view contrib/vim/hgcommand.txt @ 2592:457846f400e8

Vim script: Adaptation from CVS to Mercurial
author "Mathieu Clabaut <mathieu.clabaut@gmail.com>"
date Mon, 10 Jul 2006 23:45:16 +0200
parents 61f2008cd6bf
children
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*hgcommand.txt*	HGCommand

For instructions on installing this file, type
	:help add-local-help
inside Vim.

Author:  Mathieu Clabaut <mathieu.clabaut@gmail.com>
Credits:  Bob Hiestand <bob.hiestand@gmail.com>

==============================================================================
1. Contents						*hgcommand-contents*

	Installation		: |hgcommand-install|
        HGCommand Intro	        : |hgcommand|
	HGCommand Manual	: |hgcommand-manual|
	Customization		: |hgcommand-customize|
	SSH "integration"	: |hgcommand-ssh|
	Bugs			: |hgcommand-bugs|

==============================================================================

2. HGCommand Installation				*hgcommand-install*

The HGCommand plugin comprises two files, hgcommand.vim and hgcommand.txt
(this file).  In order to install the plugin, place the hgcommand.vim file
into a plugin' directory in your runtime path (please see |add-global-plugin|
and |'runtimepath'|.

HGCommand may be customized by setting variables, creating maps, and
specifying event handlers.  Please see |hgcommand-customize| for more
details.

This help file can be included in the VIM help system by copying it into a
'doc' directory in your runtime path and then executing the |:helptags|
command, specifying the full path of the 'doc' directory.  Please see
|add-local-help| for more details.

==============================================================================

3. HGCommand Intro					*hgcommand*
							*hgcommand-intro*

The HGCommand plugin provides global ex commands for manipulating
HG-controlled source files.  In general, each command operates on the current
buffer and accomplishes a separate hg function, such as update, commit, log,
and others (please see |hgcommand-commands| for a list of all available
commands).  The results of each operation are displayed in a scratch buffer.
Several buffer variables are defined for those scratch buffers (please see
|hgcommand-buffer-variables|).

The notion of "current file" means either the current buffer, or, in the case
of a directory buffer, the file on the current line within the buffer.

For convenience, any HGCommand invoked on a HGCommand scratch buffer acts as
though it was invoked on the original file and splits the screen so that the
output appears in a new window.

Many of the commands accept revisions as arguments.  By default, most operate
on the most recent revision on the current branch if no revision is specified
(though see |HGCommandInteractive| to prompt instead).

Each HGCommand is mapped to a key sequence starting with the <Leader>
keystroke.  The default mappings may be overridden by supplying different
mappings before the plugin is loaded, such as in the vimrc, in the standard
fashion for plugin mappings.  For examples, please see
|hgcommand-mappings-override|.

The HGCommand plugin may be configured in several ways.  For more details,
please see |hgcommand-customize|.

==============================================================================

4. HGCommand Manual					*hgcommand-manual*

4.1 HGCommand commands					*hgcommand-commands*

HGCommand defines the following commands:

|:HGAdd|
|:HGAnnotate|
|:HGCommit|
|:HGDiff|
|:HGGotoOriginal|
|:HGLog|
|:HGRevert|
|:HGReview|
|:HGStatus|
|:HGUnedit|
|:HGUpdate|
|:HGVimDiff|

:HGAdd							*:HGAdd*

This command performs "hg add" on the current file.  Please note, this does
not commit the newly-added file.

:HGAnnotate						*:HGAnnotate*

This command performs "hg annotate" on the current file.  If an argument is
given, the argument is used as a revision number to display.  If not given an
argument, it uses the most recent version of the file on the current branch.
Additionally, if the current buffer is a HGAnnotate buffer already, the
version number on the current line is used.

If the |HGCommandAnnotateParent| variable is set to a non-zero value, the
version previous to the one on the current line is used instead.  This allows
one to navigate back to examine the previous version of a line.

