in $HG_NODE. Source of operation is
in $HG_SOURCE; see "preoutgoing" hook for description.
post-<command>
Run after successful invocations of the associated command.
The contents of the command line are passed as $HG_ARGS and
the result code in $HG_RESULT. Parsed command line arguments
are passed as $HG_PATS and $HG_OPTS. These contain string
representations of the python data internally passed to
<command>. $HG_OPTS is a dictionary of options (with
unspecified options set to their defaults). $HG_PATS is a
list of arguments. Hook failure is ignored.
pre-<command>
Run before executing the associated command. The contents of
the command line are passed as $HG_ARGS. Parsed command line
arguments are passed as $HG_PATS and $HG_OPTS. These contain
string representations of the data internally passed to
<command>. $HG_OPTS is a dictionary of options (with
unspecified options set to their defaults). $HG_PATS is a list
of arguments. If the hook returns failure, the command doesn't
execute and Mercurial returns the failure code.
prechangegroup
Run before a changegroup is added via push, pull or unbundle.
Exit status 0 allows the changegroup to proceed. Non-zero
status will cause the push, pull or unbundle to fail. URL from
which changes will come is in $HG_URL.
precommit
Run before starting a local commit. Exit status 0 allows the
commit to proceed. Non-zero status will cause the commit to
fail. Parent changeset IDs are in $HG_PARENT1 and
$HG_PARENT2.
prelistkeys
Run before listing pushkeys (like bookmarks) in the
repository. Non-zero status will cause failure. The key
namespace is in $HG_NAMESPACE.
preoutgoing
Run before collecting changes to send from the local
repository to another. Non-zero status will cause failure.
This lets you prevent pull over HTTP or SSH. Also prevents
against local pull, push (outbound) or bundle commands, but
not effective, since you can just copy files instead then.
Source of operation is in $HG_SOURCE. If "serve", operation is
happening on behalf of remote SSH or HTTP repository. If
"push", "pull" or "bundle", operation is happening on behalf
of repository on same system.
prepushkey
Run before a pushkey (like a bookmark) is added to the
repository. Non-zero status will cause the key to be rejected.
The key namespace is in $HG_NAMESPACE, the key is in $HG_KEY,
the old value (if any) is in $HG_OLD, and the new value is in
$HG_NEW.
pretag
Run before creating a tag. Exit status 0 allows the tag to be
created. Non-zero status will cause the tag to fail. ID of
changeset to tag is in $HG_NODE. Name of tag is in $HG_TAG.
Tag is local if $HG_LOCAL=1, in repository if $HG_LOCAL=0.
pretxnchangegroup
Run after a changegroup has been added via push, pull or
unbundle, but before the transaction has been committed.
Changegroup is visible to hook program. This lets you validate
incoming changes before accepting them. Passed the ID of the
first new changeset in $HG_NODE. Exit status 0 allows the
transaction to commit. Non-zero status will cause the
transaction to be rolled back and the push, pull or unbundle
will fail. URL that was source of changes is in $HG_URL.
pretxncommit
Run after a changeset has been created but the transaction not
yet committed. Changeset is visible to hook program. This lets
you validate commit message and changes. Exit status 0 allows
the commit to proceed. Non-zero status will cause the
transaction to be rolled back. ID of changeset is in $HG_NODE.
Parent changeset IDs are in $HG_PARENT1 and $HG_PARENT2.
preupdate
Run before updating the working directory. Exit status 0
allows the update to proceed. Non-zero status will prevent the
update. Changeset ID of first new parent is in $HG_PARENT1.
If merge, ID of second new parent is in $HG_PARENT2.
listkeys
Run after listing pushkeys (like bookmarks) in the repository.
