Provided by: mercurial-common_5.3.1-1ubuntu1_all bug

NAME

       hgrc - configuration files for Mercurial

DESCRIPTION

       The Mercurial system uses a set of configuration files to control aspects of its behavior.

TROUBLESHOOTING

       If  you're  having  problems  with  your configuration, hg config --debug can help you understand what is
       introducing a setting into your environment.

       See hg help config.syntax and hg help config.files for  information  about  how  and  where  to  override
       things.

STRUCTURE

       The configuration files use a simple ini-file format. A configuration file consists of sections, led by a
       [section] header and followed by name = value entries:

       [ui]
       username = Firstname Lastname <firstname.lastname@example.net>
       verbose = True

       The  above  entries  will  be  referred  to  as  ui.username  and  ui.verbose,  respectively. See hg help
       config.syntax.

FILES

       Mercurial reads configuration data from several files, if they  exist.   These  files  do  not  exist  by
       default and you will have to create the appropriate configuration files yourself:

       Local configuration is put into the per-repository <repo>/.hg/hgrc file.

       Global configuration like the username setting is typically put into:

       • %USERPROFILE%\mercurial.ini (on Windows)

       • $HOME/.hgrc (on Unix, Plan9)

       The  names  of these files depend on the system on which Mercurial is installed. *.rc files from a single
       directory are read in alphabetical order, later ones overriding earlier ones. Where  multiple  paths  are
       given below, settings from earlier paths override later ones.

       On Unix, the following files are consulted:

       • <repo>/.hg/hgrc (per-repository)

       • $HOME/.hgrc (per-user)

       • ${XDG_CONFIG_HOME:-$HOME/.config}/hg/hgrc (per-user)

       • <install-root>/etc/mercurial/hgrc (per-installation)

       • <install-root>/etc/mercurial/hgrc.d/*.rc (per-installation)

       • /etc/mercurial/hgrc (per-system)

       • /etc/mercurial/hgrc.d/*.rc (per-system)

       • <internal>/*.rc (defaults)

       On Windows, the following files are consulted:

       • <repo>/.hg/hgrc (per-repository)

       • %USERPROFILE%\.hgrc (per-user)

       • %USERPROFILE%\Mercurial.ini (per-user)

       • %HOME%\.hgrc (per-user)

       • %HOME%\Mercurial.ini (per-user)

       • HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Mercurial (per-system)

       • <install-dir>\hgrc.d\*.rc (per-installation)

       • <install-dir>\Mercurial.ini (per-installation)

       • %PROGRAMDATA%\Mercurial\hgrc (per-system)

       • %PROGRAMDATA%\Mercurial\Mercurial.ini (per-system)

       • %PROGRAMDATA%\Mercurial\hgrc.d\*.rc (per-system)

       • <internal>/*.rc (defaults)

       Note   The  registry  key  HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Wow6432Node\Mercurial  is used when running 32-bit
              Python on 64-bit Windows.

       On Plan9, the following files are consulted:

       • <repo>/.hg/hgrc (per-repository)

       • $home/lib/hgrc (per-user)

       • <install-root>/lib/mercurial/hgrc (per-installation)

       • <install-root>/lib/mercurial/hgrc.d/*.rc (per-installation)

       • /lib/mercurial/hgrc (per-system)

       • /lib/mercurial/hgrc.d/*.rc (per-system)

       • <internal>/*.rc (defaults)

       Per-repository  configuration  options  only  apply  in  a  particular  repository.  This  file  is   not
       version-controlled,  and  will  not  get  transferred  during  a  "clone" operation. Options in this file
       override options in all other configuration files.

       On Plan 9 and Unix, most of this file will be ignored if it doesn't belong to a  trusted  user  or  to  a
       trusted group. See hg help config.trusted for more details.

       Per-user  configuration  file(s) are for the user running Mercurial.  Options in these files apply to all
       Mercurial commands executed by this user in any directory. Options in these files override per-system and
       per-installation options.

       Per-installation configuration files are searched for in the  directory  where  Mercurial  is  installed.
       <install-root> is the parent directory of the hg executable (or symlink) being run.

       For     example,     if     installed     in     /shared/tools/bin/hg,    Mercurial    will    look    in
       /shared/tools/etc/mercurial/hgrc. Options in these files apply to all Mercurial commands executed by  any
       user in any directory.

       Per-installation  configuration  files are for the system on which Mercurial is running. Options in these
       files apply to all Mercurial commands executed by any  user  in  any  directory.  Registry  keys  contain
       PATH-like  strings,  every part of which must reference a Mercurial.ini file or be a directory where *.rc
       files will be read.  Mercurial checks each of these locations in the specified order until  one  or  more
       configuration files are detected.

       Per-system  configuration  files are for the system on which Mercurial is running. Options in these files
       apply to all Mercurial commands executed by any user in any directory. Options in  these  files  override
       per-installation options.

       Mercurial  comes  with  some  default  configuration.  The default configuration files are installed with
       Mercurial and will be overwritten on upgrades. Default configuration files  should  never  be  edited  by
       users  or  administrators  but  can be overridden in other configuration files. So far the directory only
       contains merge tool configuration but packagers can also put other default configuration there.

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).

SECTIONS

       This section describes the different sections that may appear in  a  Mercurial  configuration  file,  the
       purpose of each section, its possible keys, and their possible values.

   alias
       Defines command aliases.

       Aliases  allow  you  to  define  your  own  commands  in terms of other commands (or aliases), optionally
       including arguments. Positional arguments in the form of  $1,  $2,  etc.  in  the  alias  definition  are
       expanded by Mercurial before execution. Positional arguments not already used by $N in the definition are
       put at the end of the command to be executed.

       Alias definitions consist of lines of the form:

       <alias> = <command> [<argument>]...

       For example, this definition:

       latest = log --limit 5

       creates  a  new command latest that shows only the five most recent changesets. You can define subsequent
       aliases using earlier ones:

       stable5 = latest -b stable

       Note   It is possible to create aliases with the  same  names  as  existing  commands,  which  will  then
              override the original definitions. This is almost always a bad idea!

       An alias can start with an exclamation point (!) to make it a shell alias. A shell alias is executed with
       the shell and will let you run arbitrary commands. As an example,

       echo = !echo $@

       will let you do hg echo foo to have foo printed in your terminal. A better example might be:

       purge = !$HG status --no-status --unknown -0 re: | xargs -0 rm -f

       which  will  make  hg  purge  delete  all unknown files in the repository in the same manner as the purge
       extension.

       Positional arguments like $1, $2, etc. in the alias definition expand to the command arguments. Unmatched
       arguments are removed. $0 expands to the alias name and $@ expands to all arguments separated by a space.
       "$@" (with quotes) expands to  all  arguments  quoted  individually  and  separated  by  a  space.  These
       expansions happen before the command is passed to the shell.

       Shell aliases are executed in an environment where $HG expands to the path of the Mercurial that was used
       to  execute  the alias. This is useful when you want to call further Mercurial commands in a shell alias,
       as was done above for the purge alias. In addition, $HG_ARGS expands to the arguments given to Mercurial.
       In the hg echo foo call above, $HG_ARGS would expand to echo foo.

       Note   Some global configuration options such as -R are processed before shell aliases and will thus  not
              be passed to aliases.

   annotate
       Settings used when displaying file annotations. All values are Booleans and default to False. See hg help
       config.diff for related options for the diff command.

       ignorews

              Ignore white space when comparing lines.

       ignorewseol

              Ignore white space at the end of a line when comparing lines.

       ignorewsamount

              Ignore changes in the amount of white space.

       ignoreblanklines

              Ignore changes whose lines are all blank.

   auth
       Authentication credentials and other authentication-like configuration for HTTP connections. This section
       allows  you  to  store  usernames  and  passwords  for  use  when  logging into HTTP servers. See hg help
       config.web if you want to configure who can login to your HTTP server.

       The following options apply to all hosts.

       cookiefile

              Path to a file containing HTTP cookie lines. Cookies matching a host will be sent automatically.

              The file format uses the Mozilla cookies.txt format, which defines cookies  on  their  own  lines.
              Each  line  contains  7  fields  delimited  by  the tab character (domain, is_domain_cookie, path,
              is_secure, expires, name, value). For more info, do an Internet search for  "Netscape  cookies.txt
              format."

              Note:  the  cookies  parser does not handle port numbers on domains. You will need to remove ports
              from the domain for the cookie to be recognized.  This could result in a cookie being disclosed to
              an unwanted server.

              The cookies file is read-only.

       Other options in this section are grouped by name and have the following format:

       <name>.<argument> = <value>

       where <name> is used to group arguments into authentication entries. Example:

       foo.prefix = hg.intevation.de/mercurial
       foo.username = foo
       foo.password = bar
       foo.schemes = http https

       bar.prefix = secure.example.org
       bar.key = path/to/file.key
       bar.cert = path/to/file.cert
       bar.schemes = https

       Supported arguments:

       prefix

              Either * or a URI prefix with or without the scheme  part.   The  authentication  entry  with  the
              longest matching prefix is used (where * matches everything and counts as a match of length 1). If
              the  prefix  doesn't  include  a  scheme,  the  match is performed against the URI with its scheme
              stripped as well, and the schemes argument, q.v., is then subsequently consulted.

       username

              Optional. Username to authenticate with. If not given, and  the  remote  site  requires  basic  or
              digest authentication, the user will be prompted for it. Environment variables are expanded in the
              username  letting you do foo.username = $USER. If the URI includes a username, only [auth] entries
              with a matching username or without a username will be considered.

       password

              Optional. Password to authenticate with. If not given, and  the  remote  site  requires  basic  or
              digest authentication, the user will be prompted for it.

       key

              Optional.  PEM  encoded  client  certificate  key  file. Environment variables are expanded in the
              filename.

       cert

              Optional. PEM encoded client certificate chain file. Environment variables  are  expanded  in  the
              filename.

       schemes

              Optional.  Space separated list of URI schemes to use this authentication entry with. Only used if
              the prefix doesn't include a scheme. Supported  schemes  are  http  and  https.  They  will  match
              static-http and static-https respectively, as well.  (default: https)

       If  no  suitable authentication entry is found, the user is prompted for credentials as usual if required
       by the remote.

   color
       Configure the Mercurial color mode. For details about how to define your custom effect and style  see  hg
       help color.

       mode

              String:  control  the method used to output color. One of auto, ansi, win32, terminfo or debug. In
              auto mode, Mercurial will use ANSI mode by default (or win32 mode  prior  to  Windows  10)  if  it
              detects a terminal. Any invalid value will disable color.

       pagermode

              String: optional override of color.mode used with pager.

              On  some  systems,  terminfo  mode  may  cause  problems  when using color with less -R as a pager
              program. less with the -R option will only display ECMA-48 color  codes,  and  terminfo  mode  may
              sometimes  emit  codes that less doesn't understand. You can work around this by either using ansi
              mode (or auto mode), or by using less -r (which will pass through all terminal control codes,  not
              just color control codes).

