A simple script & library to handle syncing remote mercuial repositories
Project description
When developing a cross platform application it can be neccesary to transfer changes between different machines in order to test changes out. Mercurials push & pull help to make this process simpler, however keeping your repositories in sync is not neccesarily a single step process. Particularly if you rebase and collapse changesets quite frequently, and especially if you like to make use of the mq extension.
This script intends to make the process of syncing two mercurial repositories to exactly the same point as easy as possible, by taking care of all the steps neccesary in a single command.
Currently it can:
Clone a new remote repository
Refresh the local mq patch
Strip superflous changesets from the remote repository
Push to and update the remote repository
Commit to the local mq repository
Push to and update the remote mq repository
Ensure the remote repository has the correct mq patches pushed
Requirements
Python 2.7 & Mercurial 2.3 are recommended, though others may work.
Synchg depends on these python packages:
It also requires the mq mercurial extension is enabled on any remote machines it is used with.
Installation
Synchg and it’s python dependencies can be installed via pip:
pip install synchg
Preparing Repositories
Prior to running synchg for the first time it is recommended that you delete any remote repositories you intend to use it with, and allow synchg to perform the initial clone. If you intend to use mq patches with synchg, you should also ensure you have run hg init --mq on your local repositories.
It should be noted that synchg regards remote repositories as “slaves” and will strip out any changesets it finds that are not in the local repository. You will be prompted before this happens, but the script will be unable to continue if you don’t answer yes. This is to avoid creating additional heads on the remote.
Usage
Synchg should be run from the command line:
synchg remote_host [local_path=None]
Where remote_host is the host you wish to sync with and local_path is the optional path to the local mercurial repository (if missing, the current directory will be assumed)
More options can be found by running:
synchg --help
On first run, you will be prompted for some configuration options:
Remote source directory - this is the path on the remote under which all your repositories should be found
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