The key namespace is in $HG_NAMESPACE. $HG_VALUES is a
dictionary containing the keys and values.
pushkey
Run after a pushkey (like a bookmark) is added to the
repository. The key namespace is in $HG_NAMESPACE, the key is
in $HG_KEY, the old value (if any) is in $HG_OLD, and the new
value is in $HG_NEW.
tag
Run after a tag is created. ID of tagged changeset is in
$HG_NODE. Name of tag is in $HG_TAG. Tag is local if
$HG_LOCAL=1, in repository if $HG_LOCAL=0.
update
Run after updating the working directory. Changeset ID of
first new parent is in $HG_PARENT1. If merge, ID of second new
parent is in $HG_PARENT2. If the update succeeded,
$HG_ERROR=0. If the update failed (e.g. because conflicts not
resolved), $HG_ERROR=1.
Note It is generally better to use standard hooks rather than the
generic pre- and post- command hooks as they are guaranteed to
be called in the appropriate contexts for influencing
transactions. Also, hooks like "commit" will be called in all
contexts that generate a commit (e.g. tag) and not just the
commit command.
Note Environment variables with empty values may not be passed to
hooks on platforms such as Windows. As an example, $HG_PARENT2
will have an empty value under Unix-like platforms for
non-merge changesets, while it will not be available at all
under Windows.
The syntax for Python hooks is as follows:
hookname = python:modulename.submodule.callable
hookname = python:/path/to/python/module.py:callable
Python hooks are run within the Mercurial process. Each hook is
called with at least three keyword arguments: a ui object (keyword
ui), a repository object (keyword repo), and a hooktype keyword that
tells what kind of hook is used. Arguments listed as environment
variables above are passed as keyword arguments, with no HG_ prefix,
and names in lower case.
If a Python hook returns a "true" value or raises an exception, this
is treated as a failure.
hostfingerprints
Fingerprints of the certificates of known HTTPS servers. A HTTPS
connection to a server with a fingerprint configured here will only
succeed if the servers certificate matches the fingerprint. This is
very similar to how ssh known hosts works. The fingerprint is the
SHA-1 hash value of the DER encoded certificate. The CA chain and
web.cacerts is not used for servers with a fingerprint.
For example:
[hostfingerprints]
hg.intevation.org = 44:ed:af:1f:97:11:b6:01:7a:48:45:fc:10:3c:b7:f9:d4:89:2a:9d
This feature is only supported when using Python 2.6 or later.
http_proxy
Used to access web-based Mercurial repositories through a HTTP proxy.
host
Host name and (optional) port of the proxy server, for example
"myproxy:8000".
no
Optional. Comma-separated list of host names that should
bypass the proxy.
passwd
Optional. Password to authenticate with at the proxy server.
user
Optional. User name to authenticate with at the proxy server.
always
Optional. Always use the proxy, even for localhost and any
entries in http_proxy.no. True or False. Default: False.
merge-patterns
This section specifies merge tools to associate with particular file
patterns. Tools matched here will take precedence over the default
merge tool. Patterns are globs by default, rooted at the repository
root.
Example:
[merge-patterns]
**.c = kdiff3
**.jpg = myimgmerge
merge-tools
This section configures external merge tools to use for file-level
merges.
Example ~/.hgrc:
[merge-tools]
# Override stock tool location
kdiff3.executable = ~/bin/kdiff3
# Specify command line
kdiff3.args = $base $local $other -o $output
# Give higher priority
kdiff3.priority = 1
# Define new tool
myHtmlTool.args = -m $local $other $base $output
myHtmlTool.regkey = Software\FooSoftware\HtmlMerge
myHtmlTool.priority = 1
Supported arguments:
priority
The priority in which to evaluate this tool. Default: 0.
executable
Either just the name of the executable or its pathname. On
Windows, the path can use environment variables with
${ProgramFiles} syntax. Default: the tool name.
args
The arguments to pass to the tool executable. You can refer to
the files being merged as well as the output file through
these variables: $base, $local, $other, $output. Default:
$local $base $other
premerge
Attempt to run internal non-interactive 3-way merge tool
before launching external tool. Options are true, false, or
keep to leave markers in the file if the premerge fails.
