On Sep 25, 2011, at 9:09 AM, Jelmer Vernooij wrote: > > On Sun 25 Sep 2011 03:59:49 PM CEST, Augie Fackler wrote: >> (bcc: mpm, mercurial and hg-git groups, cc: dulwich-users) >> >> On Sep 25, 2011, at 7:56 AM, Danny Tuppeny wrote: >>> >>> (apologies if you see this twice - I wasn't in the hg-git list!) >>> >>> >>> On 12 September 2011 05:03, Matt Mackall <[email protected]> wrote: >>> >>>>>> So the mercurial server's deprecated then? >>>> >>>>> No, you've got it backwards: the git client is deprecated. Tell your >>>>> friends. >>> >>> >>> The git client is probably easier to install and make work :-P >>> >>> I'm on Windows 7 64bit, and have Python 2.5.2 installed (for Google App >>> Engine), and the latest Mercurial (from Windows installer). >>> >>> I grabbed Dulwich (which is a tar.gz with no zip - grrr) and tried running >>> "setup install" from a command line. It blew up with an error trying to >>> compile C... I thought my VS 2010 install would have the required compilers >>> :-( >> >> I would think so too. Anyone over on dulwich-users got ideas here? I don't >> know a thing about Windows. > You should be able to install Dulwich without the C extensions. This > will make it run slower, but it should be an improvement over not > working at all. > > You can do this by passing --pure to "setup.py install". > > As for compiling with the extensions, I'm not sure either. I have had > reports that others have managed to get it to work when they had the > right compilers installed.
One other thought: I think TortoiseHg comes with Dulwich installed in its Python environment. Hopefully Steve can shed some light on that. > > Cheers, > > Jelmer _______________________________________________ Mailing list: https://launchpad.net/~dulwich-users Post to : [email protected] Unsubscribe : https://launchpad.net/~dulwich-users More help : https://help.launchpad.net/ListHelp