              On  some  systems  (such as MSYS in Windows), the terminal may support a different color mode than
              the pager program.

   commands
       commit.post-status

              Show status of files in the working directory after successful commit.  (default: False)

       merge.require-rev

              Require that the revision to merge the current commit with be specified on the  command  line.  If
              this is enabled and a revision is not specified, the command aborts.  (default: False)

       push.require-revs

              Require  revisions  to  push  be  specified  using  one or more mechanisms such as specifying them
              positionally on the command line,  using  -r,  -b,  and/or  -B  on  the  command  line,  or  using
              paths.<path>:pushrev in the configuration. If this is enabled and revisions are not specified, the
              command aborts.  (default: False)

       resolve.confirm

              Confirm before performing action if no filename is passed.  (default: False)

       resolve.explicit-re-merge

              Require  uses of hg resolve to specify which action it should perform, instead of re-merging files
              by default.  (default: False)

       resolve.mark-check

              Determines what level of checking hg resolve --mark will perform before marking files as resolved.
              Valid values are none`, ``warn, and abort. warn will output a warning  listing  the  file(s)  that
              still  have  conflict markers in them, but will still mark everything resolved.  abort will output
              the same warning but will not mark things as resolved.  If --all is passed  and  this  is  set  to
              abort, only a warning will be shown (an error will not be raised).  (default: none)

       status.relative

              Make paths in hg status output relative to the current directory.  (default: False)

       status.terse

              Default value for the --terse flag, which condenses status output.  (default: empty)

       update.check

              Determines  what level of checking hg update will perform before moving to a destination revision.
              Valid values are abort, none, linear, and noconflict. abort always fails if the working  directory
              has  uncommitted  changes.  none  performs no checking, and may result in a merge with uncommitted
              changes. linear allows any update as long as it follows a straight line in the  revision  history,
              and may trigger a merge with uncommitted changes. noconflict will allow any update which would not
              trigger a merge with uncommitted changes, if any are present.  (default: linear)

       update.requiredest

              Require  that the user pass a destination when running hg update.  For example, hg update .:: will
              be allowed, but a plain hg update will be disallowed.  (default: False)

   committemplate
       changeset

              String: configuration in this section is used as the template to customize the text shown  in  the
              editor when committing.

       In  addition  to  pre-defined  template  keywords,  commit  log  specific  one  below  can  be  used  for
       customization:

       extramsg

              String: Extra message (typically 'Leave message empty to abort commit.'). This may be  changed  by
              some commands or extensions.

       For example, the template configuration below shows as same text as one shown by default:

       [committemplate]
       changeset = {desc}\n\n
           HG: Enter commit message.  Lines beginning with 'HG:' are removed.
           HG: {extramsg}
           HG: --
           HG: user: {author}\n{ifeq(p2rev, "-1", "",
          "HG: branch merge\n")
          }HG: branch '{branch}'\n{if(activebookmark,
          "HG: bookmark '{activebookmark}'\n")   }{subrepos %
          "HG: subrepo {subrepo}\n"              }{file_adds %
          "HG: added {file}\n"                   }{file_mods %
          "HG: changed {file}\n"                 }{file_dels %
          "HG: removed {file}\n"                 }{if(files, "",
          "HG: no files changed\n")}

       diff()

              String: show the diff (see hg help templates for detail)

       Sometimes  it  is helpful to show the diff of the changeset in the editor without having to prefix 'HG: '
       to each line so that highlighting works correctly. For this, Mercurial provides a  special  string  which
       will ignore everything below it:

       HG: ------------------------ >8 ------------------------

       For example, the template configuration below will show the diff below the extra message:

       [committemplate]
       changeset = {desc}\n\n
           HG: Enter commit message.  Lines beginning with 'HG:' are removed.
           HG: {extramsg}
           HG: ------------------------ >8 ------------------------
           HG: Do not touch the line above.
           HG: Everything below will be removed.
           {diff()}

       Note   For  some  problematic  encodings (see hg help win32mbcs for detail), this customization should be
              configured carefully, to avoid showing broken characters.

              For example, if a multibyte character ending with  backslash  (0x5c)  is  followed  by  the  ASCII
              character  'n'  in  the  customized  template,  the  sequence  of  backslash and 'n' is treated as
              line-feed unexpectedly (and the multibyte character is broken, too).

       Customized template is used for commands below (--edit may be required):

       • hg backouthg commithg fetch (for merge commit only)

       • hg grafthg histedithg importhg qfold, hg qnew and hg qrefreshhg rebasehg shelvehg signhg taghg transplant

       Configuring items below instead of changeset allows showing customized message only for specific actions,
       or showing different messages for each action.

       • changeset.backout for hg backoutchangeset.commit.amend.merge for hg commit --amend on merges

       • changeset.commit.amend.normal for hg commit --amend on other

       • changeset.commit.normal.merge for hg commit on merges

       • changeset.commit.normal.normal for hg commit on other

       • changeset.fetch for hg fetch (impling merge commit)

       • changeset.gpg.sign for hg signchangeset.graft for hg graftchangeset.histedit.edit for edit of hg histeditchangeset.histedit.fold for fold of hg histeditchangeset.histedit.mess for mess of hg histeditchangeset.histedit.pick for pick of hg histeditchangeset.import.bypass for hg import --bypasschangeset.import.normal.merge for hg import on merges

       • changeset.import.normal.normal for hg import on other

       • changeset.mq.qnew for hg qnewchangeset.mq.qfold for hg qfoldchangeset.mq.qrefresh for hg qrefreshchangeset.rebase.collapse for hg rebase --collapsechangeset.rebase.merge for hg rebase on merges

       • changeset.rebase.normal for hg rebase on other

       • changeset.shelve.shelve for hg shelvechangeset.tag.add for hg tag without --removechangeset.tag.remove for hg tag --removechangeset.transplant.merge for hg transplant on merges

       • changeset.transplant.normal for hg transplant on other

       These dot-separated lists of names are treated as hierarchical ones.  For  example,  changeset.tag.remove
       customizes  the  commit message only for hg tag --remove, but changeset.tag customizes the commit message
       for hg tag regardless of --remove option.

       When the external editor is invoked for a commit, the corresponding dot-separated list of  names  without
       the changeset. prefix (e.g. commit.normal.normal) is in the HGEDITFORM environment variable.

       In  this  section, items other than changeset can be referred from others. For example, the configuration
       to list committed files up below can be referred as {listupfiles}:

       [committemplate]
       listupfiles = {file_adds %
          "HG: added {file}\n"     }{file_mods %
          "HG: changed {file}\n"   }{file_dels %
          "HG: removed {file}\n"   }{if(files, "",
          "HG: no files changed\n")}

   decode/encode
       Filters for transforming files on checkout/checkin. This would typically be used for  newline  processing
       or other localization/canonicalization of files.

       Filters  consist of a filter pattern followed by a filter command.  Filter patterns are globs by default,
       rooted at the repository root.  For example, to match any file ending in .txt in the root directory only,
       use the pattern *.txt. To match any file ending in .c anywhere in the repository, use the  pattern  **.c.
       For each file only the first matching filter applies.

       The filter command can start with a specifier, either pipe: or tempfile:. If no specifier is given, pipe:
       is used by default.

       A pipe: command must accept data on stdin and return the transformed data on stdout.

       Pipe example:

       [encode]
       # uncompress gzip files on checkin to improve delta compression
       # note: not necessarily a good idea, just an example
       *.gz = pipe: gunzip

       [decode]
       # recompress gzip files when writing them to the working dir (we
       # can safely omit "pipe:", because it's the default)
       *.gz = gzip

       A  tempfile:  command is a template. The string INFILE is replaced with the name of a temporary file that
       contains the data to be filtered by the command. The string OUTFILE is replaced with the name of an empty
       temporary file, where the filtered data must be written by the command.

       Note   The tempfile  mechanism  is  recommended  for  Windows  systems,  where  the  standard  shell  I/O
              redirection operators often have strange effects and may corrupt the contents of your files.

       This filter mechanism is used internally by the eol extension to translate line ending characters between
       Windows (CRLF) and Unix (LF) format. We suggest you use the eol extension for convenience.

   defaults
       (defaults are deprecated. Don't use them. Use aliases instead.)

       Use  the [defaults] section to define command defaults, i.e. the default options/arguments to pass to the
       specified commands.

       The following example makes hg log run in verbose mode, and hg status show only the  modified  files,  by
       default:

       [defaults]
       log = -v
       status = -m

       The  actual  commands, instead of their aliases, must be used when defining command defaults. The command
       defaults will also be applied to the aliases of the commands defined.

   diff
       Settings used when displaying diffs. Everything except for unified is a Boolean and  defaults  to  False.
       See hg help config.annotate for related options for the annotate command.

       git

              Use git extended diff format.

       nobinary

              Omit git binary patches.

       nodates

              Don't include dates in diff headers.

       noprefix

              Omit 'a/' and 'b/' prefixes from filenames. Ignored in plain mode.

       showfunc

              Show which function each change is in.

       ignorews

              Ignore white space when comparing lines.

       ignorewsamount

              Ignore changes in the amount of white space.

       ignoreblanklines

              Ignore changes whose lines are all blank.

       unified

              Number of lines of context to show.

       word-diff

              Highlight changed words.

   email
       Settings for extensions that send email messages.

       from

              Optional. Email address to use in "From" header and SMTP envelope of outgoing messages.

       to

              Optional. Comma-separated list of recipients' email addresses.

       cc

              Optional. Comma-separated list of carbon copy recipients' email addresses.

       bcc

              Optional. Comma-separated list of blind carbon copy recipients' email addresses.

       method

              Optional.  Method  to  use  to  send email messages. If value is smtp (default), use SMTP (see the
              [smtp] section for configuration).  Otherwise, use as name  of  program  to  run  that  acts  like
              sendmail  (takes  -f  option  for  sender,  list of recipients on command line, message on stdin).
              Normally, setting this to sendmail or  /usr/sbin/sendmail  is  enough  to  use  sendmail  to  send
              messages.

       charsets

              Optional.  Comma-separated list of character sets considered convenient for recipients. Addresses,
              headers, and parts not containing patches of outgoing  messages  will  be  encoded  in  the  first
              character set to which conversion from local encoding ($HGENCODING, ui.fallbackencoding) succeeds.
              If correct conversion fails, the text in question is sent as is.  (default: '')

              Order of outgoing email character sets:

              1. us-ascii: always first, regardless of settings

              2. email.charsets: in order given by user

              3. ui.fallbackencoding: if not in email.charsets

              4. $HGENCODING: if not in email.charsets

              5. utf-8: always last, regardless of settings

       Email example:

       [email]
       from = Joseph User <joe.user@example.com>
       method = /usr/sbin/sendmail
       # charsets for western Europeans
       # us-ascii, utf-8 omitted, as they are tried first and last
       charsets = iso-8859-1, iso-8859-15, windows-1252

   extensions
       Mercurial has an extension mechanism for adding new features. To enable an extension, create an entry for
       it in this section.

       If  you  know that the extension is already in Python's search path, you can give the name of the module,
       followed by =, with nothing after the =.

       Otherwise, give a name that you choose, followed by =, followed by the path to the  .py  file  (including
       the file name extension) that defines the extension.