Default: True
binary
This tool can merge binary files. Defaults to False, unless
tool was selected by file pattern match.
symlink
This tool can merge symlinks. Defaults to False, even if tool
was selected by file pattern match.
check
A list of merge success-checking options:
changed
Ask whether merge was successful when the merged file
shows no changes.
conflicts
Check whether there are conflicts even though the tool
reported success.
prompt
Always prompt for merge success, regardless of success
reported by tool.
fixeol
Attempt to fix up EOL changes caused by the merge tool.
Default: False
gui
This tool requires a graphical interface to run. Default:
False
regkey
Windows registry key which describes install location of this
tool. Mercurial will search for this key first under
HKEY_CURRENT_USER and then under HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE. Default:
None
regkeyalt
An alternate Windows registry key to try if the first key is
not found. The alternate key uses the same regname and
regappend semantics of the primary key. The most common use
for this key is to search for 32bit applications on 64bit
operating systems. Default: None
regname
Name of value to read from specified registry key. Defaults to
the unnamed (default) value.
regappend
String to append to the value read from the registry,
typically the executable name of the tool. Default: None
patch
Settings used when applying patches, for instance through the
'import' command or with Mercurial Queues extension.
eol
When set to 'strict' patch content and patched files end of
lines are preserved. When set to lf or crlf, both files end of
lines are ignored when patching and the result line endings
are normalized to either LF (Unix) or CRLF (Windows). When set
to auto, end of lines are again ignored while patching but
line endings in patched files are normalized to their original
setting on a per-file basis. If target file does not exist or
has no end of line, patch line endings are preserved.
Default: strict.
paths
Assigns symbolic names to repositories. The left side is the symbolic
name, and the right gives the directory or URL that is the location
of the repository. Default paths can be declared by setting the
following entries.
default
Directory or URL to use when pulling if no source is
specified. Default is set to repository from which the
current repository was cloned.
default-push
Optional. Directory or URL to use when pushing if no
destination is specified.
Custom paths can be defined by assigning the path to a name that
later can be used from the command line. Example:
[paths]
my_path = http://example.com/path
To push to the path defined in my_path run the command:
hg push my_path
phases
Specifies default handling of phases. See hg help phases for more
information about working with phases.
publish
Controls draft phase behavior when working as a server. When
true, pushed changesets are set to public in both client and
server and pulled or cloned changesets are set to public in
the client. Default: True
new-commit
Phase of newly-created commits. Default: draft
profiling
Specifies profiling type, format, and file output. Two profilers are
supported: an instrumenting profiler (named ls), and a sampling
profiler (named stat).
In this section description, 'profiling data' stands for the raw data
collected during profiling, while 'profiling report' stands for a
statistical text report generated from the profiling data. The
profiling is done using lsprof.
type
The type of profiler to use. Default: ls.
ls
Use Python's built-in instrumenting profiler. This
profiler works on all platforms, but each line number
it reports is the first line of a function. This
restriction makes it difficult to identify the
expensive parts of a non-trivial function.
stat
Use a third-party statistical profiler, statprof. This
profiler currently runs only on Unix systems, and is
most useful for profiling commands that run for longer
than about 0.1 seconds.
format
Profiling format. Specific to the ls instrumenting profiler.
Default: text.
text
Generate a profiling report. When saving to a file, it
should be noted that only the report is saved, and the
profiling data is not kept.
kcachegrind
Format profiling data for kcachegrind use: when saving
to a file, the generated file can directly be loaded
into kcachegrind.
frequency
Sampling frequency. Specific to the stat sampling profiler.
Default: 1000.
output
File path where profiling data or report should be saved. If
the file exists, it is replaced. Default: None, data is
printed on stderr
sort
Sort field. Specific to the ls instrumenting profiler. One
of callcount, reccallcount, totaltime and inlinetime.
Default: inlinetime.
limit
Number of lines to show. Specific to the ls instrumenting
profiler. Default: 30.
nested
Show at most this number of lines of drill-down info after
each main entry. This can help explain the difference between
Total and Inline. Specific to the ls instrumenting profiler.
