confusing about hg webserver - mercurial

I've some local mercurial repository to my pc and I want that a thirt person can clone it. I cannot use Google code. What can I do? I've tryed to simply go to my local repository and start the web server. Now from my browser I edit both `localhost:8000` and `myipaddress:8000` and this work just fine. I also tryed to clone from command line the repository: `hg clone http://myipaddress:8000` myhgrep and this work fine too.
I've tryed tha same thing from another pc: on my host (server) pc I started the webserve, in the other pc I've tryed to type serveripaddress:8000 but it doesn't work!
What I am wrong? Is a very simple way to accomplish this?

Related

How to clone a local repository using PyCharm

I'm currently using PyCharm but finding impossible to checkout or clone from a local Mercurial repository.
In the Clone Mercurial Repository dialog, you can put an URL to clone from, and works ok with HTTP URLs, but I'm clueless about how to do it from a local repository.
I've tried putting file:// before the absolute path, but PyCharm keeps telling me no repository found there, so I have to open the console, clone, setup project, etc.
There must be a way, every other IDE I've used allows to do it
Thanks and regards!
It works for me:
It doesn't need "file://", just type in the path.
Are you on Windows or Linux/Mac?
Maybe, you use the "tilda" sign (~) for the home directory? This dialog doesn't understand tildas.
Also note, that you have to specify the path to the Mercurial root, not to the ".hg" directory itself.
Please share your path so that we could see, what can be treated incorrectly there.

Get changes from mercurial to FTP site

I work with a partner on an PHP site for a client. We have a common Mercurial repository (on Bitbucket), both local copies and the live site. We have only FTP access to the live site (which can't be changed since it is a hosting package with FTP only).
I want to be able to push changes from the repository to the live site.
Until now I simply keep track of changed files in the repo and copy them manually with FileZilla - a error prone and annoying task. My idea is, to mount the remote location locally (i.e. using CurlFtpFS) and tell mercurial to automagically copy changed files to the site. Ideally I want to be able to specify which changes but this would be a bonus. It would be sufficient if the local state of the files within the repo are synced.
Is there any good way to do this using linux commandline tools?
My first recommendation is, if at all possible, get a package that allows more access. FTP only is just brutal.
But since you are looking for a real answer to your question, I have two ideas for you:
I would suggest looking into the mercurial FTP Extension. I personally have never used it since I have never gotten myself stuck in a ftp-only situation (not for a long time at least), but it looks promising. Looks like if you make sure that you tag your production releases it will work really well for you. (make sure to use the -uploaded param)
Also, if you only ever want the tip to be installed on your production env, then you could look at the suggestion Martin Geisler made on the bitbucket user group a few days ago. Basically his suggestion is to utilize bitbucket's "ping url" functionality. You would have to write a server-side script/url handler that would accept that ping, then fetch the tip from bitbucket (as a zip) and then unzip/unpack it. This is a bit complicated, but if you are looking for complete automation and the tip will always be the best this could work for you.
One notion is the use the hg archive command:
hg archive /path/to/curlftpsfs
which will put a snapshot of your repo in that location -- it will however overwrite any file already there.
Another option is to create a Mercurial clone in that same /path/to/curlftpsfs and then just do a hg pull ; hg update in it on your local system with the remote one mounted. Setting that up initially will mean transferring the whole thing but subsequently you'll only be sending deltas.
Some folks don't like this last options because it exposes your entire /.hg repository too, but you can block access to that at the web server.
I came across this problem a while ago after switching from AWS to a local web hosting that provides only ssh/ftp.
My previous approach of updating a production site on AWS using "hg pull; hg update -C" can no longer be used on the new web hosting. They don't have mercurial installed for shared hosts.
So, what I did is to mount the remote location using ftp, to a local machine (i.e. your laptop), then run the hg pull and update commands locally on your machine at the path where has the remote ftp site mounted.
Windows solution:
BeyondCompare (http://www.scootersoftware.com/) is an awesome piece of software. Apart from being awesome it can mirror your local folder to the FTP site. It's comparing files and only transfers what's new.

