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TortoiseHg is a GUI front-end for Mercurial that runs on Microsoft Windows (on which it integrates directly with File Explorer [2]), Mac OS X, [3] and Linux. [4] It is written in PyQt (except the Windows shell extension), and the underlying client can be used on the command line. It is often recommended and preferred for working with Mercurial ...
Mercurial is a distributed revision control tool for software developers. It is supported on Microsoft Windows , Linux , and other Unix-like systems, such as FreeBSD and macOS .
RhodeCode is an enterprise source code management platform for Mercurial, Git, and SVN repositories. It also provides a web interface and APIs to control source code access, manage users, and conduct code reviews. The platform applies existing tools and integrations across the whole code base in a unified way.
Mercurial [open, distributed] – written in Python as an open source replacement to BitKeeper; decentralized and aims to be fast, lightweight, portable, and easy to use; Panvalet [proprietary, shared] – Around since the 1970s, source and object control for IBM mainframe computers
The following table contains relatively general attributes of version-control software systems, including: Repository model, the relationship between copies of the source code repository
It provides two- and three-way comparison of both files and directories, and supports many version control systems including Git, Mercurial, Baazar, CVS and Subversion. Meld is free and open-source software subject to the terms of the GNU General Public License (GPL-2.0-or-later).
Git, Subversion, Mercurial Linux, macOS, Windows pre- and post-commit Gerrit: Google, Inc. actively developed Apache v2 Git Java EE: pre-commit Gitea: Gitea actively developed MIT: Git Linux, macOS, Windows pre- and post-commit GitHub: GitHub, Inc. actively developed Proprietary: Git Linux, macOS, Windows pre- and post-commit GitLab: GitLab Inc.
CodePlex was a forge website by Microsoft.While it was active, it allowed shared development of open-source software. [1] Its features included wiki pages, source control based on Mercurial, TFVC, Subversion or Git, discussion forums, issue tracking, project tagging, RSS support, statistics, and releases.