Default: 5.
revsetalias
Alias definitions for revsets. See hg help revsets for details.
server
Controls generic server settings.
uncompressed
Whether to allow clients to clone a repository using the
uncompressed streaming protocol. This transfers about 40% more
data than a regular clone, but uses less memory and CPU on
both server and client. Over a LAN (100 Mbps or better) or a
very fast WAN, an uncompressed streaming clone is a lot faster
(~10x) than a regular clone. Over most WAN connections
(anything slower than about 6 Mbps), uncompressed streaming is
slower, because of the extra data transfer overhead. This mode
will also temporarily hold the write lock while determining
what data to transfer. Default is True.
preferuncompressed
When set, clients will try to use the uncompressed streaming
protocol. Default is False.
validate
Whether to validate the completeness of pushed changesets by
checking that all new file revisions specified in manifests
are present. Default is False.
smtp
Configuration for extensions that need to send email messages.
host
Host name of mail server, e.g. "mail.example.com".
port
Optional. Port to connect to on mail server. Default: 465 (if
tls is smtps) or 25 (otherwise).
tls
Optional. Method to enable TLS when connecting to mail server:
starttls, smtps or none. Default: none.
verifycert
Optional. Verification for the certificate of mail server,
when tls is starttls or smtps. "strict", "loose" or False. For
"strict" or "loose", the certificate is verified as same as
the verification for HTTPS connections (see [hostfingerprints]
and [web] cacerts also). For "strict", sending email is also
aborted, if there is no configuration for mail server in
[hostfingerprints] and [web] cacerts. --insecure for hg email
overwrites this as "loose". Default: "strict".
username
Optional. User name for authenticating with the SMTP server.
Default: none.
password
Optional. Password for authenticating with the SMTP server. If
not specified, interactive sessions will prompt the user for a
password; non-interactive sessions will fail. Default: none.
local_hostname
Optional. It's the hostname that the sender can use to
identify itself to the MTA.
subpaths
Subrepository source URLs can go stale if a remote server changes
name or becomes temporarily unavailable. This section lets you define
rewrite rules of the form:
<pattern> = <replacement>
where pattern is a regular expression matching a subrepository source
URL and replacement is the replacement string used to rewrite it.
Groups can be matched in pattern and referenced in replacements. For
instance:
http://server/(.*)-hg/ = http://hg.server/\1/
rewrites http://server/foo-hg/ into http://hg.server/foo/ .
Relative subrepository paths are first made absolute, and the rewrite
rules are then applied on the full (absolute) path. The rules are
applied in definition order.
trusted
Mercurial will not use the settings in the .hg/hgrc file from a
repository if it doesn't belong to a trusted user or to a trusted
group, as various hgrc features allow arbitrary commands to be run.
This issue is often encountered when configuring hooks or extensions
for shared repositories or servers. However, the web interface will
use some safe settings from the [web] section.
This section specifies what users and groups are trusted. The current
user is always trusted. To trust everybody, list a user or a group
with name *. These settings must be placed in an already-trusted file
to take effect, such as $HOME/.hgrc of the user or service running
Mercurial.
users
Comma-separated list of trusted users.
groups
Comma-separated list of trusted groups.
ui
User interface controls.
archivemeta
Whether to include the .hg_archival.txt file containing meta
data (hashes for the repository base and for tip) in archives
created by the hg archive command or downloaded via hgweb.
Default is True.
askusername
Whether to prompt for a username when committing. If True, and
neither $HGUSER nor $EMAIL has been specified, then the user
will be prompted to enter a username. If no username is
entered, the default USER@HOST is used instead. Default is
False.
commitsubrepos
Whether to commit modified subrepositories when committing the
parent repository. If False and one subrepository has
uncommitted changes, abort the commit. Default is False.
debug
Print debugging information. True or False. Default is False.
editor
The editor to use during a commit. Default is $EDITOR or vi.
fallbackencoding
Encoding to try if it's not possible to decode the changelog
using UTF-8. Default is ISO-8859-1.
ignore
A file to read per-user ignore patterns from. This file should
be in the same format as a repository-wide .hgignore file.
