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We're using TortoiseHg 2.1.4 right now.

Our workflow looks something similar like this:

  • dev1 creates change in baseline, exports patch via tortoiseHg
  • dev1 gives patch to dev2 for review
  • if review is ok, patch gets to a merge guy dev3, who then backports it

Problem: the time shown in tortoiseHg is the time of local patch creation/commit by dev1, but we want to see, in tortoiseHg, when the patch was pushed to baseline by dev3.

If there is a way to get the info via command line, that would work too, but adding the info to TortoiseHg would be better. Any ideas?

Edit

This is a duplicate of In Mercurial, how can I see revisions pushed to a repo in the last 24 hours?, I misinterpreted the question there the first time. The answer there (serverside plugin only) sucks a bit, but anyway.

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  • Nope, that’s basically it. You can also easily run it on your own computer by the way using hg serve. But the push-information is not distributed I guess. Nov 28, 2011 at 11:35
  • Push information can't be distributed. Which push to which repo do you log? It's a concept that doesn't work unless the answer is all push/pulls to all repos. Then that's potentially a lot of information. What time did this commit land in the local repo is a valid question though, along with where did it come from, how did it get here, etc.
    – Paul S
    Nov 28, 2011 at 13:05
  • Just change workflow and use merges (two or more named branches) instead of patches, this way mergesets in default will have real time Nov 28, 2011 at 15:07

1 Answer 1

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This is a double of In Mercurial, how can I see revisions pushed to a repo in the last 24 hours?, misinterpreted the question there the first time. Can be closed.

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