       To  explicitly disable an extension that is enabled in an hgrc of broader scope, prepend its path with !,
       as in foo = !/ext/path or foo = ! when path is not supplied.

       Example for ~/.hgrc:

       [extensions]
       # (the churn extension will get loaded from Mercurial's path)
       churn =
       # (this extension will get loaded from the file specified)
       myfeature = ~/.hgext/myfeature.py

   format
       Configuration that  controls  the  repository  format.  Newer  format  options  are  more  powerful,  but
       incompatible  with  some  older  versions  of  Mercurial.  Format  options  are  considered at repository
       initialization only. You need to make a new clone for config changes to be taken into account.

       For    more    details     about     repository     format     and     version     compatibility,     see
       https://www.mercurial-scm.org/wiki/MissingRequirement

       usegeneraldelta

              Enable  or  disable  the "generaldelta" repository format which improves repository compression by
              allowing "revlog" to store deltas against arbitrary revisions instead  of  the  previously  stored
              one. This provides significant improvement for repositories with branches.

              Repositories with this on-disk format require Mercurial version 1.9.

              Enabled by default.

       dotencode

              Enable or disable the "dotencode" repository format which enhances the "fncache" repository format
              (which  has  to  be enabled to use dotencode) to avoid issues with filenames starting with "._" on
              Mac OS X and spaces on Windows.

              Repositories with this on-disk format require Mercurial version 1.7.

              Enabled by default.

       usefncache

              Enable or disable the "fncache" repository format which enhances  the  "store"  repository  format
              (which  has  to  be  enabled  to  use  fncache) to allow longer filenames and avoids using Windows
              reserved names, e.g. "nul".

              Repositories with this on-disk format require Mercurial version 1.1.

              Enabled by default.

       usestore

              Enable or disable the "store" repository format which improves  compatibility  with  systems  that
              fold  case  or  otherwise  mangle  filenames. Disabling this option will allow you to store longer
              filenames in some situations at the expense of compatibility.

              Repositories with this on-disk format require Mercurial version 0.9.4.

              Enabled by default.

       sparse-revlog

              Enable or disable the sparse-revlog delta strategy.  This  format  improves  delta  re-use  inside
              revlog.  For  very branchy repositories, it results in a smaller store. For repositories with many
              revisions, it also helps performance (by using shortened delta chains.)

              Repositories with this on-disk format require Mercurial version 4.7

              Enabled by default.

       revlog-compression

              Compression algorithm used by revlog. Supported values are zlib and zstd. The zlib engine  is  the
              historical  default  of  Mercurial.  zstd  is  a newer format that is usually a net win over zlib,
              operating faster at better compression rates. Use zstd to reduce CPU usage.

              On some systems, the Mercurial installation may lack zstd support.

              Default is zlib.

       bookmarks-in-store

              Store bookmarks in .hg/store/. This means that bookmarks are shared when using hg share regardless
              of the -B option.

              Repositories with this on-disk format require Mercurial version 5.1.

              Disabled by default.

   graph
       Web graph view configuration. This section let you change graph elements display properties by  branches,
       for instance to make the default branch stand out.

       Each line has the following format:

       <branch>.<argument> = <value>

       where <branch> is the name of the branch being customized. Example:

       [graph]
       # 2px width
       default.width = 2
       # red color
       default.color = FF0000

       Supported arguments:

       width

              Set branch edges width in pixels.

       color

              Set branch edges color in hexadecimal RGB notation.

   hooks
       Commands  or  Python  functions  that  get  automatically executed by various actions such as starting or
       finishing a commit. Multiple hooks can be run for the same action by appending a suffix  to  the  action.
       Overriding  a  site-wide  hook can be done by changing its value or setting it to an empty string.  Hooks
       can be prioritized by adding a prefix of priority. to the hook  name  on  a  new  line  and  setting  the
       priority. The default priority is 0.

       Example .hg/hgrc:

       [hooks]
       # update working directory after adding changesets
       changegroup.update = hg update
       # do not use the site-wide hook
       incoming =
       incoming.email = /my/email/hook
       incoming.autobuild = /my/build/hook
       # force autobuild hook to run before other incoming hooks
       priority.incoming.autobuild = 1

       Most  hooks are run with environment variables set that give useful additional information. For each hook
       below, the environment variables it is passed are listed with names in the form $HG_foo. The $HG_HOOKTYPE
       and $HG_HOOKNAME variables are set for all hooks.  They contain the type of hook which triggered the  run
       and  the  full  name  of  the  hook  in  the  config,  respectively.  In  the example above, this will be
       $HG_HOOKTYPE=incoming and $HG_HOOKNAME=incoming.email.

       Some basic Unix syntax can be enabled for portability, including $VAR and ${VAR} style  variables.   A  ~
       followed by \ or / will be expanded to %USERPROFILE% to simulate a subset of tilde expansion on Unix.  To
       use  a  literal  $ or ~, it must be escaped with a back slash or inside of a strong quote.  Strong quotes
       will be replaced by double quotes after processing.

       This feature is enabled by adding a prefix of tonative. to the hook name on a new line, and setting it to
       True.  For example:

       [hooks]
       incoming.autobuild = /my/build/hook
       # enable translation to cmd.exe syntax for autobuild hook
       tonative.incoming.autobuild = True

       changegroup

              Run after a changegroup has been added via push, pull or  unbundle.   The  ID  of  the  first  new
              changeset  is  in  $HG_NODE  and  last is in $HG_NODE_LAST.  The URL from which changes came is in
              $HG_URL.

       commit

              Run after a changeset has been created in the local  repository.  The  ID  of  the  newly  created
              changeset is in $HG_NODE. Parent changeset IDs are in $HG_PARENT1 and $HG_PARENT2.

       incoming

              Run  after  a changeset has been pulled, pushed, or unbundled into the local repository. The ID of
              the newly arrived changeset is in $HG_NODE. The URL that was source of the changes is in $HG_URL.

       outgoing

              Run after sending changes from the local repository to another. The ID of first changeset sent  is
              in $HG_NODE. The source of operation is in $HG_SOURCE. Also see hg help config.hooks.preoutgoing.

       post-<command>

              Run  after  successful invocations of the associated command. The contents of the command line are
              passed as $HG_ARGS and the result code in $HG_RESULT. Parsed command line arguments are passed  as
              $HG_PATS  and  $HG_OPTS. These contain string representations of the python data internally passed
              to <command>. $HG_OPTS is  a  dictionary  of  options  (with  unspecified  options  set  to  their
              defaults).  $HG_PATS is a list of arguments. Hook failure is ignored.

       fail-<command>

              Run  after  a  failed  invocation  of  an associated command. The contents of the command line are
              passed as $HG_ARGS. Parsed command line arguments are  passed  as  $HG_PATS  and  $HG_OPTS.  These
              contain  string  representations  of the python data internally passed to <command>. $HG_OPTS is a
              dictionary of options (with unspecified options set to their defaults).  $HG_PATS  is  a  list  of
              arguments.  Hook failure is ignored.

       pre-<command>

              Run  before  executing  the  associated  command.  The  contents of the command line are passed as
              $HG_ARGS. Parsed command line arguments are passed as $HG_PATS and $HG_OPTS. These contain  string
              representations  of  the  data internally passed to <command>. $HG_OPTS is a dictionary of options
              (with unspecified options set to their defaults). $HG_PATS is a list of  arguments.  If  the  hook
              returns failure, the command doesn't execute and Mercurial returns the failure code.

       prechangegroup

              Run before a changegroup is added via push, pull or unbundle. Exit status 0 allows the changegroup
              to  proceed.  A  non-zero status will cause the push, pull or unbundle to fail. The URL from which
              changes will come is in $HG_URL.

       precommit

              Run before starting a local commit. Exit status 0 allows the commit to proceed. A non-zero  status
              will cause the commit to fail.  Parent changeset IDs are in $HG_PARENT1 and $HG_PARENT2.

       prelistkeys

              Run  before  listing  pushkeys  (like  bookmarks)  in the repository. A non-zero status will cause
              failure. The key namespace is in $HG_NAMESPACE.

       preoutgoing

              Run before collecting changes to send from the local repository to another. A non-zero status will
              cause failure. This lets you prevent pull over HTTP  or  SSH.  It  can  also  prevent  propagating
              commits  (via  local  pull, push (outbound) or bundle commands), but not completely, since you can
              just copy files instead. The source of operation is in $HG_SOURCE. If "serve",  the  operation  is
              happening  on  behalf  of  a  remote  SSH  or  HTTP repository. If "push", "pull" or "bundle", the
              operation is happening on behalf of a repository on same system.

       prepushkey

              Run before a pushkey (like a bookmark) is added to the repository. A non-zero  status  will  cause
              the  key  to  be  rejected.  The key namespace is in $HG_NAMESPACE, the key is in $HG_KEY, the old
              value (if any) is in $HG_OLD, and the new value is in $HG_NEW.

       pretag

              Run before creating a tag. Exit status 0 allows the tag to be  created.  A  non-zero  status  will
              cause  the  tag  to  fail.  The  ID  of the changeset to tag is in $HG_NODE. The name of tag is in
              $HG_TAG. The tag is local if $HG_LOCAL=1, or in the repository if $HG_LOCAL=0.

       pretxnopen

              Run before any new repository transaction is open. The reason  for  the  transaction  will  be  in
              $HG_TXNNAME,  and  a  unique identifier for the transaction will be in HG_TXNID. A non-zero status
              will prevent the transaction from being opened.

       pretxnclose

              Run right before the transaction is actually finalized. Any repository change will be  visible  to
              the  hook  program.  This  lets  you  validate the transaction content or change it. Exit status 0
              allows the commit to proceed. A non-zero status will cause the transaction to be rolled back.  The
              reason  for  the  transaction  opening  will  be  in  $HG_TXNNAME, and a unique identifier for the
              transaction will be in  HG_TXNID.  The  rest  of  the  available  data  will  vary  according  the
              transaction  type.  New  changesets  will  add  $HG_NODE  (the  ID  of the first added changeset),
              $HG_NODE_LAST (the ID of the last added changeset), $HG_URL and  $HG_SOURCE  variables.   Bookmark
              and phase changes will set HG_BOOKMARK_MOVED and HG_PHASES_MOVED to 1 respectively, etc.

       pretxnclose-bookmark

              Run right before a bookmark change is actually finalized. Any repository change will be visible to
              the  hook  program.  This  lets  you  validate the transaction content or change it. Exit status 0
              allows the commit to proceed. A non-zero status will cause the transaction to be rolled back.  The
              name of the bookmark will be  available  in  $HG_BOOKMARK,  the  new  bookmark  location  will  be
              available  in  $HG_NODE while the previous location will be available in $HG_OLDNODE. In case of a
              bookmark creation $HG_OLDNODE will be empty. In case of  deletion  $HG_NODE  will  be  empty.   In
              addition,  the  reason for the transaction opening will be in $HG_TXNNAME, and a unique identifier
              for the transaction will be in HG_TXNID.

