Comparison with Sapling¶
Introduction¶
This document attempts to describe how jj is different from Sapling. Sapling is a VCS developed by Meta. It is a heavily modified fork of Mercurial. Because jj has copied many ideas from Mercurial, there are many similarities between the two tools, such as:
- A user-friendly CLI
- A "revset" language for selecting revisions
- Good support for working with stacked commits, including tracking "anonymous
heads" (no "detached HEAD" state like in Git) and
split
commands, and automatically rebasing descendant commits when you amend a commit. - Flexible customization of output using templates
Differences¶
Here is a list of some differences between jj and Sapling.
- Working copy: When using Sapling (like most VCSs), the
user explicitly tells the tool when to create a commit and which files to
include. When using jj, the working copy
is automatically snapshotted by every command. New files
are automatically tracked and deleted files are automatically untracked. This
has several advantages:
- The working copy is effectively backed up every time you run a command.
- No commands fail because you have changes in the working copy ("abort: 1
conflicting file changes: ..."). No need for
sl shelve
. - Simpler and more consistent CLI because the working copy is treated like any other commit.
- Conflicts: Like most VCSs, Sapling requires the user to
resolve conflicts before committing. jj lets
you commit conflicts. Note that it's a representation of the
conflict that's committed, not conflict markers (
<<<<<<<
etc.). This also has several advantages:- Merge conflicts won't prevent you from checking out another commit.
- You can resolve the conflicts when you feel like it.
- Rebasing descendants always succeeds. Like jj, Sapling automatically rebases, but it will fail if there are conflicts.
- Merge commits can be rebased correctly (Sapling sometimes fails).
- You can rebase conflicts and conflict resolutions.
- Undo: jj's undo is powered by the operation log, which
records how the repo has changed over time. Sapling has a similar feature
with its MetaLog.
They seem to provide similar functionality, but jj also exposes the log to the
user via
jj op log
, so you can tell how far back you want to go back. Sapling hassl debugmetalog
, but that seems to show the history of a single commit, not the whole repo's history. Thanks to jj snapshotting the working copy, it's possible to undo changes to the working copy. For example, if youjj undo
ajj commit
,jj diff
will show the same changes as beforejj commit
, but if yousl undo
asl commit
, the working copy will be clean. - Git interop: Sapling supports cloning, pushing, and pulling from a remote
Git repo. jj also does, and it also supports sharing a working copy with a Git
repo, so you can use
jj
andgit
interchangeably in the same repo. - Polish: Sapling is much more polished and feature-complete. For example,
jj has no
blame/annotate
orbisect
commands, and also no copy/rename support. Sapling also has very nice web UI called Interactive Smartlog, which lets you drag and drop commits to rebase them, among other things. - Forge workflow: Sapling has
sl pr submit --stack
, which lets you push a stack of commits as separate GitHub PRs, including setting the base branch. It only supports GitHub. jj doesn't have any direct integration with GitHub or any other forge. However, it hasjj git push --change
for automatically creating branches for specified commits. You have to specify each commit you want to create a branch for by usingjj git push --change X --change Y ...
, and you have to manually set up any base branches in GitHub's UI (or GitLab's or ...). On subsequent pushes, you can update all at once by specifying something likejj git push -r main..@
(to push all branches on the current stack of commits from where it forked frommain
).