Few days ago I started experimenting with Mercurial, and everything went great, until I decided to try writting a small program, that gets the list of repositories and lists of
No, Mercurial is designed so that you need a local repository for almost all commands. The only built-in command that will give you information about a remote repository is hg id
:
$ hg id https://bitbucket.org/aragost/javahg/
3b2711b26dbd
To get hold of more information you can sometimes exploit the raw
template for hgweb
:
$ wget -q -O - 'https://www.mercurial-scm.org/repo/hg/tags?style=raw' | head
tip a3a36bcf122e2ea4edbbe4ac44da59446cf0ee07
4.2.1 c850f0ed54c1d42f9aa079ad528f8127e5775217
4.2 bb96d4a497432722623ae60d9bc734a1e360179e
4.2-rc 616e788321cc4ae9975b7f0c54c849f36d82182b
4.1.3 77eaf9539499a1b8be259ffe7ada787d07857f80
4.1.2 ed5b25874d998ababb181a939dd37a16ea644435
4.1.1 25703b624d27e3917d978af56d6ad59331e0464a
4.1 e1526da1e6d84e03146151c9b6e6950fe9a83d7d
4.1-rc a1dd2c0c479e0550040542e392e87bc91262517e
4.0.2 e69874dc1f4e142746ff3df91e678a09c6fc208c
That requires that the host is running the hgweb
CGI script that comes with Mercurial. For a site like Bitbucket you would need to use their API.
Finally, if you can enable extensions on the remote repository, then it's possible to write an extension that exposes the information you want in a parsable format. I once wrote such an extension as a demo.