       pretxnclose-phase

              Run right before a phase change is actually finalized. Any repository change will  be  visible  to
              the  hook  program.  This  lets  you  validate the transaction content or change it. Exit status 0
              allows the commit to proceed.  A non-zero status will cause the transaction to be rolled back. The
              hook is called multiple times, once for each revision affected by a phase  change.   The  affected
              node  is available in $HG_NODE, the phase in $HG_PHASE while the previous $HG_OLDPHASE. In case of
              new node, $HG_OLDPHASE will be empty.  In addition, the reason for the transaction opening will be
              in $HG_TXNNAME, and a unique identifier for the transaction will be in HG_TXNID. The hook is  also
              run for newly added revisions. In this case the $HG_OLDPHASE entry will be empty.

       txnclose

              Run  after  any  repository  transaction has been committed. At this point, the transaction can no
              longer  be  rolled  back.  The  hook  will  run  after  the  lock  is  released.   See   hg   help
              config.hooks.pretxnclose for details about available variables.

       txnclose-bookmark

              Run  after any bookmark change has been committed. At this point, the transaction can no longer be
              rolled   back.   The   hook   will   run   after   the   lock   is   released.   See    hg    help
              config.hooks.pretxnclose-bookmark for details about available variables.

       txnclose-phase

              Run  after  any  phase  change has been committed. At this point, the transaction can no longer be
              rolled   back.   The   hook   will   run   after   the   lock   is   released.   See    hg    help
              config.hooks.pretxnclose-phase for details about available variables.

       txnabort

              Run  when  a  transaction  is  aborted.  See  hg  help  config.hooks.pretxnclose for details about
              available variables.

       pretxnchangegroup

              Run after a changegroup has been added via push, pull or unbundle, but before the transaction  has
              been committed. The changegroup is visible to the hook program. This allows validation of incoming
              changes  before  accepting  them.  The ID of the first new changeset is in $HG_NODE and last is in
              $HG_NODE_LAST. Exit status 0 allows the transaction to commit. A non-zero status  will  cause  the
              transaction  to  be  rolled  back,  and the push, pull or unbundle will fail. The URL that was the
              source of changes is in $HG_URL.

       pretxncommit

              Run after a changeset has been created, but before the transaction is committed. The changeset  is
              visible to the hook program. This allows validation of the commit message and changes. Exit status
              0  allows  the  commit to proceed. A non-zero status will cause the transaction to be rolled back.
              The ID of the new changeset is in $HG_NODE. The  parent  changeset  IDs  are  in  $HG_PARENT1  and
              $HG_PARENT2.

       preupdate

              Run  before updating the working directory. Exit status 0 allows the update to proceed. A non-zero
              status will prevent the update.  The changeset ID of  first  new  parent  is  in  $HG_PARENT1.  If
              updating to a merge, the ID of second new parent is in $HG_PARENT2.

       listkeys

              Run  after  listing  pushkeys  (like  bookmarks)  in  the  repository.  The  key  namespace  is in
              $HG_NAMESPACE. $HG_VALUES is a dictionary containing the keys and values.

       pushkey

              Run after a pushkey (like a bookmark) is  added  to  the  repository.  The  key  namespace  is  in
              $HG_NAMESPACE,  the  key is in $HG_KEY, the old value (if any) is in $HG_OLD, and the new value is
              in $HG_NEW.

       tag

              Run after a tag is created. The ID of the tagged changeset is in $HG_NODE.  The name of tag is  in
              $HG_TAG. The tag is local if $HG_LOCAL=1, or in the repository if $HG_LOCAL=0.

       update

              Run  after updating the working directory. The changeset ID of first new parent is in $HG_PARENT1.
              If updating to a merge, the ID of second new parent is in $HG_PARENT2. If  the  update  succeeded,
              $HG_ERROR=0. If the update failed (e.g. because conflicts were not resolved), $HG_ERROR=1.

       Note   It is generally better to use standard hooks rather than the generic pre- and post- command hooks,
              as  they  are  guaranteed  to  be called in the appropriate contexts for influencing transactions.
              Also, hooks like "commit" will be called in all contexts that generate a commit (e.g. tag) and not
              just the commit command.

       Note   Environment variables with empty values may not be passed to hooks on platforms such  as  Windows.
              As  an  example,  $HG_PARENT2  will  have  an  empty value under Unix-like platforms for non-merge
              changesets, while it will not be available at all under Windows.

       The syntax for Python hooks is as follows:

       hookname = python:modulename.submodule.callable
       hookname = python:/path/to/python/module.py:callable

       Python hooks are run within the Mercurial process. Each hook  is  called  with  at  least  three  keyword
       arguments:  a  ui  object  (keyword  ui), a repository object (keyword repo), and a hooktype keyword that
       tells what kind of hook is used. Arguments listed as environment variables above are  passed  as  keyword
       arguments, with no HG_ prefix, and names in lower case.

       If a Python hook returns a "true" value or raises an exception, this is treated as a failure.

   hostfingerprints
       (Deprecated. Use [hostsecurity]'s fingerprints options instead.)

       Fingerprints of the certificates of known HTTPS servers.

       A  HTTPS  connection  to  a  server  with  a fingerprint configured here will only succeed if the servers
       certificate matches the fingerprint.  This is very similar to how ssh known hosts works.

       The fingerprint is the SHA-1 hash value of the DER encoded certificate.  Multiple values can be specified
       (separated by spaces or commas). This can be used to define both old and new fingerprints  while  a  host
       transitions to a new certificate.

       The CA chain and web.cacerts is not used for servers with a fingerprint.

       For example:

       [hostfingerprints]
       hg.intevation.de = fc:e2:8d:d9:51:cd:cb:c1:4d:18:6b:b7:44:8d:49:72:57:e6:cd:33
       hg.intevation.org = fc:e2:8d:d9:51:cd:cb:c1:4d:18:6b:b7:44:8d:49:72:57:e6:cd:33

   hostsecurity
       Used to specify global and per-host security settings for connecting to other machines.

       The following options control default behavior for all hosts.

       ciphers

              Defines the cryptographic ciphers to use for connections.

              Value    must    be    a    valid    OpenSSL    Cipher    List    Format    as    documented    at
              https://www.openssl.org/docs/manmaster/apps/ciphers.html#CIPHER-LIST-FORMAT.

              This setting is for advanced users only. Setting  to  incorrect  values  can  significantly  lower
              connection security or decrease performance.  You have been warned.

              This option requires Python 2.7.

       minimumprotocol

              Defines the minimum channel encryption protocol to use.

              By default, the highest version of TLS supported by both client and server is used.

              Allowed values are: tls1.0, tls1.1, tls1.2.

              When  running  on  an old Python version, only tls1.0 is allowed since old versions of Python only
              support up to TLS 1.0.

              When running a Python that supports modern TLS versions, the default is tls1.1. tls1.0  can  still
              be  used  to allow TLS 1.0. However, this weakens security and should only be used as a feature of
              last resort if a server does not support TLS 1.1+.

       Options in the [hostsecurity] section can have the form hostname:setting. This allows  multiple  settings
       to be defined on a per-host basis.

       The following per-host settings can be defined.

       ciphers

              This  behaves  like  ciphers  as described above except it only applies to the host on which it is
              defined.

       fingerprints

              A  list  of  hashes  of  the  DER  encoded  peer/remote  certificate.   Values   have   the   form
              algorithm:fingerprint.                                                                        e.g.
              sha256:c3ab8ff13720e8ad9047dd39466b3c8974e592c2fa383d4a3960714caef0c4f2.  In addition, colons  (:)
              can appear in the fingerprint part.

              The following algorithms/prefixes are supported: sha1, sha256, sha512.

              Use of sha256 or sha512 is preferred.

              If  a  fingerprint  is  specified,  the CA chain is not validated for this host and Mercurial will
              require the remote certificate to match one of the  fingerprints  specified.  This  means  if  the
              server updates its certificate, Mercurial will abort until a new fingerprint is defined.  This can
              provide stronger security than traditional CA-based validation at the expense of convenience.

              This option takes precedence over verifycertsfile.

       minimumprotocol

              This  behaves  like minimumprotocol as described above except it only applies to the host on which
              it is defined.

       verifycertsfile

              Path to file a  containing  a  list  of  PEM  encoded  certificates  used  to  verify  the  server
              certificate. Environment variables and ~user constructs are expanded in the filename.

              The  server  certificate  or the certificate's certificate authority (CA) must match a certificate
              from this file or certificate verification will  fail  and  connections  to  the  server  will  be
              refused.

              If  defined,  only  certificates  provided  by  this  file  will  be  used:  web.cacerts  and  any
              system/default certificates will not be used.

              This option has no effect if the per-host fingerprints option is set.

              The format of the file is as follows:

              -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
              ... (certificate in base64 PEM encoding) ...
              -----END CERTIFICATE-----
              -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
              ... (certificate in base64 PEM encoding) ...

              -----END CERTIFICATE-----
       For example:

       [hostsecurity]
       hg.example.com:fingerprints = sha256:c3ab8ff13720e8ad9047dd39466b3c8974e592c2fa383d4a3960714caef0c4f2
       hg2.example.com:fingerprints = sha1:914f1aff87249c09b6859b88b1906d30756491ca, sha1:fc:e2:8d:d9:51:cd:cb:c1:4d:18:6b:b7:44:8d:49:72:57:e6:cd:33
       hg3.example.com:fingerprints = sha256:9a:b0:dc:e2:75:ad:8a:b7:84:58:e5:1f:07:32:f1:87:e6:bd:24:22:af:b7:ce:8e:9c:b4:10:cf:b9:f4:0e:d2
       foo.example.com:verifycertsfile = /etc/ssl/trusted-ca-certs.pem

       To change the default minimum protocol version to TLS 1.2  but  to  allow  TLS  1.1  when  connecting  to
       hg.example.com:

       [hostsecurity]
       minimumprotocol = tls1.2
       hg.example.com:minimumprotocol = tls1.1

   http_proxy
       Used to access web-based Mercurial repositories through a HTTP proxy.

       host

              Host name and (optional) port of the proxy server, for example "myproxy:8000".

       no

              Optional. Comma-separated list of host names that should bypass the proxy.

       passwd

              Optional. Password to authenticate with at the proxy server.

       user

              Optional. User name to authenticate with at the proxy server.

       always

              Optional.  Always  use  the  proxy, even for localhost and any entries in http_proxy.no. (default:
              False)

   http
       Used to configure access to Mercurial repositories via HTTP.

       timeout

              If set, blocking operations will timeout after that many seconds.  (default: None)

   merge
       This section specifies behavior during merges and updates.

       checkignored

              Controls behavior when an ignored file on disk has  the  same  name  as  a  tracked  file  in  the
              changeset  being  merged  or  updated  to, and has different contents. Options are abort, warn and
              ignore. With abort, abort on such files. With warn, warn on such files and back them up as  .orig.
              With ignore, don't print a warning and back them up as .orig. (default: abort)

       checkunknown

              Controls  behavior  when an unknown file that isn't ignored has the same name as a tracked file in
              the  changeset  being  merged  or  updated  to,   and   has   different   contents.   Similar   to
              merge.checkignored, except for files that are not ignored. (default: abort)

       on-failure

              When set to continue (the default), the merge process attempts to merge all unresolved files using
              the  merge  chosen  tool,  regardless  of  whether previous file merge attempts during the process
              succeeded or not.  Setting this to prompt will prompt after any merge failure continue or halt the
              merge process. Setting this to halt will automatically halt the merge process on  any  merge  tool
              failure.  The merge process can be restarted by using the resolve command. When a merge is halted,
              the repository is left in a normal unresolved merge state.  (default: continue)

       strict-capability-check

              Whether capabilities of internal merge tools are checked strictly or not, while examining rules to
              decide merge tool to be used.  (default: False)

   merge-patterns
       This section specifies merge tools to associate with particular file patterns. Tools  matched  here  will
       take  precedence  over  the  default  merge tool. Patterns are globs by default, rooted at the repository
       root.

