Differences between revisions 481 and 482
Revision 481 as of 2015-05-09 06:25:54
Size: 9855
Comment:
Revision 482 as of 2015-05-09 10:58:24
Size: 10259
Comment: copy editing rpm section
Deletions are marked like this. Additions are marked like this.
Line 49: Line 49:
Since Mercurial version 3.4, the Mercurial project provides packages for the following systems:
Line 50: Line 51:
Since version 3.4, rpm we automatically provide packages for the follow systems  * [[http://mercurial.selenic.com/release/centos5/RPMS/x86_64/|Centos 5]] (includes a python2.7 install)
 * [[http://mercurial.selenic.com/release/centos6/RPMS/x86_64/|Centos 6]]
 * [[http://mercurial.selenic.com/release/centos7/RPMS/x86_64/|Centos 7]]
Line 52: Line 55:
 * [[http://mercurial.selenic.com/release/centos5/|Centos 5]] (includes a python2.7 install)
 * [[http://mercurial.selenic.com/release/centos6/|Centos 6]]
 * [[http://mercurial.selenic.com/release/centos7/|Centos 7]]
You can download, install and upgrade the packages manually.
Line 56: Line 57:
To use them, add the following file at `/etc/yum.repos.d/mercurial.selenic.com.repo` and run `yum install mercurial` You can also add it as a "yum" package repository and get automatic updates: Add the following file at `/etc/yum.repos.d/mercurial.selenic.com.repo` and run `yum install mercurial`.
Line 67: Line 69:
/!\ Mercurial is stable and won't break on automatic updates. Mercurial do however not promise API stability so an update might break extensions or tools using Mercurial internals.

Similar Fedora packages can be built from a Mercurial source repository with commands like `make docker-fedora21`. "Unsupported" platforms can use `contrib/buildrpm` directly.
Line 75: Line 81:

An RPM package can be built from a Mercurial source repository with ''contrib/buildrpm''. It has currently mostly been tested on Fedora.

Download

Source archives and binary packages for various systems. See WhatsNew for information on upgrading.

1. Binary packages

1.1. Windows

/!\ Like TortoiseSVN, we recommend turning off the indexing service on the working copies and repositories, and excluding them from virus scans.

The following installers can be used from Windows XP onwards:

Most of the above installers are from thg-winbuild, which has nightly builds of Mercurial and TortoiseHg.

1.2. Mac OS X

  • Mac OS X packages are available on the downloads page

  • Fink: install with 'fink install mercurial' - 3.3

  • macports: install with 'sudo port install mercurial' - 3.3

1.3. Linux (.deb)

Mercurial (from 1.0 onwards) is packaged for Debian-related distributions as two packages, mercurial and mercurial-common - you only need to care about this if you are downloading .deb files for manual installation - otherwise, APT dependency handling will take care of this for you when you install mercurial.

1.4. Linux (.rpm)

Since Mercurial version 3.4, the Mercurial project provides packages for the following systems:

You can download, install and upgrade the packages manually.

You can also add it as a "yum" package repository and get automatic updates: Add the following file at /etc/yum.repos.d/mercurial.selenic.com.repo and run yum install mercurial.

[mercurial.selenic.com]
name=mercurial.selenic.com
baseurl=http://mercurial.selenic.com/release/centos$releasever
enabled=1
# Temporary until we get a serious signing scheme in place,
# check http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/Download again
gpgcheck=0

/!\ Mercurial is stable and won't break on automatic updates. Mercurial do however not promise API stability so an update might break extensions or tools using Mercurial internals.

Similar Fedora packages can be built from a Mercurial source repository with commands like make docker-fedora21. "Unsupported" platforms can use contrib/buildrpm directly.

You can also install the package from your distribution

  • Mandriva: install with urpmi mercurial - latest revision available

  • Fedora - latest version is available within few days after release, install with yum install '*mercurial*'

  • Fedora Projects EPEL for RHEL and CentOS 5: 1.3.1, install with yum install '*mercurial*'

  • openSUSE - latest version is available shortly after release in the devel:tools:scm repository

  • Ark Linux - 1.6.2

  • OpenPKG - 1.4

1.5. Linux (others)

1.6. Solaris

1.7. AIX

1.8. BSD

1.9. Plan 9 from Bell Labs

  • To build from source, see: Plan9FromBellLabs

  • Binary packages are available from fgb's contrib:

% contrib/install stallion/mercurial

2. Source packages

After getting the source, continue to UnixInstall or WindowsInstall for help with installing.

3. Using easy_install

/!\ This method is not recommended and may conflict with other installs of Mercurial.

Mercurial can also be installed from pypi with easy_install. You will need Python and the C compiler used to build it and easy_install. easy_install might be available in a python-dev or python-setuptools-devel package for your platform or you can grab it from http://peak.telecommunity.com/DevCenter/EasyInstall.

/!\ Unable to find vcvarsall.bat fix error with mingw and install mercurial 1.7.3 with python 2.7

Create a file in C:\Python26\Lib\distutils and call it distutils.cfg
[build]
compiler=mingw32

With the right prerequisites you can install the latest version of Mercurial using:

easy_install -U mercurial


CategoryProject

Français, 中文, 日本語

Download (last edited 2021-10-01 20:25:20 by CarlReinke)