view help/a-10.html @ 537:a4e699d32a9a

gah! hg 2.1 changes push and pull so as to return failure codes on success, if there was nothing to push or pull
author Chris Cannam
date Fri, 10 Feb 2012 13:08:07 +0000
parents 21aa41b62c3a
children
line wrap: on
line source
<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="help.css"/>


<h2>Someone gave me a repository URL and asked me to clone it</h2>

<p>A Mercurial repository location is usually described by a URL, like
that of a website.</p>

<p>For example, the URL for the repository containing the source code for
EasyMercurial itself is <code>https://bitbucket.org/cannam/easyhg</code>.</p>

<p>To get a copy of the files in a repository, you need to <i>clone</i> the
repository from the remote URL into a folder on your own computer.  To
do this,</p>

<p><b>1. Click the Open toolbar button or use File -> Open</b></p>

<p><center><img src="images/openremote50.png"></center></p>

<p><b>2. Select &ldquo;Remote repository&rdquo; as the thing you want to open</b></p>

<p><b>3. Enter the repository URL into the URL field</b></p>

<p><b>4. Give the name of a folder on your local computer to clone into</b> &ndash;
 this folder will be created for you, so it shouldn't be one that already
 exists</p>

<p><b>5. Click OK</b></p>

<p>If the remote repository has restricted access, you may be asked to
provide a username and password to log in to the server it is hosted
on.  If the repository is large, you may have to wait a while for all the
data to be transferred.</p>

<p>Provided the clone has been successful, you should now have a local
repository to start working in.
<ul><li>Note: the equivalent Mercurial command for this is <b>hg clone</b></li></ul>