I like creating named branches in Mercurial to deal with features that might take a while to code, so when I push I do a hg push -r default
to ensure I'm only pushing changes to the default branch. However, it is a pain to have to remember -r default
every time I do do a push or outgoing command.
So I tried fix this by adding this config to my ~/.hgrc:
[defaults]
push = push -r default
outgoing = outgoing -r default
The problem is, those config lines are not really defaults, they are aliases. They work as intended until I try to do a hg push -r <some revision>
. And the "default" I've setup just obliterates the revision I passed in. (I see that defaults are deprecated, but aliases have the same problem).
I tried looking around, but I can't find anything that will allow me to set a default branch to push AND allow me to override it when necessary. Anyone know of something else I could do?
ps: I do realize that I could have separate clones for each branch, but I would rather not do that. It's annoying to have to switch directories, particularly when you have shared configuration or editor workspaces.
Are you using Tortoise HG perhaps? Doing a full revert to an explicit branch name will cause Tortoise HG to remember the branch you're working on during subsequent commits. I'm not sure what metadata it gleans this from.
e.g.
I don't think you can do it with pure mercurial, short of having a clone with only that branch in it (which I was was about to suggest until you said it wasn't your cup of tea). If it's really killing you you can create a tiny wrapper script like:
name it 'hg' and put it earlier in your path.