This option supports hook syntax, so if you want to specify
multiple ignore files, you can do so by setting something like
ignore.other = ~/.hgignore2. For details of the ignore file
format, see the hgignore(5) man page.
interactive
Allow to prompt the user. True or False. Default is True.
logtemplate
Template string for commands that print changesets.
merge
The conflict resolution program to use during a manual merge.
For more information on merge tools see hg help merge-tools.
For configuring merge tools see the [merge-tools] section.
portablefilenames
Check for portable filenames. Can be warn, ignore or abort.
Default is warn. If set to warn (or true), a warning message
is printed on POSIX platforms, if a file with a non-portable
filename is added (e.g. a file with a name that can't be
created on Windows because it contains reserved parts like
AUX, reserved characters like :, or would cause a case
collision with an existing file). If set to ignore (or
false), no warning is printed. If set to abort, the command
is aborted. On Windows, this configuration option is ignored
and the command aborted.
quiet
Reduce the amount of output printed. True or False. Default is
False.
remotecmd
remote command to use for clone/push/pull operations. Default
is hg.
reportoldssl
Warn if an SSL certificate is unable to be due to using Python
2.5 or earlier. True or False. Default is True.
report_untrusted
Warn if a .hg/hgrc file is ignored due to not being owned by a
trusted user or group. True or False. Default is True.
slash
Display paths using a slash (/) as the path separator. This
only makes a difference on systems where the default path
separator is not the slash character (e.g. Windows uses the
backslash character (\)). Default is False.
ssh
command to use for SSH connections. Default is ssh.
strict
Require exact command names, instead of allowing unambiguous
abbreviations. True or False. Default is False.
style
Name of style to use for command output.
timeout
The timeout used when a lock is held (in seconds), a negative
value means no timeout. Default is 600.
traceback
Mercurial always prints a traceback when an unknown exception
occurs. Setting this to True will make Mercurial print a
traceback on all exceptions, even those recognized by
Mercurial (such as IOError or MemoryError). Default is False.
username
The committer of a changeset created when running "commit".
Typically a person's name and email address, e.g. Fred Widget
<fred@example.com>. Default is $EMAIL or username@hostname. If
the username in hgrc is empty, it has to be specified manually
or in a different hgrc file (e.g. $HOME/.hgrc, if the admin
set username = in the system hgrc). Environment variables in
the username are expanded.
verbose
Increase the amount of output printed. True or False. Default
is False.
web
Web interface configuration. The settings in this section apply to
both the builtin webserver (started by hg serve) and the script you
run through a webserver (hgweb.cgi and the derivatives for FastCGI
and WSGI).
The Mercurial webserver does no authentication (it does not prompt
for usernames and passwords to validate who users are), but it does
do authorization (it grants or denies access for authenticated users
based on settings in this section). You must either configure your
webserver to do authentication for you, or disable the authorization
checks.
For a quick setup in a trusted environment, e.g., a private LAN,
where you want it to accept pushes from anybody, you can use the
following command line:
$ hg --config web.allow_push=* --config web.push_ssl=False serve
Note that this will allow anybody to push anything to the server and
that this should not be used for public servers.
The full set of options is:
accesslog
Where to output the access log. Default is stdout.
address
Interface address to bind to. Default is all.
allow_archive
List of archive format (bz2, gz, zip) allowed for downloading.
