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revsets.md: document the all: prefix modifier for revsets

While this is arguably not part of the revset language, this
is a likely place for a user to look.

See https://discord.com/channels/968932220549103686/968932220549103689/1228065431281995837
This commit is contained in:
Ilya Grigoriev 2024-04-11 12:01:26 -07:00
parent 0fb582ed8f
commit 77eaf67f96
2 changed files with 43 additions and 14 deletions

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@ -328,23 +328,18 @@ Can be customized by the `format_short_signature()` template alias.
### Allow "large" revsets by default
Certain commands (such as `jj rebase`) can take multiple revset arguments, and
each of these may resolve to one-or-many revisions. By default, `jj` will not
allow revsets that resolve to more than one revision — a so-called "large
revset" — and will ask you to confirm that you want to proceed by
prefixing it with the `all:` modifier.
Certain commands (such as `jj rebase`) can take multiple revset arguments, but
default to requiring each of those revsets to expand to a *single* revision.
This restriction can be overridden by prefixing a revset that the user wants to
be able to expand to more than one revision with the [`all:`
modifier](revsets.md#the-all-modifier).
For instance, to add a new parent `abc` to the commit `xyz`, you may use `jj
rebase`:
```
jj rebase -r xyz -d "all:xyz-" -d "abc"
```
`jj` requires the `all:` prefix for the above command. However, you may disable
this behavior by setting `ui.always-allow-large-revsets` to `true`:
Another way you can override this check is by setting
`ui.always-allow-large-revsets` to `true`. Then, `jj` will allow every one of
the revset arguments of such commands to expand to any number of revisions.
```toml
# Assume `all:` prefix before revsets whenever it would make a difference
ui.always-allow-large-revsets = true
```

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@ -218,6 +218,40 @@ for a comprehensive list.
* `immutable_heads()`: Resolves to `trunk() | tags()` by default. See
[here](config.md#set-of-immutable-commits) for details.
## The `all:` modifier
Certain commands (such as `jj rebase`) can take multiple revset arguments, and
each of these may resolve to one-or-many revisions. By default, `jj` will not
allow revsets that resolve to more than one revision — a so-called "large
revset" — and will ask you to confirm that you want to proceed by
prefixing it with the `all:` modifier.
If you set the `ui.always-allow-large-revsets` option to `true`, `jj` will
behave as though the `all:` modifier was used every time it would matter.
An `all:` modifier before a revset expression does not otherwise change its
meaning. Strictly speaking, it is not part of the revset language. The notation
is similar to the modifiers like `glob:` allowed before [string
patterms](#string-patterns).
For example, `jj rebase -r w -d xyz+` will rebase `w` on top of the child of
`xyz` as long as `xyz` has exactly one child.
If `xyz` has more than one child, the `all:` modifier is *not* specified, and
`ui.always-allow-large-revsets` is `false` (the default), `jj rebase -r w -d
xyz+` will return an error.
If `ui.always-allow-large-revsets` was `true`, the above command would act as if
`all:` was set (see the next paragraph).
With the `all:` modifier, `jj rebase -r w -d all:xyz+` will make `w` into a merge
commit if `xyz` has more than one child. The `all:` modifier confirms that the
user expected `xyz` to have more than one child.
A more useful example: if `w` is a merge commit, `jj rebase -s w -d all:w- -d
xyz` will add `xyz` to the list of `w`'s parents.
## Examples
Show the parent(s) of the working-copy commit (like `git log -1 HEAD`):