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Closed 9 years ago.
Is there anything that can produce pretty charts / graphs for Mercurial commit history in a repository? I'm thinking something like what GitHub makes (only for Mercurial):
You can just do hg serve and then connect to http://localhost:8000 and a graph very similar to that will be on the 'chart' tab of that web page. As Wim points out you get the same behavior from running hgweb in a webserver, but you can do it with just Mercurial too.
I like the Mercurial Activity extension, which creates a graph over time, with commits per user and displays tags as milestones:
If you publish your repository on a webserver with hgweb/hgwebdir, then you can see the history in your webbrowser.
TortoiseHg's repository explorer has visual commit graphs (albeit in a vertical format, as opposed to a horizontal one) - not sure how useful those would be to you, if you're trying to export them to images or the like or just use them yourself.
Related
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Closed 9 years ago.
I have a lab setup in office where people work in a development environment that is hosted on a Cloud PAAS (like openshift or cloudbees).
The developers connect to the cloud git repository using SSH connection. They can easily take the SSH key to home and download the code at their home. I would like to restrict that activity.
Is their a software utility available that I can use to get this done?
you want something like GitHub but self hosted? You can probably use one of the clones like Gitlab to do so. Otherwise it's difficult to restrict user access to single user PaaSs.
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Closed 9 years ago.
Good day all,
Please forgive me if this isn't the right forum to ask this question - but I couldn't think of a more resourceful community.
I handle IT stuff for a small firm where I built a PCI Compliant VB.net application to store credit card information. When a customer gives authorization to keep their card information on file, they are required to sign an Authorization Form. All has been successful thus far, but now they want to be able to store a pdf copy of this authorization form and make it accessible via the application.
I've been thinking of the following ways accomplish this task:
FTP (separate from the DB)
BLOB (directly in the DB)
What's the best approach to achieve this and how would I go about coding this in VB.net? I'm using a MySQL database.
//Kismet
Separate from the DB... just save the URL or file path in the database. In this case then you could split the PDF's up across multiple servers if needed. Also keeps the size of the DB smaller (which you want to backup more frequently).
As it currently stands, this question is not a good fit for our Q&A format. We expect answers to be supported by facts, references, or expertise, but this question will likely solicit debate, arguments, polling, or extended discussion. If you feel that this question can be improved and possibly reopened, visit the help center for guidance.
Closed 10 years ago.
in my spare time I create open source projects which I hosted at google code in the past but apparently google limits the maximum number of projects to 25 which is not what I want.
I have many small projects that I want to share and showcase.
What would be your choice? I know github and sourceforge but I couldn't find information about their limitations so I'm not sure.
Where would you host more than 25 projects?
My choice would be GitHub. I don't believe they impose restriction on the number of public repositories you may have, they only ask you to keep under 1Gb each.
You can use:
github
sourceforge
I'm using github a lot more than the second..
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Closed 10 years ago.
I am parsing large amounts of complex files (mostly CSV files but some are not) and I need to structure/parse them into some standard formats. This not only involves row wise cleanup of data but some simple individual cell-based logic. I want a tool that a non-programmer can use also so a business team member can write simple drag and drop logic and not take up engineering time. So far, I have looked at Google Refine and Data wrangler and the last one looks great. Are there any other such tools out there?
ETL tools are oriented more towards relational databases, but also have support for XML and CSV file input/output. Examples:
http://www.talendforge.org/
http://kettle.pentaho.com/
Could easily be too complicated for your requirements though. Also, see this similar question on SO (with additional links): What software is availible for data quality checking .
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Closed 9 years ago.
I am looking for the current recommendations for all-inclusive open source ALM system, essentially an open source alternative to Microsoft's Team Foundation Server.
I have found two so far, Jabox and Endeavour.
Are there any others that you know of?
If you have experience with Jabox or Endeavour, can you comment on their relative merits?
I am looking specifically for all-in-one ALM solutions like Jabox and Endeavour, rather than individual applications like Jenkins, Bugzilla, TestLink, etc.
Two popular ones are OSEE from Eclipse.org and Tuleap.
Atlassian family of products can be considered as a single product. As far as I know they are open source and Atlassian gives them for free if you are developing an open source solution.