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I converted a Subversion repository to Mercurial, using the Convert extension. When I look at the new repository with Tortoise HG, I see in each changeset the corresponding source path and revision (see image). Tortoise HG Screenshot with HG Changeset and SVN source path/revision

Is there a way to write those two out to the console? Ideally I'd like an output like this:

hg:1147 svn:trunk@7201
hg:1146 svn:trunk@7200
...

I know that I can use hg log with the template option to customize the output, but don't know how to get the Subversion source path/revision.

EDIT: It looks like the way I wanted to go is not possible. The svn source path/revision is in a field called extras within the changeset (thanks @Ry4en) and neither hg log nor hg export output this value. What I will try now is to use the file .hg/shamap in combination with

hg log --template 'hg:{rev} nodeid:{node}'

To map the Mercurial revision to the SVN source path/revision.

EDIT2: My Mercurial version is 1.4.3. With Mercurial 1.7.1 it's possible to use this command (thanks @ Wim Coenen): hg log --template {node}\n{extras}\n\n

2 Answers 2

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New versions of hgsubversion adds a {svnrev} template keyword. This is described in hg help subversion:

[...]

Finding and displaying Subversion revisions

For revealing the relationship between Mercurial changesets and Subversion revisions, hgsubversion provides three template keywords:

 svnrev   Expanded to the original Subversion revision number.
 svnpath  The path within the repository that the changeset represents.
 svnuuid  The Universally Unique Identifier of the Subversion repository.

An example:

 $ hg log --template='{rev}:{node|short} {author|user}\nsvn: {svnrev}\n'

The template keywords are available when using Mercurial 1.5 or later.

For finding changesets from Subversion, hgsubversion extends revsets to provide two new selectors:

 fromsvn  Select changesets that originate from Subversion. Takes no
          arguments.
 svnrev   Select changesets that originate in a specific Subversion
          revision. Takes a revision argument.

For example:

 $ hg log -r 'fromsvn()'
 $ hg log -r 'svnrev(500)'

Revsets are available when using Mercurial 1.6 or later and are accepted by several Mercurial commands for specifying revisions. See "hg help revsets" for details.

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  • Does this also work when I did a complete conversion of the SVN repository with the convert extension or do I have to use hgsubversion from the beginning? Nov 25, 2010 at 9:55
  • 1
    He's not using hgsubversion, he's converted the repository. Nov 25, 2010 at 9:56
  • @Chris: oh, sorry, I guess I assumed everybody used hgsubversion these days :-) Dec 1, 2010 at 15:08
  • @Matthias: I'm afraid you cannot mix a hg convert conversion with a hgsubversion conversion. Dec 1, 2010 at 15:09
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It's tucked away in a field named extras on the changeset, and I don't believe there is a log template entry for it. It might show up in a hg export from which you could grep it, and it's certainly available programmatically, but I don't think there's a --template way to get it.

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  • 7
    It looks like you can print extras, try hg log --template {node}\n{extras}\n\n for example.
    – Wim Coenen
    Nov 24, 2010 at 20:28
  • @Wim: When I enter the command like you wrote it (plus single quotes for the template string), I get the message "No keyword 'extra'" (note the missing s). When I just use 'extra' instead of 'extras' I get the log output, but only the node id and no value for the extra field. Nov 25, 2010 at 9:44
  • @Ry4en: It seems you're right: There is no way to get the data with hg log. Unfortunately I don't see the extras in the hg export output either. But I think I can correlate the log output with the entries in .hg/shamap to get the combination I need. Nov 25, 2010 at 9:45
  • @Matthias: My example as shown works for me on mercurial 1.7.1. Perhaps you are using an old version?
    – Wim Coenen
    Nov 25, 2010 at 15:23
  • @Wim: Yes, I'm using 1.4.3 and there's no word on when I'll get the newer version (at work). I'll keep your suggestion in mind though, thanks :). Nov 29, 2010 at 10:14

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