Default is empty.
allowbz2
(DEPRECATED) Whether to allow .tar.bz2 downloading of
repository revisions. Default is False.
allowgz
(DEPRECATED) Whether to allow .tar.gz downloading of
repository revisions. Default is False.
allowpull
Whether to allow pulling from the repository. Default is True.
allow_push
Whether to allow pushing to the repository. If empty or not
set, push is not allowed. If the special value *, any remote
user can push, including unauthenticated users. Otherwise, the
remote user must have been authenticated, and the
authenticated user name must be present in this list. The
contents of the allow_push list are examined after the
deny_push list.
allow_read
If the user has not already been denied repository access due
to the contents of deny_read, this list determines whether to
grant repository access to the user. If this list is not
empty, and the user is unauthenticated or not present in the
list, then access is denied for the user. If the list is empty
or not set, then access is permitted to all users by default.
Setting allow_read to the special value * is equivalent to it
not being set (i.e. access is permitted to all users). The
contents of the allow_read list are examined after the
deny_read list.
allowzip
(DEPRECATED) Whether to allow .zip downloading of repository
revisions. Default is False. This feature creates temporary
files.
archivesubrepos
Whether to recurse into subrepositories when archiving.
Default is False.
baseurl
Base URL to use when publishing URLs in other locations, so
third-party tools like email notification hooks can construct
URLs. Example: http://hgserver/repos/ .
cacerts
Path to file containing a list of PEM encoded certificate
authority certificates. Environment variables and ~user
constructs are expanded in the filename. If specified on the
client, then it will verify the identity of remote HTTPS
servers with these certificates.
This feature is only supported when using Python 2.6 or later.
If you wish to use it with earlier versions of Python, install
the backported version of the ssl library that is available
from http://pypi.python.org .
To disable SSL verification temporarily, specify --insecure
from command line.
You can use OpenSSL's CA certificate file if your platform has
one. On most Linux systems this will be
/etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt. Otherwise you will have to
generate this file manually. The form must be as follows:
-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
... (certificate in base64 PEM encoding) ...
-----END CERTIFICATE-----
-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
... (certificate in base64 PEM encoding) ...
-----END CERTIFICATE-----
cache
Whether to support caching in hgweb. Defaults to True.
collapse
With descend enabled, repositories in subdirectories are shown
at a single level alongside repositories in the current path.
With collapse also enabled, repositories residing at a deeper
level than the current path are grouped behind navigable
directory entries that lead to the locations of these
repositories. In effect, this setting collapses each
collection of repositories found within a subdirectory into a
single entry for that subdirectory. Default is False.
comparisoncontext
Number of lines of context to show in side-by-side file
comparison. If negative or the value full, whole files are
shown. Default is 5. This setting can be overridden by a
context request parameter to the comparison command, taking
the same values.
contact
Name or email address of the person in charge of the
repository. Defaults to ui.username or $EMAIL or "unknown" if
unset or empty.
deny_push
Whether to deny pushing to the repository. If empty or not
set, push is not denied. If the special value *, all remote
users are denied push. Otherwise, unauthenticated users are
all denied, and any authenticated user name present in this
list is also denied. The contents of the deny_push list are
examined before the allow_push list.
deny_read
Whether to deny reading/viewing of the repository. If this
list is not empty, unauthenticated users are all denied, and
any authenticated user name present in this list is also
denied access to the repository. If set to the special value
*, all remote users are denied access (rarely needed ;). If
deny_read is empty or not set, the determination of repository
access depends on the presence and content of the allow_read
list (see description). If both deny_read and allow_read are
empty or not set, then access is permitted to all users by
default. If the repository is being served via hgwebdir,
denied users will not be able to see it in the list of
repositories. The contents of the deny_read list have priority
over (are examined before) the contents of the allow_read
list.
descend
hgwebdir indexes will not descend into subdirectories. Only
repositories directly in the current path will be shown (other
repositories are still available from the index corresponding
to their containing path).
description
Textual description of the repository's purpose or contents.