       Example:

       [merge-patterns]
       **.c = kdiff3
       **.jpg = myimgmerge

   merge-tools
       This section configures external merge tools to use for file-level merges. This section has  likely  been
       preconfigured  at install time.  Use hg config merge-tools to check the existing configuration.  Also see
       hg help merge-tools for more details.

       Example ~/.hgrc:

       [merge-tools]
       # Override stock tool location
       kdiff3.executable = ~/bin/kdiff3
       # Specify command line
       kdiff3.args = $base $local $other -o $output
       # Give higher priority
       kdiff3.priority = 1

       # Changing the priority of preconfigured tool
       meld.priority = 0

       # Disable a preconfigured tool
       vimdiff.disabled = yes

       # Define new tool
       myHtmlTool.args = -m $local $other $base $output
       myHtmlTool.regkey = Software\FooSoftware\HtmlMerge
       myHtmlTool.priority = 1

       Supported arguments:

       priority

              The priority in which to evaluate this tool.  (default: 0)

       executable

              Either just the name of the executable or its pathname.

              On Windows, the path can use environment variables with ${ProgramFiles} syntax.

              (default: the tool name)

       args

              The arguments to pass to the tool executable. You can refer to the files being merged as  well  as
              the output file through these variables: $base, $local, $other, $output.

              The  meaning of $local and $other can vary depending on which action is being performed. During an
              update or merge, $local represents the original state of the file,  while  $other  represents  the
              commit  you are updating to or the commit you are merging with. During a rebase, $local represents
              the destination of the rebase, and $other represents the commit being rebased.

              Some operations define custom labels to assist with  identifying  the  revisions,  accessible  via
              $labellocal, $labelother, and $labelbase. If custom labels are not available, these will be local,
              other, and base, respectively.  (default: $local $base $other)

       premerge

              Attempt  to run internal non-interactive 3-way merge tool before launching external tool.  Options
              are true, false, keep or keep-merge3. The keep option will  leave  markers  in  the  file  if  the
              premerge  fails.  The  keep-merge3  will do the same but include information about the base of the
              merge in the marker (see internal :merge3 in hg help merge-tools).  (default: True)

       binary

              This tool can merge binary files. (default: False, unless tool was selected by file pattern match)

       symlink

              This tool can merge symlinks. (default: False)

       check

              A list of merge success-checking options:

              changed

                     Ask whether merge was successful when the merged file shows no changes.

              conflicts

                     Check whether there are conflicts even though the tool reported success.

              prompt

                     Always prompt for merge success, regardless of success reported by tool.

       fixeol

              Attempt to fix up EOL changes caused by the merge tool.  (default: False)

       gui

              This tool requires a graphical interface to run. (default: False)

       mergemarkers

              Controls whether the labels passed via  $labellocal,  $labelother,  and  $labelbase  are  detailed
              (respecting  mergemarkertemplate)  or  basic.  If  premerge  is  keep or keep-merge3, the conflict
              markers generated during premerge will be detailed if either  this  option  or  the  corresponding
              option in the [ui] section is detailed.  (default: basic)

       mergemarkertemplate

              This  setting  can  be  used  to  override mergemarkertemplate from the [ui] section on a per-tool
              basis; this applies to the  $label-prefixed  variables  and  to  the  conflict  markers  that  are
              generated  if  premerge is keep` or ``keep-merge3. See the corresponding variable in [ui] for more
              information.

       regkey

              Windows registry key which describes install location of this tool. Mercurial will search for this
              key first under HKEY_CURRENT_USER and then under HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE.  (default: None)

       regkeyalt

              An alternate Windows registry key to try if the first key is not found.  The  alternate  key  uses
              the  same regname and regappend semantics of the primary key.  The most common use for this key is
              to search for 32bit applications on 64bit operating systems.  (default: None)

       regname

              Name of value to read from specified registry key.  (default: the unnamed (default) value)

       regappend

              String to append to the value read from the registry, typically the executable name of  the  tool.
              (default: None)

   pager
       Setting used to control when to paginate and with what external tool. See hg help pager for details.

       pager

              Define the external tool used as pager.

              If  no  pager is set, Mercurial uses the environment variable $PAGER.  If neither pager.pager, nor
              $PAGER is set, a default pager will be used, typically less on Unix and more on Windows. Example:

              [pager]
              pager = less -FRX

       ignore

              List of commands to disable the pager for. Example:

              [pager]
              ignore = version, help, update

   patch
       Settings used when applying patches, for instance through the 'import' command or with  Mercurial  Queues
       extension.

       eol

              When set to 'strict' patch content and patched files end of lines are preserved. When set to lf or
              crlf, both files end of lines are ignored when patching and the result line endings are normalized
              to  either  LF  (Unix)  or  CRLF (Windows). When set to auto, end of lines are again ignored while
              patching but line endings in patched files are normalized to their original setting on a  per-file
              basis.  If  target  file  does  not exist or has no end of line, patch line endings are preserved.
              (default: strict)

       fuzz

              The number of lines of 'fuzz' to allow when applying patches. This controls how much  context  the
              patcher is allowed to ignore when trying to apply a patch.  (default: 2)

   paths
       Assigns symbolic names and behavior to repositories.

       Options are symbolic names defining the URL or directory that is the location of the repository. Example:

       [paths]
       my_server = https://example.com/my_repo
       local_path = /home/me/repo

       These  symbolic  names  can  be used from the command line. To pull from my_server: hg pull my_server. To
       push to local_path: hg push local_path.

       Options containing colons (:) denote sub-options that can influence  behavior  for  that  specific  path.
       Example:

       [paths]
       my_server = https://example.com/my_path
       my_server:pushurl = ssh://example.com/my_path

       The following sub-options can be defined:

       pushurl

              The  URL to use for push operations. If not defined, the location defined by the path's main entry
              is used.

       pushrev

              A revset defining which revisions to push by default.

              When hg push is executed without a -r argument, the revset defined by this sub-option is evaluated
              to determine what to push.

              For example, a value of . will push the working directory's revision by default.

              Revsets specifying bookmarks will not result in the bookmark being pushed.

       The following special named paths exist:

       default

              The URL or directory to use when no source or remote is specified.

              hg clone will automatically define this path to the location the repository was cloned from.

       default-push

              (deprecated) The URL or directory for the default hg  push location.   default:pushurl  should  be
              used instead.

   phases
       Specifies default handling of phases. See hg help phases for more information about working with phases.

       publish

              Controls  draft  phase  behavior when working as a server. When true, pushed changesets are set to
              public in both client and server and pulled or cloned changesets are set to public in the  client.
              (default: True)

       new-commit

              Phase of newly-created commits.  (default: draft)

       checksubrepos

              Check  the  phase  of  the  current  revision  of each subrepository. Allowed values are "ignore",
              "follow" and "abort". For settings other than "ignore", the phase of the current revision of  each
              subrepository  is  checked  before  committing  the  parent  repository. If any of those phases is
              greater than the phase of the parent repository (e.g. if a subrepo is in a  "secret"  phase  while
              the  parent  repo  is  in "draft" phase), the commit is either aborted (if checksubrepos is set to
              "abort") or the higher phase is used for the  parent  repository  commit  (if  set  to  "follow").
              (default: follow)

   profiling
       Specifies profiling type, format, and file output. Two profilers are supported: an instrumenting profiler
       (named ls), and a sampling profiler (named stat).

       In  this  section description, 'profiling data' stands for the raw data collected during profiling, while
       'profiling report' stands for a statistical text report generated from the profiling data.

       enabled

              Enable the profiler.  (default: false)

              This is equivalent to passing --profile on the command line.

       type

              The type of profiler to use.  (default: stat)

              ls

                     Use Python's built-in instrumenting profiler. This profiler works  on  all  platforms,  but
                     each  line  number  it  reports  is the first line of a function. This restriction makes it
                     difficult to identify the expensive parts of a non-trivial function.

              stat

                     Use a statistical profiler, statprof. This profiler is most useful for  profiling  commands
                     that run for longer than about 0.1 seconds.

       format

              Profiling format.  Specific to the ls instrumenting profiler.  (default: text)

              text

                     Generate a profiling report. When saving to a file, it should be noted that only the report
                     is saved, and the profiling data is not kept.

              kcachegrind

                     Format  profiling  data  for kcachegrind use: when saving to a file, the generated file can
                     directly be loaded into kcachegrind.

       statformat

              Profiling format for the stat profiler.  (default: hotpath)

              hotpath

                     Show a tree-based display containing the hot path of execution (where most time was spent).

              bymethod

                     Show a table of methods ordered by how frequently they are active.

              byline

                     Show a table of lines in files ordered by how frequently they are active.

              json

                     Render profiling data as JSON.

       frequency

              Sampling frequency.  Specific to the stat sampling profiler.  (default: 1000)

       output

              File path where profiling data or report should be saved. If the  file  exists,  it  is  replaced.
              (default: None, data is printed on stderr)

       sort

              Sort field.  Specific to the ls instrumenting profiler.  One of callcount, reccallcount, totaltime
              and inlinetime.  (default: inlinetime)

       time-track

              Control if the stat profiler track cpu or real time.  (default: cpu on Windows, otherwise real)

       limit

              Number of lines to show. Specific to the ls instrumenting profiler.  (default: 30)

       nested

              Show at most this number of lines of drill-down info after each main entry.  This can help explain
              the difference between Total and Inline.  Specific to the ls instrumenting profiler.  (default: 0)

       showmin

              Minimum  fraction  of  samples  an  entry must have for it to be displayed.  Can be specified as a
              float between 0.0 and 1.0 or can have a % afterwards to allow values up to 100. e.g. 5%.

              Only used by the stat profiler.

              For the hotpath format, default is 0.05.  For the chrome format, default is 0.005.

              The option is unused on other formats.

       showmax

              Maximum fraction of samples an entry can have before it is ignored in display.  Values  format  is
              the same as showmin.

              Only used by the stat profiler.

              For the chrome format, default is 0.999.