scp a mercurial repository

I have a shared web host and I am trying to figure out a way to download the latest copy of a private project from bitbucket onto the server.
The server does not have any versioning tools installed, but it does have scp and ssh with a jailshell level of access. It also has wget and curl...
Can I can do something like this?
scp ssh://hg#bitbucket.org/jespern/testrepo ~/public_html
I don't have a problem setting up the identity files / DSA keys, but I'm not exactly sure how the protocols are put together here so I need some help with the basic syntax.
Or, if scp is not the way to go, does ssh have an option for doing this? or is it possible to use CURL or wGet to grab the latest version of the repository and then reconstruct it on the server?
I am sure there is a way to do this, so please don't respond saying "it can't be done."
Thanks!
You can download from bitbucket using either http with URL like this:
http://bitbucket.org/jespern/rewsfeed/get/tip.tar.bz2
Notice how tip can be used in place of a revision ID in that URL form to always get the latest snapshot.
Alternately, you can just install Mercurial in your home directory on the shared web host -- people have succeeded in doing that on almost every webhost out there no matter how locked down they are.
Then you can just do: /home/me/bin hg clone ssh://hg#bitbucket.org/jespern/testrepo ~/public_html

Mercurial clone operation works, but I don't have write access

Somewhere I did something silly.
I was deploying my Rails app via cloning the Mercurial repo down onto my Ubuntu server. It worked the first time, and then...well, I made a small change on my dev machine, pushed the changes to the repo, and then deleted the copy on the Ubuntu server and re-cloned from the repo.
The clone operation (the second, and third, and 'n' times) works without error, but I don't have write access to the files that were cloned.
When I try to startup my mongrel - it can't create the /tmp folder, and because of no write access, fails to start the Rails app.
Fixed through work around stated in comment above.

How to configure hosted Mercurial in TeamCity 5

This is probably a simple problem and I'm feeling exceptionally dumb because I can't find a any kind of documentation.
I've just installed TeamCity 5 and I want to get files from my Mercurial hosting and there is two fields I just can't figure out.
HG Command path. What should I put here? The path to a file containing what? Can I get an example of that file somewhere?
The host is using Mercurial over SSH where do I define my private key?
Pull changes from? Should I put the address I'm cloning from i.e. ssh://username#myhost.something/project
I figured this out for my TeamCity 5 server last week.
HG Command path: HG
Pull changes from: https://bitbucket.org/.../.../
Don't put the username# in the URL. This is specificed as in the Username/Password fields. If you include the username in the URL it'll fail as there is a bug in the configuration tool. You'll also see a screenshot of the configuration attached to the thread:
http://www.jetbrains.net/devnet/message/5254640#5254640
I'd suggest getting things working with HTTPS and then moving to SSH if possible. This breaks things down into two easier to solve configuration problems. I used the following tutorial to get SSH going on my Windows client machine.
http://www.codza.com/mercurial-with-ssh-setup-on-windows
I've not set this up on my TeamCity server yet. However I did get TeamCity to pick up my Mercurial.ini settings by putting the ini file in \Documents and Settings\TeamCity, which is the account the service runs under.
I've not used team city, but I think hg command path is probably the full path to your local mercurial executable. For me (on linux) that's:
$ type hg
hg is /usr/bin/hg
On windows it's where the 'hg' executable in your system path was placed by whichever (of the many) windows installers for mercurial you used.
Pull changes from sounds like the URL to the repo, so:
ssh://username#myhost.something/project
or
ssh://username#myhost.something//project # note the _two_ double slashes
if you're using absolute paths on the server side.
Your private key location/specification depends on what you're using for ssh and whether or not you're running ssh-agent, but here's a links that explicitly points from within mercurial.ini, which seems sound:
http://dev.openttdcoop.org/projects/home/wiki/Configuring_TortoiseHg_(Windows)#Pointing-to-you-Private-key