I use RhodeCode for a web-based frontend for mercurial. Clone work with successful auth, but all commits with tortoisehg end in /dev/null, like they never have existed. No error shown in tortoisehg, even in any log file. Commiting dirctly with the webinterface is working ....
Please check your rhodecode log for any messages when doing Push via Tortoise maybe it fails on authentication ? From our side there are no compatibilty issues with TurtoiseHG.
Related
A coworker got this error after pulling from the repo. I searched for an answer online on how to solve it but couldn't find anything. I figured out a way to solve it so posting it below for anyone else with the same issue.
I asked everyone else working on the repository to check their user cache folder (C:\Users\username\AppData\Local\largefiles on Windows) to see if they had a file with that id ("XXX" from the title).
One of them did, the original author of the file.
I asked him to send it to me, I remote connected to the server that has the central repo. I then copied the file both to the server's cache and into .hg\largefiles
The user could then pull again and push and everything worked.
LF extension seems not compatible with keyword extension.
With these both extensions, at the commit, the LF is NOT put in the configured folder on the PC and then raises this error at push.
If you disable the keyword extension, it's perfectly working.
Unfortunately, I've not found any additional explanations.
If someone could provide a stable solution, it will be great.
It looks like hg pull is happily sparse, but hg push is not; thus you need all largefiles for every revision not already present on the new remote, so that it can populate for history and allow clients to successfully pull at any revision. Which makes sense.
When migrating to a new hg server, I hit this issue. The "within Mercurial" solution was to download all largefiles, for all commits, to my local repo, and then push to the new server repo:
$ hg lfpull --rev 1-tip
$ hg push newbox
(Disclaimer: my Mercurial-fu is weak, I only use it for this one largefile repo)
I have a mercurial server, running RhodeCode, that I commit my code to. My client has a Redmine installation and has requested that code I modify for them be stored on their server (understandable).
I would like to still commit to RhodeCode and after a successful commit, push these changes to their repository automatically. They have their code in both an SVN repository and a mercurial repository. I am allowed to commit to either - and they handle the synchronization between the two. My assumption is that it'd be easier to push to a mercurial repository.
I have a changegroup hook in mind, but I have a few technical questions on how this should work.
What is the best way to handle both receiving and pushing out to an external repository though?
User ----> RhodeCode ----> Redmine
At the RhodeCode step/changegroup hook, how do I forward on my changes? Can I do it directly from the main repository or am I forced to clone it into another directory and push that to the client?
Is there a better way to maintain my master repository and push my client's changes on?
I see no problem with this; the Mercurial hook in Buildbot works this way, doesn't it?
A noob question... i think
I use Mercurial for my project on my laptop. How do i submit the project to an online server like codeplex?
I'm using tortoisehg and i cant find the upload interface for submit the project online...
From the command line, the command is:
hg push <url>
to push changes a remote repository.
In TortoiseHg, this is accessed through the "Synchronize" function, which seems to show up if you right-click in a Windows Explorer window but not on any file. It's also available in the workbench; the icon is 2 arrows pointing in a circle.
For these things, I find the best way to go is to use the command line interface - TortoiseHG is OK if you need to perform some common operations from the file browser, and it's a nice tool to visualize some aspects of your repository, but it doesn't implement all of mercurial's features in full detail, and it renames and bundles some operations for no apparent reason.
I don't know how things work at codeplex, but I assume it is similar to bitbucket or github, in which case here's what you'd do:
Create an empty repository on the remote end (codeplex / bitbucket / ...).
Find the remote repository's URL - for bitbucket, it is https://bitbucket.org/yourname/project, or ssh://hg#bitbucket.org/yourname/project.
From your local repository, commit all pending changes, then issue the command: hg push {remote_url}, where {remote_url} is the URL of the remote repository. This will push all committed changes from your local repository to the remote repository.
Since the remote's head revision (an empty project) is the same as the first revision in your local copy (because all hg repositories start out empty), mercurial should consider the two repositories related and accept the push.
For an introductory guide to command-line mercurial, I recommend http://hginit.com/
I have a local machine ("laptop") and a shared Mercurial repository on another machine ("server").
The shared repository is set up as a multi-repository as described in the Mercurial documentation using Apache, the hgwebdir.cgi script and Mercurial 1.4.
The setup works in the sense that I can browse the projects (repositories) in the web browser, I can clone and pull from the server, and I can push from the laptop when the project/repository already exists on the server.
But I cannot create a new project on the laptop (hg init, do stuff, hg commit) and push it to the shared multi-repository (hg push http://server/hg/my-new-project-name) - I get "abort: HTTP Error 404: Not Found", presumably because the directory/project repository does not exist yet.