The filetype of the HGCommand scratch buffer is set to 'HGAnnotate', to take
advantage of the bundled syntax file.


:HGCommit[!]						*:HGCommit*

If called with arguments, this performs "hg commit" using the arguments as
the log message.

If '!' is used with no arguments, an empty log message is committed.

If called with no arguments, this is a two-step command.  The first step opens
a buffer to accept a log message.  When that buffer is written, it is
automatically closed and the file is committed using the information from that
log message.  The commit can be abandoned if the log message buffer is deleted
or wiped before being written.

Alternatively, the mapping that is used to invoke :HGCommit (by default
<Leader>hgc) can be used in the log message buffer to immediately commit.  
This
is useful if the |HGCommandCommitOnWrite| variable is set to 0 to disable the
normal commit-on-write behavior.

:HGDiff						*:HGDiff*

With no arguments, this performs "hg diff" on the current file against the
current repository version.

With one argument, "hg diff" is performed on the current file against the
specified revision.

With two arguments, hg diff is performed between the specified
revisions of the current file.

This command uses the 'HGCommandDiffOpt' variable to specify diff options.
If that variable does not exist, then 'wbBc' is assumed.  If you wish to have
no options, then set it to the empty string.


This command performs "hg edit" on the current file.

:HGGotoOriginal					*:HGGotoOriginal*

This command returns the current window to the source buffer, if the current
buffer is a HG command output buffer.

:HGGotoOriginal!

Like ":HGGotoOriginal" but also executes :bufwipeout on all HG command
output buffers for the source buffer.

:HGLog							*:HGLog*

Performs "hg log" on the current file.

If an argument is given, it is passed as an argument to the "-r" option of
"hg log".

:HGRevert						*:HGRevert*

Replaces the current file with the most recent version from the repository in
order to wipe out any undesired changes.

:HGReview						*:HGReview*

Retrieves a particular version of the current file.  If no argument is given,
the most recent version of the file on the current branch is retrieved.
Otherwise, the specified version is retrieved.

:HGStatus						*:HGStatus*

Performs "hg status" on the current file.

:HGUnedit						*:HGUnedit*

Performs "hg unedit" on the current file.  Again, yes, the output buffer here
is basically useless.

:HGUpdate						*:HGUpdate*

Performs "hg update" on the current file.  This intentionally does not
automatically reload the current buffer, though vim should prompt the user to
do so if the underlying file is altered by this command.

:HGVimDiff						*:HGVimDiff*

With no arguments, this prompts the user for a revision and then uses vimdiff
to display the differences between the current file and the specified
revision.  If no revision is specified, the most recent version of the file on
the current branch is used.

With one argument, that argument is used as the revision as above.  With two
arguments, the differences between the two revisions is displayed using
vimdiff.

With either zero or one argument, the original buffer is used to perform the
vimdiff.  When the other buffer is closed, the original buffer will be
returned to normal mode.

Once vimdiff mode is started using the above methods, additional vimdiff
buffers may be added by passing a single version argument to the command.
There may be up to 4 vimdiff buffers total.

Using the 2-argument form of the command resets the vimdiff to only those 2
versions.  Additionally, invoking the command on a different file will close
the previous vimdiff buffers.


4.2 Mappings						*hgcommand-mappings*

By default, a mapping is defined for each command.  These mappings execute the
default (no-argument) form of each command.

<Leader>hga HGAdd
<Leader>hgn HGAnnotate
<Leader>hgc HGCommit
<Leader>hgd HGDiff
<Leader>hgg HGGotoOriginal
<Leader>hgG HGGotoOriginal!
<Leader>hgl HGLog
<Leader>hgr HGReview
<Leader>hgs HGStatus
<Leader>hgt HGUnedit
<Leader>hgu HGUpdate
<Leader>hgv HGVimDiff

						*hgcommand-mappings-override*

The default mappings can be overriden by user-provided instead by mapping to
<Plug>CommandName.  This is especially useful when these mappings collide with
other existing mappings (vim will warn of this during plugin initialization,
but will not clobber the existing mappings).

