]> git.madduck.net Git - code/myrepos.git/blobdiff - debian/control

madduck's git repository

Every one of the projects in this repository is available at the canonical URL git://git.madduck.net/madduck/pub/<projectpath> — see each project's metadata for the exact URL.

All patches and comments are welcome. Please squash your changes to logical commits before using git-format-patch and git-send-email to patches@git.madduck.net. If you'd read over the Git project's submission guidelines and adhered to them, I'd be especially grateful.

SSH access, as well as push access can be individually arranged.

If you use my repositories frequently, consider adding the following snippet to ~/.gitconfig and using the third clone URL listed for each project:

[url "git://git.madduck.net/madduck/"]
  insteadOf = madduck:

* Fix inverted tests in tags command. (madduck)
[code/myrepos.git] / debian / control
index 740bfbc9203044c42452d3981da77a4238b5eeb2..eee97c2681f18e8bee3a44d8d4d93b2bce52348c 100644 (file)
@@ -11,17 +11,20 @@ Package: mr
 Architecture: all
 Section: utils
 Depends: 
-Suggests: subversion, git-core, cvs, bzr
+Suggests: subversion, git-core, cvs, bzr, mercurial
 Description: a Multiple Repository management tool
  The mr(1) command can checkout, update, or perform other actions on
  a set of repositories as if they were one combined respository. It
- supports any combination of subversion, git, cvs, and bzr repositories,
- and support for other revision control systems can easily be added.
+ supports any combination of subversion, git, cvs, bzr, and mercurial
+ repositories, and support for other revision control systems can easily
+ be added.
  .
  It is extremely configurable via simple shell scripting. Some examples
- of things it can be configured to do include:
+ of things it can do include:
  .
- * Update a repository no more frequently than once every twelve hours.
- * Run an arbitrary command before committing to a repository.
- * When updating a git repository, pull from two different upstreams
-   and merge the two together.
+  * Update a repository no more frequently than once every twelve hours.
+  * Run an arbitrary command before committing to a repository.
+  * When updating a git repository, pull from two different upstreams
+    and merge the two together.
+  * Run several repository updates in parallel, greatly speeding up
+    the update process.