              The option is unused on other formats.

       showtime

              Show  time  taken  as  absolute  durations,  in addition to percentages.  Only used by the hotpath
              format.  (default: true)

   progress
       Mercurial commands can draw progress bars that are as informative as possible. Some  progress  bars  only
       offer indeterminate information, while others have a definite end point.

       debug

              Whether to print debug info when updating the progress bar. (default: False)

       delay

              Number of seconds (float) before showing the progress bar. (default: 3)

       changedelay

              Minimum  delay  before  showing a new topic. When set to less than 3 * refresh, that value will be
              used instead. (default: 1)

       estimateinterval

              Maximum sampling interval in seconds for speed and estimated time calculation. (default: 60)

       refresh

              Time in seconds between refreshes of the progress bar. (default: 0.1)

       format

              Format of the progress bar.

              Valid entries for the format field are topic, bar, number, unit, estimate, speed, and  item.  item
              defaults  to  the  last 20 characters of the item, but this can be changed by adding either -<num>
              which would take the last num characters, or +<num> for the first num characters.

              (default: topic bar number estimate)

       width

              If set, the maximum width of the progress information (that is, min(width,  term  width)  will  be
              used).

       clear-complete

              Clear the progress bar after it's done. (default: True)

       disable

              If true, don't show a progress bar.

       assume-tty

              If true, ALWAYS show a progress bar, unless disable is given.

   rebase
       evolution.allowdivergence

              Default  to  False,  when  True  allow  creating  divergence  when  performing  rebase of obsolete
              changesets.

   revsetalias
       Alias definitions for revsets. See hg help revsets for details.

   rewrite
       backup-bundle

              Whether to save stripped changesets to a bundle file. (default: True)

       update-timestamp

              If true, updates the date and time of the changeset to current.  It  is  only  applicable  for  hg
              amend, hg commit --amend and hg uncommit in the current version.

   storage
       Control  the  strategy  Mercurial  uses  internally  to  store  history.  Options in this category impact
       performance and repository size.

       revlog.optimize-delta-parent-choice

              When storing a merge revision, both parents will be equally considered as a possible  delta  base.
              This  results in better delta selection and improved revlog compression. This option is enabled by
              default.

              Turning this option off can result in large increase of repository size for repository  with  many
              merges.

       revlog.reuse-external-delta-parent

              Control the order in which delta parents are considered when adding new revisions from an external
              source.  (typically: apply bundle from hg pull or hg push).

              New  revisions are usually provided as a delta against other revisions. By default, Mercurial will
              try to reuse this delta first, therefore using the same "delta parent"  as  the  source.  Directly
              using  delta's from the source reduces CPU usage and usually speeds up operation. However, in some
              case, the source might have sub-optimal delta bases and forcing their reevaluation is useful.  For
              example,  pushes  from an old client could have sub-optimal delta's parent that the server want to
              optimize. (lack of general delta, bad parents, choice, lack of sparse-revlog, etc).

              This option is enabled by default. Turning it off will ensure bad delta parent choices from  older
              client do not propagate to this repository, at the cost of a small increase in CPU consumption.

              Note:  this  option  only  control  the  order  in  which delta parents are considered.  Even when
              disabled, the existing delta from the source will be reused if the same delta parent is selected.

       revlog.reuse-external-delta

              Control the reuse of delta from external source.  (typically: apply bundle  from  hg  pull  or  hg
              push).

              New revisions are usually provided as a delta against another revision. By default, Mercurial will
              not  recompute  the  same  delta  again, trusting externally provided deltas. There have been rare
              cases of small adjustment to the diffing algorithm in the past. So in some rare case,  recomputing
              delta  provided  by ancient clients can provides better results. Disabling this option means going
              through a full delta recomputation for all incoming revisions. It means a large  increase  in  CPU
              usage and will slow operations down.

              This   option   is   enabled   by   default.   When   disabled,   it  also  disables  the  related
              storage.revlog.reuse-external-delta-parent option.

       revlog.zlib.level

              Zlib compression level used when storing data into the repository. Accepted  Value  range  from  1
              (lowest compression) to 9 (highest compression). Zlib default value is 6.

       revlog.zstd.level

              zstd  compression  level  used  when storing data into the repository. Accepted Value range from 1
              (lowest compression) to 22 (highest compression).  (default 3)

   server
       Controls generic server settings.

       bookmarks-pushkey-compat

              Trigger pushkey hook when being pushed bookmark  updates.  This  config  exist  for  compatibility
              purpose (default to True)

              If  you  use  pushkey  and pre-pushkey hooks to control bookmark movement we recommend you migrate
              them to txnclose-bookmark and pretxnclose-bookmark.

       compressionengines

              List of compression engines and their relative priority to advertise to clients.

              The order of compression engines determines their priority, the first having the highest priority.
              If a compression engine is not listed here, it won't be advertised to clients.

              If not set (the default), built-in defaults  are  used.  Run  hg  debuginstall to  list  available
              compression engines and their default wire protocol priority.

              Older  Mercurial  clients  only support zlib compression and this setting has no effect for legacy
              clients.

       uncompressed

              Whether to allow clients to clone a repository using the  uncompressed  streaming  protocol.  This
              transfers  about  40%  more data than a regular clone, but uses less memory and CPU on both server
              and client. Over a LAN (100 Mbps or better) or a very fast WAN, an uncompressed streaming clone is
              a lot faster (~10x) than a regular clone. Over most WAN connections (anything slower than about  6
              Mbps),  uncompressed  streaming  is slower, because of the extra data transfer overhead. This mode
              will also temporarily hold the write lock while determining  what  data  to  transfer.   (default:
              True)

       uncompressedallowsecret

              Whether to allow stream clones when the repository contains secret changesets. (default: False)

       preferuncompressed

              When set, clients will try to use the uncompressed streaming protocol. (default: False)

       disablefullbundle

              When  set,  servers  will  refuse  attempts  to  do  pull-based  clones.   If  this option is set,
              preferuncompressed and/or clone bundles are highly  recommended.  Partial  clones  will  still  be
              allowed.  (default: False)

       streamunbundle

              When set, servers will apply data sent from the client directly, otherwise it will be written to a
              temporary file first. This option effectively prevents concurrent pushes.

       pullbundle

              When  set,  the server will check pullbundle.manifest for bundles covering the requested heads and
              common nodes. The first matching entry will be streamed to the client.

              For HTTP transport, the stream will still use zlib compression for older clients.

       concurrent-push-mode

              Level of allowed race condition between two pushing clients.

              • 'strict': push is abort if another client touched the repository while the push  was  preparing.
                (default)

              • 'check-related':  push  is only aborted if it affects head that got also affected while the push
                was preparing.

              This requires compatible client (version 4.3 and later). Old client will use 'strict'.

       validate

              Whether to validate the completeness of pushed changesets by checking that all new file  revisions
              specified in manifests are present. (default: False)

       maxhttpheaderlen

              Instruct HTTP clients not to send request headers longer than this many bytes. (default: 1024)

       bundle1

              Whether  to  allow  clients  to  push and pull using the legacy bundle1 exchange format. (default:
              True)

       bundle1gd

              Like bundle1 but only used if the repository is using the generaldelta storage  format.  (default:
              True)

       bundle1.push

              Whether to allow clients to push using the legacy bundle1 exchange format. (default: True)

       bundle1gd.push

              Like  bundle1.push  but  only  used  if  the  repository is using the generaldelta storage format.
              (default: True)

       bundle1.pull

              Whether to allow clients to pull using the legacy bundle1 exchange format. (default: True)

       bundle1gd.pull

              Like bundle1.pull but only used if the  repository  is  using  the  generaldelta  storage  format.
              (default: True)

              Large  repositories  using  the  generaldelta  storage  format should consider setting this option
              because converting generaldelta repositories to the exchange format required by the  bundle1  data
              format can consume a lot of CPU.

       bundle2.stream

              Whether to allow clients to pull using the bundle2 streaming protocol.  (default: True)

       zliblevel

              Integer  between -1 and 9 that controls the zlib compression level for wire protocol commands that
              send zlib compressed output (notably the commands that send repository history data).

              The default (-1) uses the default zlib compression level, which is likely equivalent to 6. 0 means
              no compression. 9 means maximum compression.

              Setting this option allows server operators to make trade-offs between  bandwidth  and  CPU  used.
              Lowering the compression lowers CPU utilization but sends more bytes to clients.

              This option only impacts the HTTP server.

       zstdlevel

              Integer between 1 and 22 that controls the zstd compression level for wire protocol commands. 1 is
              the minimal amount of compression and 22 is the highest amount of compression.

              The  default  (3)  should  be  significantly  faster  than  zlib  while  likely  delivering better
              compression ratios.

              This option only impacts the HTTP server.

              See also server.zliblevel.

       view

              Repository filter used when exchanging revisions with the peer.

              The default view (served)  excludes  secret  and  hidden  changesets.   Another  useful  value  is
              immutable (no draft, secret or hidden changesets). (EXPERIMENTAL)

   smtp
       Configuration for extensions that need to send email messages.

       host

              Host name of mail server, e.g. "mail.example.com".

       port

              Optional. Port to connect to on mail server. (default: 465 if tls is smtps; 25 otherwise)

       tls

              Optional.  Method to enable TLS when connecting to mail server: starttls, smtps or none. (default:
              none)

       username

              Optional. User name for authenticating with the SMTP server.  (default: None)

       password

              Optional. Password for authenticating with the SMTP server. If not specified, interactive sessions
              will prompt the user for a password; non-interactive sessions will fail. (default: None)

       local_hostname

              Optional. The hostname that the sender can use to identify itself to the MTA.

   subpaths
       Subrepository source URLs  can  go  stale  if  a  remote  server  changes  name  or  becomes  temporarily
       unavailable. This section lets you define rewrite rules of the form:

       <pattern> = <replacement>

       where  pattern  is  a  regular  expression  matching  a  subrepository  source URL and replacement is the
       replacement string used to rewrite it. Groups can be matched in pattern and referenced  in  replacements.
       For instance:

       http://server/(.*)-hg/ = http://hg.server/\1/

       rewrites http://server/foo-hg/ into http://hg.server/foo/.

       Relative  subrepository paths are first made absolute, and the rewrite rules are then applied on the full
       (absolute) path. If pattern doesn't match the full path, an attempt is made to apply it on  the  relative
       path alone. The rules are applied in definition order.

   subrepos
       This  section contains options that control the behavior of the subrepositories feature. See also hg help
       subrepos.

       Security note: auditing in Mercurial is known to be insufficient to  prevent  clone-time  code  execution
       with  carefully  constructed  Git  subrepos.  It  is unknown if a similar detect is present in Subversion
       subrepos. Both Git and Subversion subrepos are disabled  by  default  out  of  security  concerns.  These
       subrepo types can be enabled using the respective options below.

       allowed

              Whether subrepositories are allowed in the working directory.

              When  false,  commands  involving subrepositories (like hg update) will fail for all subrepository
              types.  (default: true)

       hg:allowed

              Whether Mercurial subrepositories are allowed in the working directory. This option  only  has  an
              effect if subrepos.allowed is true.  (default: true)

       git:allowed

              Whether  Git subrepositories are allowed in the working directory.  This option only has an effect
              if subrepos.allowed is true.