For instance, to override the default mapping for :HGAdd to set it to '\add',
add the following to the vimrc:

nmap \add <Plug>HGAdd

4.3 Automatic buffer variables			*hgcommand-buffer-variables*

Several buffer variables are defined in each HGCommand result buffer.	These
may be useful for additional customization in callbacks defined in the event
handlers (please see |hgcommand-events|).

The following variables are automatically defined:

b:hgOrigBuffNR						*b:hgOrigBuffNR*

This variable is set to the buffer number of the source file.

b:hgcmd						*b:hgcmd*

This variable is set to the name of the hg command that created the result
buffer.
==============================================================================

5. Configuration and customization			*hgcommand-customize*
							*hgcommand-config*

The HGCommand plugin can be configured in two ways:  by setting configuration
variables (see |hgcommand-options|) or by defining HGCommand event handlers
(see |hgcommand-events|).  Additionally, the HGCommand plugin provides
several option for naming the HG result buffers (see |hgcommand-naming|) and
supported a customized status line (see |hgcommand-statusline| and
|hgcommand-buffer-management|).

5.1 HGCommand configuration variables			*hgcommand-options*

Several variables affect the plugin's behavior.  These variables are checked
at time of execution, and may be defined at the window, buffer, or global
level and are checked in that order of precedence.


The following variables are available:

|HGCommandAnnotateParent|
|HGCommandCommitOnWrite|
|HGCommandHGExec|
|HGCommandDeleteOnHide|
|HGCommandDiffOpt|
|HGCommandDiffSplit|
|HGCommandEdit|
|HGCommandEnableBufferSetup|
|HGCommandInteractive|
|HGCommandNameMarker|
|HGCommandNameResultBuffers|
|HGCommandSplit|

HGCommandAnnotateParent			*HGCommandAnnotateParent*

This variable, if set to a non-zero value, causes the zero-argument form of
HGAnnotate when invoked on a HGAnnotate buffer to go to the version previous
to that displayed on the current line.  If not set, it defaults to 0.

HGCommandCommitOnWrite				*HGCommandCommitOnWrite*

This variable, if set to a non-zero value, causes the pending hg commit
to take place immediately as soon as the log message buffer is written.
If set to zero, only the HGCommit mapping will cause the pending commit to
occur.	If not set, it defaults to 1.

HGCommandHGExec				*HGCommandHGExec*

This variable controls the executable used for all HG commands  If not set,
it defaults to "hg".

HGCommandDeleteOnHide				*HGCommandDeleteOnHide*

This variable, if set to a non-zero value, causes the temporary HG result
buffers to automatically delete themselves when hidden.

HGCommandDiffOpt				*HGCommandDiffOpt*

This variable, if set, determines the options passed to the diff command of
HG.  If not set, it defaults to 'wbBc'.

HGCommandDiffSplit				*HGCommandDiffSplit*

This variable overrides the |HGCommandSplit| variable, but only for buffers
created with |:HGVimDiff|.

HGCommandEdit					*HGCommandEdit*

This variable controls whether the original buffer is replaced ('edit') or
split ('split').  If not set, it defaults to 'edit'.

HGCommandEnableBufferSetup			*HGCommandEnableBufferSetup*

This variable, if set to a non-zero value, activates HG buffer management
mode see (|hgcommand-buffer-management|).  This mode means that two buffer
variables, 'HGRevision' and 'HGBranch', are set if the file is
HG-controlled.  This is useful for displaying version information in the
status bar.

HGCommandInteractive				*HGCommandInteractive*

This variable, if set to a non-zero value, causes appropriate commands (for
the moment, only |:HGReview|) to query the user for a revision to use instead
of the current revision if none is specified.

HGCommandNameMarker				*HGCommandNameMarker*

This variable, if set, configures the special attention-getting characters
that appear on either side of the hg buffer type in the buffer name.  This
has no effect unless |HGCommandNameResultBuffers| is set to a true value.  If
not set, it defaults to '_'.  

