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Sourceforge tortoisehg7/13/2023 ![]() In another part we’ll convert the Mercurial Repository into a Git Repository and use EGit to get it into your workspace. That’s all for now: Pushing to Sourceforge Repositories and Pulling back works well. You can click “ Next” and inspect the changes or simply click “ Finish” and you’re done. We switch back to workspace we used first to get the changes from Sourceforge. (You already know how to do this □ Pull from Sourceforge to get changes from others Now do some changes, commit to your local workspace repository and Push to the remote SourceForge Repository. Using Import – Mercurial – Clone we can clone the Repository back from Sourceforge: Select the Repository (here’s only one: “ekkescorner”):Ĭlone from Sourceforge into another Workspace Paste the URI we copied from Sourceforge:īrowse the Mercurial repository from Sourceforge Now we’re ready to push the Projects up to our remote Repository at Sourceforge using “ Team Push…” TortoiseHg is a PyQt (formerly PyGTK) application that includes a. HgEclipse can only share one Project at a time, so you have to Select a Project and Click “ Share Project…” for all one by one: TortoiseHg is a graphical frontend for Mercurial, a distributed revision control system. ![]() Now we create a new Repository Location at the root of the workspace:Īs next we select Projects and then execute “ Team… Share…” – HgEclipse tells you that there’s a Repository above, so you can select this easy: We start with a workspace only containing the projects we want to push. Prepare your Projects to be pushed to Sourceforge If you try from Terminal to access the repository you can verify if the repository is there, but you have no access: Under Develop -> Code Sourceforge tells you how to access the Repositories using HTTP (read-only) or ssh (read-write): program for Windows, Mercurial offers VFP developers a powerful tool for managing their. You can enable Mercurial (and also Git if you want) (If you don’t know how ssh works take a look at my blog here) Under Account – Services – Edit SSH Keys you can paste your public key. ![]() Your Account must know your ssh public key. In this example we’ll create a Mercurial Repository at SourceForge – and in another part of this blog series I’ll blog how to convert the Mercurial repository into a Git Repository for the same Project – then it’s up to the user which to select. Another great source to host Open Source Projects is Sourceforge, wher you can use Mercurial or Git or even both together. In part 4 of my DVCS blog series I demonstrated how to use BitBucket to access remote Repositories using HgEclipse (and also how to use EGit to access remote Repositories from GitHub). This example will demonstrate how to create a Mercurial Repository at Sourceforge and how to push some existing Eclipse Projects into this remote Repository.
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