Mercurial > hgsubversion
view README @ 899:7f90bb48c9de
svn verify: use a custom editor and get_revision()
Previously, we would fetch each file in the revision/changeset
individually. With this change, we fetch the entire revision in one
request, and use a custom editor to verify its contents. This is quite
a lot faster than the previous means when verifying over the internet.
By an order of magnitude or two, in fact. As data is transfered in a
single operation, verifying a revision from PyPy took 30 seconds
rather than 30 minutes, and saturated my 10Mbps connection.
Please note that the output ordering isn't stable between the two;
output will appear in reverse order when using the fast verifier.
author | Dan Villiom Podlaski Christiansen <danchr@gmail.com> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 14 Dec 2011 00:07:58 +0100 |
parents | 050f03a3bdf5 |
children | 3df6ed4e7561 |
line wrap: on
line source
.. -*-restructuredtext-*- ============ hgsubversion ============ hgsubversion is an extension for Mercurial that allows using Mercurial as a Subversion client. At this point, hgsubversion is usable by users reasonably familiar with Mercurial as a VCS. It's not recommended to dive into hgsubversion as an introduction to Mercurial, since hgsubversion "bends the rules" a little and violates some of the typical assumptions of early Mercurial users. Installation ------------ You need to have either have Subversion 1.5 (or later) installed along with either Subvertpy 0.7.4 (or later) or the Subversion SWIG Python bindings. You need Mercurial 1.3 or later. .. _mercurial: http://selenic.com/repo/hg .. _mercurial-stable: http://selenic.com/repo/hg-stable .. _crew: http://hg.intevation.org/mercurial/crew .. _crew-stable: http://hg.intevation.org/mercurial/crew-stable If you are unfamiliar with installing Mercurial extensions, please see the UsingExtensions_ page in the Mercurial wiki. Look at the example for specifying an absolute path near the bottom of the page. You want to give the path to the top level of your clone of this repository. .. _UsingExtensions: http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/UsingExtensions Before using hgsubversion, I *strongly* encourage you to run the automated tests. Just use nose_ if you have it (or ``easy_install nose`` if you want it), or use ``python tests/run.py`` to run the suite with the conventional test runner. Note that because I use nose, there's a lot of stdout spew in the tests right now. The important part is that all the tests pass. .. _nose: http://code.google.com/p/python-nose/ You can check that hgsubversion is installed and properly activated using the following command:: $ hg version --svn Mercurial Distributed SCM (version ...) Copyright (C) 2005-2010 Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com> and others This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. There is NO warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. hgsubversion: ... Subversion: ... bindings: Subvertpy ... If your bindings are listed as `SWIG`, please consider installing Subvertpy_. .. _Subvertpy: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/subvertpy Further Reading --------------- More information on how to use hgsubversion is available from within Mercurial in the `subversion` help topic. To view it, use:: $ hg help subversion The Restructured Text source for this topic is also available in the file ``hgsubverson/help/subversion.rst``.