HGCommandNameResultBuffers			*HGCommandNameResultBuffers*

This variable, if set to a true value, causes the hg result buffers to be
named in the old way ('<source file name> _<hg command>_').  If not set
or set to a false value, the result buffer is nameless.

HGCommandSplit					*HGCommandSplit*

This variable controls the orientation of the various window splits that
may occur (such as with HGVimDiff, when using a HG command on a HG
command buffer, or when the |HGCommandEdit| variable is set to 'split'.
If set to 'horizontal', the resulting windows will be on stacked on top of
one another.  If set to 'vertical', the resulting windows will be
side-by-side.  If not set, it defaults to 'horizontal' for all but
HGVimDiff windows.

5.2 HGCommand events				*hgcommand-events*

For additional customization, HGCommand can trigger user-defined events.
Event handlers are provided by defining User event autocommands (see
|autocommand|, |User|) in the HGCommand group with patterns matching the
event name.

For instance, the following could be added to the vimrc to provide a 'q'
mapping to quit a HGCommand scratch buffer:

augroup HGCommand
  au HGCommand User HGBufferCreated silent! nmap <unique> <buffer> q: bwipeout<cr>
augroup END

The following hooks are available:

HGBufferCreated		This event is fired just after a hg command
				result buffer is created and filled with the
				result of a hg command.  It is executed within
				the context of the HG command buffer.  The
				HGCommand buffer variables may be useful for
				handlers of this event (please see
				|hgcommand-buffer-variables|).

HGBufferSetup			This event is fired just after HG buffer setup
				occurs, if enabled.

HGPluginInit			This event is fired when the HGCommand plugin
				first loads.

HGPluginFinish			This event is fired just after the HGCommand
				plugin loads.

HGVimDiffFinish		This event is fired just after the HGVimDiff
				command executes to allow customization of,
				for instance, window placement and focus.

5.3 HGCommand buffer naming				*hgcommand-naming*

By default, the buffers containing the result of HG commands are nameless
scratch buffers.  It is intended that buffer variables of those buffers be
used to customize the statusline option so that the user may fully control the
display of result buffers.

If the old-style naming is desired, please enable the
|HGCommandNameResultBuffers| variable.  Then, each result buffer will receive
a unique name that includes the source file name, the HG command, and any
extra data (such as revision numbers) that were part of the command.

5.4 HGCommand status line support			*hgcommand-statusline*

It is intended that the user will customize the |'statusline'| option to
include HG result buffer attributes.  A sample function that may be used in
the |'statusline'| option is provided by the plugin, HGGetStatusLine().  In
order to use that function in the status line, do something like the
following:

set statusline=%<%f\ %{HGGetStatusLine()}\ %h%m%r%=%l,%c%V\ %P

of which %{HGGetStatusLine()} is the relevant portion.

The sample HGGetStatusLine() function handles both HG result buffers and
HG-managed files if HGCommand buffer management is enabled (please see
|hgcommand-buffer-management|).

5.5 HGCommand buffer management		*hgcommand-buffer-management*

The HGCommand plugin can operate in buffer management mode, which means that
it attempts to set two buffer variables ('HGRevision' and 'HGBranch') upon
entry into a buffer.  This is rather slow because it means that 'hg status'
will be invoked at each entry into a buffer (during the |BufEnter|
autocommand).

This mode is disabled by default.  In order to enable it, set the
|HGCommandEnableBufferSetup| variable to a true (non-zero) value.  Enabling
this mode simply provides the buffer variables mentioned above.  The user must
explicitly include those in the |'statusline'| option if they are to appear in
the status line (but see |hgcommand-statusline| for a simple way to do that).

==============================================================================

6. SSH "integration"					*hgcommand-ssh*

The following instructions are intended for use in integrating the
hgcommand.vim plugin with an SSH-based HG environment.