Default is "unknown".
encoding
Character encoding name. Default is the current locale
charset. Example: "UTF-8"
errorlog
Where to output the error log. Default is stderr.
guessmime
Control MIME types for raw download of file content. Set to
True to let hgweb guess the content type from the file
extension. This will serve HTML files as text/html and might
allow cross-site scripting attacks when serving untrusted
repositories. Default is False.
hidden
Whether to hide the repository in the hgwebdir index. Default
is False.
ipv6
Whether to use IPv6. Default is False.
logoimg
File name of the logo image that some templates display on
each page. The file name is relative to staticurl. That is,
the full path to the logo image is "staticurl/logoimg". If
unset, hglogo.png will be used.
logourl
Base URL to use for logos. If unset,
http://mercurial.selenic.com/ will be used.
maxchanges
Maximum number of changes to list on the changelog. Default is
10.
maxfiles
Maximum number of files to list per changeset. Default is 10.
maxshortchanges
Maximum number of changes to list on the shortlog, graph or
filelog pages. Default is 60.
name
Repository name to use in the web interface. Default is
current working directory.
port
Port to listen on. Default is 8000.
prefix
Prefix path to serve from. Default is '' (server root).
push_ssl
Whether to require that inbound pushes be transported over SSL
to prevent password sniffing. Default is True.
staticurl
Base URL to use for static files. If unset, static files (e.g.
the hgicon.png favicon) will be served by the CGI script
itself. Use this setting to serve them directly with the HTTP
server. Example: http://hgserver/static/ .
stripes
How many lines a "zebra stripe" should span in multi-line
output. Default is 1; set to 0 to disable.
style
Which template map style to use.
templates
Where to find the HTML templates. Default is install path.
websub
Web substitution filter definition. You can use this section to
define a set of regular expression substitution patterns which let
you automatically modify the hgweb server output.
The default hgweb templates only apply these substitution patterns on
the revision description fields. You can apply them anywhere you want
when you create your own templates by adding calls to the "websub"
filter (usually after calling the "escape" filter).
This can be used, for example, to convert issue references to links
to your issue tracker, or to convert "markdown-like" syntax into HTML
(see the examples below).
Each entry in this section names a substitution filter. The value of
each entry defines the substitution expression itself. The websub
expressions follow the old interhg extension syntax, which in turn
imitates the Unix sed replacement syntax:
patternname = s/SEARCH_REGEX/REPLACE_EXPRESSION/[i]
You can use any separator other than "/". The final "i" is optional
and indicates that the search must be case insensitive.
Examples:
[websub]
issues = s|issue(\d+)|<a href="http://bts.example.org/issue\1">issue\1</a>|i
italic = s/\b_(\S+)_\b/<i>\1<\/i>/
bold = s/\*\b(\S+)\b\*/<b>\1<\/b>/
worker
Parallel master/worker configuration. We currently perform working
directory updates in parallel on Unix-like systems, which greatly
helps performance.
numcpus
Number of CPUs to use for parallel operations. Default is 4 or
the number of CPUs on the system, whichever is larger. A zero
or negative value is treated as use the default.
Bryan O'Sullivan <bos@serpentine.com>.
Mercurial was written by Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com>.
hg(1), hgignore(5)
This manual page is copyright 2005 Bryan O'Sullivan. Mercurial is
copyright 2005-2012 Matt Mackall. Free use of this software is
granted under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2
or any later version.
Bryan O'Sullivan <bos@serpentine.com>
Organization: Mercurial
This page is part of the hg (Mercurial source code management system)
project. Information about the project can be found at
⟨http://mercurial.selenic.com/⟩. If you have a bug report for this
manual page, see ⟨http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/BugTracker⟩.
This page was obtained from the project's upstream Mercurial reposi‐
tory ⟨http://selenic.com/hg⟩ on 2018-02-02. (At that time, the date
of the most recent commit that was found in the repository was
2018-02-01.) If you discover any rendering problems in this HTML
version of the page, or you believe there is a better or more up-to-
date source for the page, or you have corrections or improvements to
the information in this COLOPHON (which is not part of the original
manual page), send a mail to man-pages@man7.org
HGRC(5)
Pages that refer to this page: hg(1), hgignore(5)