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файлы конфигурации для Mercurial (configuration files for Mercurial)

  Name  |  Synopsis  |  Files  |    Syntax    |  Sections  |

Синтаксис (Syntax)

A configuration file consists of sections, led by a [section] header and followed by name = value entries (sometimes called configuration keys):

[spam] eggs=ham green= eggs

Each line contains one entry. If the lines that follow are indented, they are treated as continuations of that entry. Leading whitespace is removed from values. Empty lines are skipped. Lines beginning with # or ; are ignored and may be used to provide comments.

Configuration keys can be set multiple times, in which case Mercurial will use the value that was configured last. As an example:

[spam] eggs=large ham=serrano eggs=small

This would set the configuration key named eggs to small.

It is also possible to define a section multiple times. A section can be redefined on the same and/or on different configuration files. For example:

[foo] eggs=large ham=serrano eggs=small

[bar] eggs=ham green= eggs

[foo] ham=prosciutto eggs=medium bread=toasted

This would set the eggs, ham, and bread configuration keys of the foo section to medium, prosciutto, and toasted, respectively. As you can see there only thing that matters is the last value that was set for each of the configuration keys.

If a configuration key is set multiple times in different configuration files the final value will depend on the order in which the different configuration files are read, with settings from earlier paths overriding later ones as described on the Files section above.

A line of the form %include file will include file into the current configuration file. The inclusion is recursive, which means that included files can include other files. Filenames are relative to the configuration file in which the %include directive is found. Environment variables and ~user constructs are expanded in file. This lets you do something like:

%include ~/.hgrc.d/$HOST.rc

to include a different configuration file on each computer you use.

A line with %unset name will remove name from the current section, if it has been set previously.

The values are either free-form text strings, lists of text strings, or Boolean values. Boolean values can be set to true using any of "1", "yes", "true", or "on" and to false using "0", "no", "false", or "off" (all case insensitive).

List values are separated by whitespace or comma, except when values are placed in double quotation marks:

allow_read = "John Doe, PhD", brian, betty

Quotation marks can be escaped by prefixing them with a backslash. Only quotation marks at the beginning of a word is counted as a quotation (e.g., foo"bar baz is the list of foo"bar and baz).