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wix: functionality to automate building WiX installers...
wix: functionality to automate building WiX installers Like we did for Inno Setup, we want to make it easier to produce WiX installers. This commit does that. We introduce a new hgpackaging.wix module for performing all the high-level tasks required to produce WiX installers. This required miscellaneous enhancements to existing code in hgpackaging, including support for signing binaries. A new build.py script for calling into the module APIs has been created. It behaves very similarly to the Inno Setup build.py script. Unlike Inno Setup, we didn't have code in the repo previously to generate WiX installers. It appears that all existing automation for building WiX installers lives in the https://bitbucket.org/tortoisehg/thg-winbuild repository - most notably in its setup.py file. My strategy for inventing the code in this commit was to step through the code in that repo's setup.py and observe what it was doing. Despite the length of setup.py in that repository, the actual amount of steps required to produce a WiX installer is actually quite low. It consists of a basic py2exe build plus invocations of candle.exe and light.exe to produce the MSI. One rabbit hole that gave me fits was locating the Visual Studio 9 C Runtime merge modules. These merge modules are only present on your system if you have a full Visual Studio 2008 installation. Fortunately, I have a copy of Visual Studio 2008 and was able to install all the required updates. I then uploaded these merge modules to a personal repository on GitHub. That is where the added code references them from. We probably don't need to ship the merge modules. But that is for another day. The installs from the MSIs produced with the new automation differ from the last official MSI in the following ways: * Our HTML manual pages have UNIX line endings instead of Windows. * We ship modules in the mercurial.pure package. It appears the upstream packaging code is not including this package due to omission (they supply an explicit list of packages that has drifted out of sync with our setup.py). * We do not ship various distutils.* modules. This is because virtualenvs have a custom distutils/__init__.py that automagically imports distutils from its original location and py2exe gets confused by this. We don't use distutils in core Mercurial and don't provide a usable python.exe, so this omission should be acceptable. * The version of the enum package is different and we ship an enum.pyc instead of an enum/__init__.py. * The version of the docutils package is different and we ship a different set of files. * The version of Sphinx is drastically newer and we ship a number of files the old version did not. (I'm not sure why we ship Sphinx - I think it is a side-effect of the way the THG code was installing dependencies.) * We ship the idna package (dependent of requests which is a dependency of newer versions of Sphinx). * The version of imagesize is different and we ship an imagesize.pyc instead of an imagesize/__init__.pyc. * The version of the jinja2 package is different and the sets of files differs. * We ship the packaging package, which is a dependency for Sphinx. * The version of the pygments package is different and the sets of files differs. * We ship the requests package, which is a dependency for Sphinx. * We ship the snowballstemmer package, which is a dependency for Sphinx. * We ship the urllib3 package, which is a dependency for requests, which is a dependency for Sphinx. * We ship a newer version of the futures package, which includes a handful of extra modules that match Python 3 module names. # no-check-commit because foo_bar naming Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D6097
Gregory Szorc -
r42087:4371f543 default
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Mercurial for Windows



Welcome to Mercurial for Windows!




Mercurial is a command-line application. You must run it from
the Windows command prompt (or if you're hard core, a <a<br /> href="http://www.mingw.org/">MinGW shell).




Note: the standard http://www.mingw.org/">MinGW
msys startup script uses rxvt which has problems setting up
standard input and output. Running bash directly works
correctly.




For documentation, please visit the <a<br /> href="https://mercurial-scm.org/">Mercurial web site.
You can also download a free book, <a<br /> href="https://book.mercurial-scm.org/">Mercurial: The Definitive
Guide.




By default, Mercurial installs to C:\Program
Files\Mercurial
. The Mercurial command is called
hg.exe.



Testing Mercurial after you've installed it




The easiest way to check that Mercurial is installed properly is
to just type the following at the command prompt:




hg



This command should print a useful help message. If it does,
other Mercurial commands should work fine for you.



Configuration notes


Default editor



The default editor for commit messages is 'notepad'. You can set
the EDITOR (or HGEDITOR) environment variable
to specify your preference or set it in mercurial.ini:



[ui]
editor = whatever


Configuring a Merge program



It should be emphasized that Mercurial by itself doesn't attempt
to do a Merge at the file level, neither does it make any
attempt to Resolve the conflicts.




By default, Mercurial will use the merge program defined by the
HGMERGE environment variable, or uses the one defined
in the mercurial.ini file. (see <a<br /> href="https://mercurial-scm.org/wiki/MergeProgram">MergeProgram
on the Mercurial Wiki for more information)



Reporting problems




Before you report any problems, please consult the <a<br /> href="https://mercurial-scm.org/">Mercurial web site
and see if your question is already in our list of <a<br /> href="https://mercurial-scm.org/wiki/FAQ">Frequently
Answered Questions (the "FAQ").




If you cannot find an answer to your question, please feel free
to send mail to the Mercurial mailing list, at <a<br /> href="mailto:mercurial@mercurial-scm.org">mercurial@mercurial-scm.org.
Remember, the more useful information you include in your
report, the easier it will be for us to help you!




If you are IRC-savvy, that's usually the fastest way to get
help. Go to #mercurial on irc.freenode.net.



Author and copyright information




Mercurial was written by http://www.selenic.com">Matt
Mackall, and is maintained by Matt and a team of volunteers.




The Windows installer was written by <a<br /> href="http://www.serpentine.com/blog">Bryan O'Sullivan.




Mercurial is Copyright 2005-2019 Matt Mackall and others. See
the Contributors.txt file for a list of contributors.




Mercurial is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the terms of the <a<br /> href="http://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-licenses/gpl-2.0.txt">GNU
General Public License version 2 or any later version.




Mercurial is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
without any warranty; without even the implied warranty
of merchantability or fitness for a particular
purpose
. See the GNU General Public License for more
details.


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