              See the security note above before enabling Git subrepos.  (default: false)

       svn:allowed

              Whether Subversion subrepositories are allowed in the working directory. This option only  has  an
              effect if subrepos.allowed is true.

              See the security note above before enabling Subversion subrepos.  (default: false)

   templatealias
       Alias definitions for templates. See hg help templates for details.

   templates
       Use the [templates] section to define template strings.  See hg help templates for details.

   trusted
       Mercurial  will  not  use  the  settings in the .hg/hgrc file from a repository if it doesn't belong to a
       trusted user or to a trusted group, as various hgrc features allow arbitrary commands  to  be  run.  This
       issue  is  often  encountered  when  configuring  hooks or extensions for shared repositories or servers.
       However, the web interface will use some safe settings from the [web] section.

       This section specifies what users and groups are trusted. The current user is always  trusted.  To  trust
       everybody,  list  a user or a group with name *. These settings must be placed in an already-trusted file
       to take effect, such as $HOME/.hgrc of the user or service running Mercurial.

       users

              Comma-separated list of trusted users.

       groups

              Comma-separated list of trusted groups.

   ui
       User interface controls.

       archivemeta

              Whether to include the .hg_archival.txt file containing meta data (hashes for the repository  base
              and  for  tip)  in  archives created by the hg archive command or downloaded via hgweb.  (default:
              True)

       askusername

              Whether to prompt for a username when committing. If True, and neither $HGUSER nor $EMAIL has been
              specified, then the user will be prompted to enter a username. If  no  username  is  entered,  the
              default USER@HOST is used instead.  (default: False)

       clonebundles

              Whether the "clone bundles" feature is enabled.

              When  enabled,  hg clone may download and apply a server-advertised bundle file from a URL instead
              of using the normal exchange mechanism.

              This can likely result in faster and more reliable clones.

              (default: True)

       clonebundlefallback

              Whether failure to apply an advertised "clone bundle" from a server should result in fallback to a
              regular clone.

              This is disabled by default because servers advertising "clone bundles"  often  do  so  to  reduce
              server  load.  If  advertised  bundles start mass failing and clients automatically fall back to a
              regular clone, this would add significant and unexpected load to the server since  the  server  is
              expecting  clone  operations  to  be offloaded to pre-generated bundles. Failing fast (the default
              behavior) ensures clients don't overwhelm the server when "clone bundle" application fails.

              (default: False)

       clonebundleprefers

              Defines preferences for which "clone bundles" to use.

              Servers advertising "clone bundles" may advertise multiple available bundles. Each bundle may have
              different attributes, such as the bundle type and compression  format.  This  option  is  used  to
              prefer a particular bundle over another.

              The following keys are defined by Mercurial:

              BUNDLESPEC
                     A  bundle  type  specifier.  These  are  strings  passed  to hg bundle -t.  e.g. gzip-v2 or
                     bzip2-v1.

              COMPRESSION
                     The compression format of the bundle. e.g. gzip and bzip2.

              Server operators may define custom keys.

              Example values: COMPRESSION=bzip2, BUNDLESPEC=gzip-v2, COMPRESSION=gzip.

              By default, the first bundle advertised by the server is used.

       color

              When to colorize output. Possible value are Boolean ("yes" or  "no"),  or  "debug",  or  "always".
              (default: "yes"). "yes" will use color whenever it seems possible. See hg help color for details.

       commitsubrepos

              Whether to commit modified subrepositories when committing the parent repository. If False and one
              subrepository has uncommitted changes, abort the commit.  (default: False)

       debug

              Print debugging information. (default: False)

       editor

              The editor to use during a commit. (default: $EDITOR or vi)

       fallbackencoding

              Encoding to try if it's not possible to decode the changelog using UTF-8. (default: ISO-8859-1)

       graphnodetemplate

              The template used to print changeset nodes in an ASCII revision graph.  (default: {graphnode})

       ignore

              A  file  to  read  per-user  ignore  patterns  from.  This  file should be in the same format as a
              repository-wide .hgignore file. Filenames  are  relative  to  the  repository  root.  This  option
              supports  hook  syntax,  so if you want to specify multiple ignore files, you can do so by setting
              something like ignore.other = ~/.hgignore2. For  details  of  the  ignore  file  format,  see  the
              hgignore(5) man page.

       interactive

              Allow to prompt the user. (default: True)

       interface

              Select the default interface for interactive features (default: text).  Possible values are 'text'
              and 'curses'.

       interface.chunkselector

              Select  the  interface  for  change recording (e.g. hg commit -i).  Possible values are 'text' and
              'curses'.  This config overrides the interface specified by ui.interface.

       large-file-limit

              Largest file size that gives no memory use warning.  Possible values are integers or 0 to  disable
              the check.  (default: 10000000)

       logtemplate

              Template string for commands that print changesets.

       merge

              The conflict resolution program to use during a manual merge.  For more information on merge tools
              see hg help merge-tools.  For configuring merge tools see the [merge-tools] section.

       mergemarkers

              Sets  the  merge  conflict  marker  label styling. The detailed style uses the mergemarkertemplate
              setting to style the labels.  The basic style just uses 'local' and 'other' as the  marker  label.
              One of basic or detailed.  (default: basic)

       mergemarkertemplate

              The  template  used  to  print  the  commit  description next to each conflict marker during merge
              conflicts. See hg help templates for the template format.

              Defaults to showing the hash, tags, branches, bookmarks, author, and the first line of the  commit
              description.

              If  you  use  non-ASCII  characters in names for tags, branches, bookmarks, authors, and/or commit
              descriptions, you must pay attention  to  encodings  of  managed  files.  At  template  expansion,
              non-ASCII  characters  use  the  encoding specified by the --encoding global option, HGENCODING or
              other environment variables that govern your locale. If the  encoding  of  the  merge  markers  is
              different from the encoding of the merged files, serious problems may occur.

              Can be overridden per-merge-tool, see the [merge-tools] section.

       message-output

              Where to write status and error messages. (default: stdio)

              stderr

                     Everything to stderr.

              stdio

                     Status to stdout, and error to stderr.

       origbackuppath

              The  path  to a directory used to store generated .orig files. If the path is not a directory, one
              will be created.  If set, files stored in this directory have the same name as the  original  file
              and do not have a .orig suffix.

       paginate

              Control the pagination of command output (default: True). See hg help pager for details.

       patch

              An  optional  external  tool  that hg import and some extensions will use for applying patches. By
              default Mercurial uses an internal patch utility. The external tool must work as the  common  Unix
              patch  program.  In particular, it must accept a -p argument to strip patch headers, a -d argument
              to specify the current directory, a file name to patch, and a patch file to take from stdin.

              It is possible to specify a patch tool together with extra arguments. For  example,  setting  this
              option to patch --merge will use the patch program with its 2-way merge option.

       portablefilenames

              Check for portable filenames. Can be warn, ignore or abort.  (default: warn)

              warn

                     Print a warning message on POSIX platforms, if a file with a non-portable filename is added
                     (e.g.  a  file  with  a  name that can't be created on Windows because it contains reserved
                     parts like AUX, reserved characters like :,  or  would  cause  a  case  collision  with  an
                     existing file).

              ignore

                     Don't print a warning.

              abort

                     The command is aborted.

              true

                     Alias for warn.

              false

                     Alias for ignore.

              On Windows, this configuration option is ignored and the command aborted.

       pre-merge-tool-output-template

              A  template that is printed before executing an external merge tool. This can be used to print out
              additional context that might be useful to have  during  the  conflict  resolution,  such  as  the
              description of the various commits involved or bookmarks/tags.

              Additional  information  is  available  in  the  local`,  ``base,  and  other  dicts. For example:
              {local.label}, {base.name}, or {other.islink}.

       quiet

              Reduce the amount of output printed.  (default: False)

       relative-paths

              Prefer relative paths in the UI.

       remotecmd

              Remote command to use for clone/push/pull operations.  (default: hg)

       report_untrusted

              Warn if a .hg/hgrc file is ignored due to not being owned by a trusted user or  group.   (default:
              True)

       slash

              (Deprecated. Use slashpath template filter instead.)

              Display  paths  using  a  slash (/) as the path separator. This only makes a difference on systems
              where the default path separator is not the slash  character  (e.g.  Windows  uses  the  backslash
              character (\)).  (default: False)

       statuscopies

              Display copies in the status command.

       ssh

              Command to use for SSH connections. (default: ssh)

       ssherrorhint

              A    hint    shown    to   the   user   in   the   case   of   SSH   error   (e.g.    Please   see
              http://company/internalwiki/ssh.html)

       strict

              Require exact command names, instead of allowing unambiguous abbreviations. (default: False)

       style

              Name of style to use for command output.

       supportcontact

              A URL where users should report a Mercurial traceback. Use this if you are  a  large  organisation
              with  its  own Mercurial deployment process and crash reports should be addressed to your internal
              support.

       textwidth

              Maximum width of help text. A longer line generated by hg help or hg  subcommand  --help  will  be
              broken  after  white  space  to  get  this  width or the terminal width, whichever comes first.  A
              non-positive value will disable this and the terminal width will be used. (default: 78)

       timeout

              The timeout used when a lock is held (in seconds), a negative value means  no  timeout.  (default:
              600)

       timeout.warn

              Time  (in seconds) before a warning is printed about held lock. A negative value means no warning.
              (default: 0)

       traceback

              Mercurial always prints a traceback when an unknown exception occurs. Setting this  to  True  will
              make  Mercurial  print  a traceback on all exceptions, even those recognized by Mercurial (such as
              IOError or MemoryError). (default: False)

       tweakdefaults

          By default Mercurial's behavior changes very little  from  release  to  release,  but  over  time  the
          recommended config settings shift. Enable this config to opt in to get automatic tweaks to Mercurial's
          behavior  over time. This config setting will have no effect if HGPLAIN is set or HGPLAINEXCEPT is set
          and does not include tweakdefaults. (default: False)

          It currently means:

          [ui]
          # The rollback command is dangerous. As a rule, don't use it.
          rollback = False
          # Make `hg status` report copy information
          statuscopies = yes
          # Prefer curses UIs when available. Revert to plain-text with `text`.
          interface = curses
          # Make compatible commands emit cwd-relative paths by default.
          relative-paths = yes

          [commands]
          # Grep working directory by default.
          grep.all-files = True
          # Refuse to perform an `hg update` that would cause a file content merge
          update.check = noconflict
          # Show conflicts information in `hg status`
          status.verbose = True
          # Make `hg resolve` with no action (like `-m`) fail instead of re-merging.
          resolve.explicit-re-merge = True

          [diff]
          git = 1
          showfunc = 1
          word-diff = 1

       username

              The committer of a changeset created when running "commit".  Typically a person's name  and  email
              address, e.g. Fred Widget <fred@example.com>. Environment variables in the username are expanded.

              (default:  $EMAIL or username@hostname. If the username in hgrc is empty, e.g. if the system admin
              set username = in the system hgrc, it has to be specified manually or in a different hgrc file)

       verbose

              Increase the amount of output printed. (default: False)

   web
       Web interface configuration. The settings in this section apply to both the builtin webserver (started by
       hg serve) and the script you run through a webserver (hgweb.cgi  and  the  derivatives  for  FastCGI  and
       WSGI).