How can I push a new project/directory structure to a Mercurial running elsewhere? I couldn't find anything in the documentation, how do you guys do it?
You cannot create new remote repositories over http with the built-in functionality. Your options are to either:
create with a ssh clone: `ssh clone local-repo ssh://you#remote//path/to/repo'
log in to the remote repo and do a hg init where you want the repo. After that you can push to the new empty repo
Use a cheesy http-creation CGI like the one I wrote here: http://ry4an.org/unblog/UnBlog/2009-09-17
Update
I tried using Dropbox as described below, but couldn't make it sufficiently reliable, so I'm not recommending that option.
Original answer below, kept for context.
/update
I found one more option: Skipping both http and ssh altogether and using Dropbox for shared repos.
For the one-person-multiple-computers scenario, it looks like the simplest option of the lot, and you get backups as a nice side effect.
Here is a discussion on Hacker News
I use the on-demand (hosted) version of FogBugz. I would like to start using Mercurial for source control. I would like to integrate FogBugz and a BitBucket repository.
I gave it a bit of a try but things weren't going very well.
FogBugz requires that you hook up your Mercurial client to a fogbugz.py python script. TortoiseHg doesn't seem to have the hgext directory that they refer to in instructions.
So has anyone successfully done something similar?
Post-mortem:
Bitbucket now has native fogbugz support, as well as other post-back services.
http://www.bitbucket.org/help/service-integration/
From the sounds of it you are wanting to run the hook on your local machine. The hook and directions are intended for use on the central server.
If you are the only one working in your repository or don't mind commit not showing up in FB until after you do a pull, then you can add the hook locally to your primary clone, If you are using your primary clone then you need to do something slightly different from what they say here:
http://bugs.movabletype.org/help/topics/sourcecontrol/setup/Mercurial.html
You can put your fogbugz.py anywhere you want, just add a path line to your [fogbugz] section of that repositories hgrc file:
[fogbugz]
path=C:\Program Files\TortoiseHg\scripts\fogbugz.py
Just make sure you have python installed. you may also wish to add a commit hook so that local commits to the repository also get into FB.
[hooks]
commit=python:hgext.fogbugz.hook
incoming=python:hgext.fogbugz.hook
On the Fogbugz install you will want change put the following in your for your logs url:
^REPO/log/^R2/^FILE
and the following for your diff url:
^REPO/diff/^R2/^FILE
When the hook script runs it connects to your FB install and sends it a few parameters. These parameters are stored in the DB and used to generate urls for diffs and log informaiton. The script sends the url of repo, this is in your baseurl setting in the [web] section. You want this url to be the url to your bitbucket repository. This will be used to replace ^REPO from the url templates above. The hook script also passes the revision id and the file name to FB. These will replace ^R2 and ^FILE. So in summary this is the stuff you want to add to the hgrc file in your .hg directory:
[extensions]
hgext.fogbugz=
[fogbugz]
path=C:\Program Files\TortoiseHg\scripts\fogbugz.py
host=https://<YOURACCOUNT>.fogbugz.com/
script=cvsSubmit.asp
[hooks]
commit=python:hgext.fogbugz.hook
incoming=python:hgext.fogbugz.hook
[web]
baseurl=http://www.bitbucket.org/<YOURBITBUCKETACCOUNT>/<YOURPROJECT>/
One thing to remember is that FB may get notified of a checkin before you actually push those changes to bitbucket. If this is the cause do a push and things will work.
EDIT: added section about the FB server and the summary.
Just a heads-up: Fog Creek has released Kiln which provides Mercurial hosting that's tightly integrated with FogBugz and doesn't require any configuration.
I normally wouldn't "advertise" on Stack Overflow (disclaimer: I'm one of the Kiln devs), but I feel that this directly answers the original question.
It is possible to integrate your GIT BitBucket repository with FogBugz issue tracker, but unfortunately it is not properly documented.
You have to follow steps described at https://confluence.atlassian.com/display/BITBUCKET/FogBugz+Service+Management, but beware that
In CVSSubmit URL you need to put url WITHOUT "?ixBug=bugID&sFile=file&sPrev=x&sNew=y&ixRepository=" parameters.
It should just be "https://your_repo.fogbugz.com/cvsSubmit.asp"
You will need to mention your FogBugz case ID in the git commit message
by putting "BugzID: ID" string in it (this is not documented
anywhere :-( ) similar to this:
git commit -m "This is a superb commit which solves case BugzID: 42"
Of course, commit info will be sent to FogBugz after you push your commit to BitBucket server, not after your do a local commit.