Familiarity with SSH and HG are assumed.

These instructions assume that the intent is to have a message box pop up in
order to allow the user to enter a passphrase.  If, instead, the user is
comfortable using certificate-based authentication, then only instructions
6.1.1 and 6.1.2 (and optionally 6.1.4) need to be followed; ssh should then
work transparently.

6.1 Environment settings				*hgcommand-ssh-env*

6.1.1 HGROOT should be set to something like:

	:ext:user@host:/path_to_repository

6.1.2 HG_RSH should be set to:

	ssh

	Together, those settings tell HG to use ssh as the transport when
	performing HG calls.

6.1.3 SSH_ASKPASS should be set to the password-dialog program.  In my case,
	running gnome, it's set to:

	/usr/libexec/openssh/gnome-ssh-askpass

	This tells SSH how to get passwords if no input is available.

6.1.4 OPTIONAL.  You may need to set SSH_SERVER to the location of the hg
	executable on the remote (server) machine.

6.2 HG wrapper program				*hgcommand-ssh-wrapper*

Now you need to convince SSH to use the password-dialog program.  This means
you need to execute SSH (and therefore HG) without standard input.  The
following script is a simple perl wrapper that dissasociates the HG command
from the current terminal.  Specific steps to do this may vary from system to
system; the following example works for me on linux.

#!/usr/bin/perl -w
use strict;
use POSIX qw(setsid);
open STDIN, '/dev/null';
fork and do {wait; exit;};
setsid;
exec('hg', @ARGV);

6.3 Configuring hgcommand.vim			*hgcommand-ssh-config*

At this point, you should be able to use your wrapper script to invoke HG with
various commands, and get the password dialog.  All that's left is to make HG
use your newly-created wrapper script.

6.3.1 Tell hgcommand.vim what HG executable to use.  The easiest way to do this
	is globally, by putting the following in your .vimrc:

	let HGCommandHGExec=/path/to/hg/wrapper/script

6.4 Where to go from here			*hgcommand-ssh-other*

The script given above works even when non-SSH HG connections are used,
except possibly when interactively entering the message for HG commit log
(depending on the editor you use... VIM works fine).  Since the hgcommand.vim
plugin handles that message without a terminal, the wrapper script can be used
all the time.

This allows mixed-mode operation, where some work is done with SSH-based HG
repositories, and others with pserver or local access.

It is possible, though beyond the scope of the plugin, to dynamically set the
HG executable based on the HGROOT for the file being edited.  The user
events provided (such as HGBufferCreated and HGBufferSetup) can be used to
set a buffer-local value (b:HGCommandHGExec) to override the HG executable
on a file-by-file basis.  Alternatively, much the same can be done (less
automatically) by the various project-oriented plugins out there.

It is highly recommended for ease-of-use that certificates with no passphrase
or ssh-agent are employed so that the user is not given the password prompt
too often.

==============================================================================
9. Tips							*hgcommand-tips*

9.1 Split window annotation, by Michael Anderson

:nmap <Leader>hgN :vs<CR><C-w>h<Leader>hgn:vertical res 40<CR>
                 \ggdddd:set scb<CR>:set nowrap<CR><C-w>lgg:set scb<CR>
                 \:set nowrap<CR>

This splits the buffer vertically, puts an annotation on the left (minus the
header) with the width set to 40. An editable/normal copy is placed on the
right.  The two versions are scroll locked so they  move as one. and wrapping
is turned off so that the lines line up correctly. The advantages are...

1) You get a versioning on the right.
2) You can still edit your own code.
3) Your own code still has syntax highlighting.

==============================================================================

8. Known bugs						*hgcommand-bugs*

Please let me know if you run across any.

HGVimDiff, when using the original (real) source buffer as one of the diff
buffers, uses some hacks to try to restore the state of the original buffer
when the scratch buffer containing the other version is destroyed.  There may
still be bugs in here, depending on many configuration details.

vim:tw=78:ts=8:ft=help