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184551c71d609d40dba3b085331d51ef9d01da38
Use the hgrc configuration file in the internal mercurial repository in addition to the other system wide hgrc files. This is done by using the 'ui' object from the 'repository' object which will have loaded the repository hgrc file if it exists. Signed-off-by: Dan Liew <delcypher@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
'git-remote-hg' is the semi-official Mercurial bridge from Git project, once installed, it allows you to clone, fetch and push to and from Mercurial repositories as if they were Git ones: -------------------------------------- git clone "hg::http://selenic.com/repo/hello" -------------------------------------- To enable this, simply add the 'git-remote-hg' script anywhere in your `$PATH`: -------------------------------------- wget https://raw.github.com/felipec/git/fc/master/git-remote-hg.py -O ~/bin/git-remote-hg chmod +x ~/bin/git-remote-hg -------------------------------------- That's it :) == Configuration == If you want to see Mercurial revisions as Git commit notes: -------------------------------------- % git config core.notesRef refs/notes/hg -------------------------------------- If you are not interested in Mercurial permanent and global branches (aka. commit labels): -------------------------------------- % git config --global remote-hg.track-branches false -------------------------------------- With this configuration, the 'branches/foo' refs won't appear. If you want the equivalent of 'hg clone --insecure': -------------------------------------- % git config --global remote-hg.insecure true -------------------------------------- If you want 'git-remote-hg' to be compatible with 'hg-git', and generate exactly the same commits: -------------------------------------- % git config --global remote-hg.hg-git-compat true -------------------------------------- == Notes == Remember to run `git gc --aggressive` after cloning a repository, specially if it's a big one. Otherwise lots of space will be wasted. The oldest version of mercurial supported is 1.9. For the most part 1.8 works, but you might experience some issues. === Pushing branches === To push a branch, you need to use the "branches/" prefix: -------------------------------------- % git checkout branches/next # do stuff % git push origin branches/next -------------------------------------- All the pushed commits will receive the "next" Mercurial named branch. *Note*: Make sure you don't have +remote-hg.track-branches+ disabled. === Cloning HTTPS === The simplest way is to specify the user and password in the URL: -------------------------------------- git clone hg::https://user:password@bitbucket.org/user/repo -------------------------------------- You can also use the http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/SchemesExtension[schemes extension]: -------------------------------------- [auth] bb.prefix = https://bitbucket.org/user/ bb.username = user bb.password = password -------------------------------------- Finally, you can also use the https://pypi.python.org/pypi/mercurial_keyring[keyring extension]. However, some of these features require very new versions of 'git-remote-hg', so you might have better luck simply specifying the username and password in the URL. === Caveats === The only major incompatibility is that Git octopus merges (a merge with more than two parents) are not supported. Mercurial branches and bookmarks have some limitations of Git branches: you can't have both 'dev/feature' and 'dev' (as Git uses files and directories to store them). Multiple anonymous heads (which are useless anyway) are not supported; you would only see the latest head. Closed branches are not supported; they are not shown and you can't close or reopen. Additionally in certain rare situations a synchronization issue can occur (https://github.com/felipec/git/issues/65[Bug #65]). Limitations of the remote-helpers' framework apply. In particular, these commands don't work: * `git push origin :branch-to-delete` * `git push origin old:new` (it will push 'old') (Git v2.0) * `git push --dry-run origin branch` (it will push) (Git v2.0) == Other projects == There are other 'git-remote-hg' projects out there, do not confuse this one, this is the one distributed officially by the Git project: * https://github.com/msysgit/msysgit/wiki/Guide-to-git-remote-hg[msysgit's git-remote-hg] * https://github.com/rfk/git-remote-hg[rfk's git-remote-hg] For a comparison between these and other projects go https://github.com/felipec/git/wiki/Comparison-of-git-remote-hg-alternatives[here].
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