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(I think this is pretty brilliant. :-)
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Branches diverge when people create more than one changeset following
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on from a common ancestor::
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We also allow branches to reunite. This means that all the decisions
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taken on multiple branches have been reconciled and unified into a
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A: 0 ------- 1 ----- 3
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The predecessor of 3 is 1, in the sense that it was created on that
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branch. We could have created the exact same state as a successor to
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2, and we can move that state onto branch 2 without any loss of
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(One thing we can do here is just delete B. Because all of the work
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there has been merged onto A, this will not lose anything. We might
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do this if the purpose of B has been achieved, such as completing a
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feature or bug. But if the work is still in progress, we might keep
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it around. It makes little difference whether we decide to do new
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work in a branch called B or make a new one called C.)
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That is to say that 3 can be perfectly (trivially) merged onto B,
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with, say ``bzr push``, ``bzr pull`` or ``bzr update`` (whatever name
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works best). Perfectly merged means that we know there will be no
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conflicts or need for manual intervention, and that we can just
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directly store it without forming a roll-up changeset.
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I think we might also like the choice of merging A onto B, rather than
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pulling the changeset. That causes a new changeset to be created on
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B, noted as a successor of 2 and 3::
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A: 0 ------- 1 ----- 3 ------+
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B: \------ 2 ----+---------- 4
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One complication is that 3 is probably stored in A's history as a
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patch relative to 1; we can't just move this representation across.
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Instead, we need to recalculate the delta from 2 to 3 and store that.
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Despite that the delta is stored differently, the original signature
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on 3 should still be valid. So it must be a signature of the tree
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Note from `Kernel Traffic discussion`__:
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__ http://www.kerneltraffic.org/kernel-traffic/kt20030323_210.txt
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But anyway, what made Bitkeeper suck less is the real DAG
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structure. Neither arch (http://arch.fifthvision.net/bin/view)
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nor subversion seem to have understood that and, as a result,
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don't and won't provide the same level of semantics. Zero hope for
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Linus to use them, ever. They're needed for any decently
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distributed development process.
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This in turn suggests that possibly deltas should be stored separately
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from the commits that create them. Commits name points of
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development; deltas describe how to get from one to the other.
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The separation is nice in allowing us to send just a delta when
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diffing trees or recording for undo. We might want to compute many
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deltas between different trees.
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Is this a problem? Does this ignore Tom's advice about the primacy of
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Splitting them is probably good, but then what manifest is stored in
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changesets? We don't want to store the manifest of the whole tree if
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we can avoid it. So I suppose the changeset just gives the hash of
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the manifest, and the manifest then can be stored separately, possibly