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Version control systems tend to have trouble when files are split or
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joined. Here is one possibility for handling that.
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This can work like 'svn cp': copy with history::
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This creates a new file b, whose file-history is the same as a, but
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with a different file-id, and present at a different name.
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This creates the slightly strange situation that b claims to have text
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versions for revisions where b was not actually present.
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We might want to also join files in various cases:
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* Multiple imports of the same file
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* Two source files are being refactored into a single one
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* Two people apply an external patch that creates the same file
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I'm not aware of any other system that handles this.
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a and b must be versioned files. b is removed from the working tree
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and inventory. b's file id is added as a secondary id as a, so that
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later merges between them will detect them as being the same.
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b's weave is (???) incorporated into a.
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This means that we have a file which has multiple history paths. For
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example, asking to compare that file to its state in a previous
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version has to arbitrarily pick one to use. That's not necessarily
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fatal if we assign one as primary, but it might be a bit confusing.
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Trying to merge from another tree might can't really choose a good
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Rather than trying to join files we might just add notes that files
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are also known by a different file-id in other trees.