       The  Mercurial  webserver  does  no  authentication  (it  does  not prompt for usernames and passwords to
       validate who users are), but it does do authorization (it grants or denies access for authenticated users
       based on settings in this section). You must either configure your webserver  to  do  authentication  for
       you, or disable the authorization checks.

       For  a quick setup in a trusted environment, e.g., a private LAN, where you want it to accept pushes from
       anybody, you can use the following command line:

       $ hg --config web.allow-push=* --config web.push_ssl=False serve

       Note that this will allow anybody to push anything to the server and that this should  not  be  used  for
       public servers.

       The full set of options is:

       accesslog

              Where to output the access log. (default: stdout)

       address

              Interface address to bind to. (default: all)

       allow-archive

              List of archive format (bz2, gz, zip) allowed for downloading.  (default: empty)

       allowbz2

              (DEPRECATED) Whether to allow .tar.bz2 downloading of repository revisions.  (default: False)

       allowgz

              (DEPRECATED) Whether to allow .tar.gz downloading of repository revisions.  (default: False)

       allow-pull

              Whether to allow pulling from the repository. (default: True)

       allow-push

              Whether  to  allow  pushing to the repository. If empty or not set, pushing is not allowed. If the
              special value *, any remote user can push, including unauthenticated users. Otherwise, the  remote
              user  must  have been authenticated, and the authenticated user name must be present in this list.
              The contents of the allow-push list are examined after the deny_push list.

       allow_read

              If the user has not already been denied repository access due to the contents of  deny_read,  this
              list determines whether to grant repository access to the user. If this list is not empty, and the
              user  is  unauthenticated  or  not present in the list, then access is denied for the user. If the
              list is empty or not set, then access is permitted to all users by default. Setting allow_read  to
              the special value * is equivalent to it not being set (i.e. access is permitted to all users). The
              contents of the allow_read list are examined after the deny_read list.

       allowzip

              (DEPRECATED)  Whether  to  allow  .zip  downloading  of repository revisions. This feature creates
              temporary files.  (default: False)

       archivesubrepos

              Whether to recurse into subrepositories when archiving.  (default: False)

       baseurl

              Base URL to use when  publishing  URLs  in  other  locations,  so  third-party  tools  like  email
              notification hooks can construct URLs. Example: http://hgserver/repos/.

       cacerts

              Path  to  file  containing  a  list of PEM encoded certificate authority certificates. Environment
              variables and ~user constructs are expanded in the filename. If specified on the client,  then  it
              will verify the identity of remote HTTPS servers with these certificates.

              To disable SSL verification temporarily, specify --insecure from command line.

              You  can  use  OpenSSL's  CA certificate file if your platform has one. On most Linux systems this
              will be  /etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt.  Otherwise  you  will  have  to  generate  this  file
              manually. The form must be as follows:

              -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
              ... (certificate in base64 PEM encoding) ...
              -----END CERTIFICATE-----
              -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
              ... (certificate in base64 PEM encoding) ...

              -----END CERTIFICATE-----
       cache

              Whether to support caching in hgweb. (default: True)

       certificate

              Certificate to use when running hg serve.

       collapse

              With  descend  enabled,  repositories  in  subdirectories  are  shown  at a single level alongside
              repositories in the current path. With collapse also enabled, repositories residing  at  a  deeper
              level  than  the  current  path  are  grouped  behind navigable directory entries that lead to the
              locations of these repositories. In effect, this setting collapses each collection of repositories
              found within a subdirectory into a single entry for that subdirectory. (default: False)

       comparisoncontext

              Number of lines of context to show in side-by-side file comparison. If negative or the value full,
              whole files are shown. (default: 5)

              This setting can be overridden by a context request parameter to the  comparison  command,  taking
              the same values.

       contact

              Name  or email address of the person in charge of the repository.  (default: ui.username or $EMAIL
              or "unknown" if unset or empty)

       csp

              Send a Content-Security-Policy HTTP header with this value.

              The value may contain a special string %nonce%, which will be  replaced  by  a  randomly-generated
              one-time  use  value.  If  the  value  contains  %nonce%,  web.cache  will be disabled, as caching
              undermines the one-time property of the nonce. This nonce will  also  be  inserted  into  <script>
              elements containing inline JavaScript.

              Note: lots of HTML content sent by the server is derived from repository data. Please consider the
              potential  for malicious repository data to "inject" itself into generated HTML content as part of
              your security threat model.

       deny_push

              Whether to deny pushing to the repository. If empty or not set, push is not denied. If the special
              value *, all remote users are denied push. Otherwise, unauthenticated users are  all  denied,  and
              any  authenticated  user  name  present in this list is also denied. The contents of the deny_push
              list are examined before the allow-push list.

       deny_read

              Whether to deny reading/viewing of the repository. If this  list  is  not  empty,  unauthenticated
              users  are  all denied, and any authenticated user name present in this list is also denied access
              to the repository. If set to the special value *, all  remote  users  are  denied  access  (rarely
              needed ;). If deny_read is empty or not set, the determination of repository access depends on the
              presence  and  content  of the allow_read list (see description). If both deny_read and allow_read
              are empty or not set, then access is permitted to all users by default. If the repository is being
              served via hgwebdir, denied users will not be able to see it in  the  list  of  repositories.  The
              contents  of  the  deny_read  list  have  priority  over (are examined before) the contents of the
              allow_read list.

       descend

              hgwebdir indexes will not descend into subdirectories. Only repositories directly in  the  current
              path  will  be shown (other repositories are still available from the index corresponding to their
              containing path).

       description

              Textual description of the repository's purpose or contents.  (default: "unknown")

       encoding

              Character encoding name. (default: the current locale charset) Example: "UTF-8".

       errorlog

              Where to output the error log. (default: stderr)

       guessmime

              Control MIME types for raw download of file content.  Set to True to let hgweb guess  the  content
              type  from  the file extension. This will serve HTML files as text/html and might allow cross-site
              scripting attacks when serving untrusted repositories. (default: False)

       hidden

              Whether to hide the repository in the hgwebdir index.  (default: False)

       ipv6

              Whether to use IPv6. (default: False)

       labels

              List of string labels associated with the repository.

              Labels are exposed as a template keyword and can be used  to  customize  output.  e.g.  the  index
              template  can  group  or  filter  repositories  by  labels  and  the  summary template can display
              additional content if a specific label is present.

       logoimg

              File name of the logo image that some templates display on each page.  The file name  is  relative
              to  staticurl.  That  is,  the  full  path  to  the  logo image is "staticurl/logoimg".  If unset,
              hglogo.png will be used.

       logourl

              Base URL to use for logos. If unset, https://mercurial-scm.org/ will be used.

       maxchanges

              Maximum number of changes to list on the changelog. (default: 10)

       maxfiles

              Maximum number of files to list per changeset. (default: 10)

       maxshortchanges

              Maximum number of changes to list on the shortlog, graph or filelog pages. (default: 60)

       name

              Repository name to use in the web interface.  (default: current working directory)

       port

              Port to listen on. (default: 8000)

       prefix

              Prefix path to serve from. (default: '' (server root))

       push_ssl

              Whether to require that inbound pushes be transported  over  SSL  to  prevent  password  sniffing.
              (default: True)

       refreshinterval

              How frequently directory listings re-scan the filesystem for new repositories, in seconds. This is
              relevant  when  wildcards  are used to define paths. Depending on how much filesystem traversal is
              required, refreshing may negatively impact performance.

              Values less than or equal to 0 always refresh.  (default: 20)

       server-header

              Value for HTTP Server response header.

       static

              Directory where static files are served from.

       staticurl

              Base URL to use for static files. If unset, static files (e.g. the  hgicon.png  favicon)  will  be
              served  by  the  CGI  script itself. Use this setting to serve them directly with the HTTP server.
              Example: http://hgserver/static/.

       stripes

              How many lines a "zebra stripe" should span in multi-line output.  Set to 0 to disable.  (default:
              1)

       style

              Which template map style to use. The available options are the names of subdirectories in the HTML
              templates path. (default: paper) Example: monoblue.

       templates

              Where  to  find the HTML templates. The default path to the HTML templates can be obtained from hg
              debuginstall.

   websub
       Web substitution filter definition. You can use this section  to  define  a  set  of  regular  expression
       substitution patterns which let you automatically modify the hgweb server output.

       The  default  hgweb  templates only apply these substitution patterns on the revision description fields.
       You can apply them anywhere you want when you create your own templates by adding calls to  the  "websub"
       filter (usually after calling the "escape" filter).

       This  can be used, for example, to convert issue references to links to your issue tracker, or to convert
       "markdown-like" syntax into HTML (see the examples below).

       Each entry in this section names a substitution filter.  The value of each entry defines the substitution
       expression itself.  The websub expressions follow  the  old  interhg  extension  syntax,  which  in  turn
       imitates the Unix sed replacement syntax:

       patternname = s/SEARCH_REGEX/REPLACE_EXPRESSION/[i]

       You can use any separator other than "/". The final "i" is optional and indicates that the search must be
       case insensitive.

       Examples:

       [websub]
       issues = s|issue(\d+)|<a href="http://bts.example.org/issue\1">issue\1</a>|i
       italic = s/\b_(\S+)_\b/<i>\1<\/i>/
       bold = s/\*\b(\S+)\b\*/<b>\1<\/b>/

   worker
       Parallel  master/worker  configuration.  We  currently  perform  working directory updates in parallel on
       Unix-like systems, which greatly helps performance.

       enabled

              Whether to enable workers code to be used.  (default: true)

       numcpus

              Number of CPUs to use for parallel operations. A zero or negative value  is  treated  as  use  the
              default.  (default: 4 or the number of CPUs on the system, whichever is larger)

       backgroundclose

              Whether  to  enable  closing  file  handles  on background threads during certain operations. Some
              platforms aren't very efficient at closing file handles that have been written or appended to.  By
              performing  file  closing  on  background  threads,  file  write  rate can increase substantially.
              (default: true on Windows, false elsewhere)

       backgroundcloseminfilecount

              Minimum number of files required to trigger background file closing.  Operations not writing  this
              many files won't start background close threads.  (default: 2048)

       backgroundclosemaxqueue

              The maximum number of opened file handles waiting to be closed in the background. This option only
              has an effect if backgroundclose is enabled.  (default: 384)

       backgroundclosethreadcount

              Number  of threads to process background file closes. Only relevant if backgroundclose is enabled.
              (default: 4)

AUTHOR

       Bryan O'Sullivan <bos@serpentine.com>.

       Mercurial was written by Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com>.

SEE ALSO

       hg(1), hgignore(5)

COPYING

       This manual page is copyright 2005 Bryan O'Sullivan.  Mercurial  is  copyright  2005-2020  Matt  Mackall.
       Free  use  of this software is granted under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2 or any
       later version.

AUTHOR

       Bryan O'Sullivan <bos@serpentine.com>

       Organization: Mercurial

                                                                                                         HGRC(5)