Chris@499: Chris@499: Chris@499: Chris@499:
This indicates that the remote repository has some changes in it that Chris@500: you do not have in your local repository (and that are in branches Chris@500: that you have also changed).
Chris@500: Chris@500:Perhaps someone else made these changes and pushed them, or they may Chris@500: have been pushed by you from a different computer.
Chris@500: Chris@500:Why should that prevent me from pushing my changes?
Chris@499: Chris@499:A good principle is that you should review and test your changes Chris@500: before you push them to another repository. It may be OK to commit Chris@499: changes locally that don't really work or that aren't complete enough Chris@500: to test, but it's a bad idea to push anything that would cause the Chris@500: remote repository to have an untested set of changes in it.
Chris@499: Chris@500:For this reason, if you change some files, someone else changes some Chris@500: others, and you both try to push them without knowing about the other Chris@500: one, Mercurial must refuse the second push – it can't simply merge Chris@500: the changes because the result might not make any sense.
Chris@499: Chris@499:Instead you must pull the other person's changes and merge them Chris@500: locally before you push. Fortunately, this is easy to do:
Chris@499: Chris@499:1. Click Pull on the main toolbar at the top of the EasyMercurial window. Chris@499:
2. Click Merge in the toolbar on the left. Chris@499:
3. Review or test the resulting merged version in your local working folder.
Chris@499: Chris@499:4. Commit the merged version.
Chris@499: Chris@499:5. Push again to the remote repository.
Chris@499: