Qt commit tool
qct [VCS]
The qct(1) command provides a common GUI commit dialog for many revision control systems across many platforms, including Linux/UNIX, MacOSX, and Microsoft Windows.
Mercurial
[--hg|-h] Qct supports both the simple repository model and the Mercurial Queue patch maintenance model. When MQ patches are applied, qct will present a patch refresh user interface. Consult README.mercurial for more details.
Bazaar
[--bzr|-b] Bazaar support is complete, but could use some polishing. Qct can run as a bazaar plugin. Consult README.bazaar for more details.
Perforce
[--p4|-4] Perforce support is complete, if somewhat restrictive. On Windows, you must override P4DIFF with a command line diff tool. Consult README.perforce for more details.
CVS
[--cvs|-c] CVS support is feature complete, but not well tested. Consult README.cvs for more details.
Monotone
[--mtn|-m] Monotone support is feature complete, but not well tested. Consult README.monotone for more details.
Subversion
[--svn|-s] Subversion support is not very well tested at this time, so consider it alpha quality. Consult README.subversion for more details.
Git
[--cg] Git repositories are only supported via the Cogito front-end interface, which must be installed in order for Qct to work properly. Consult README.git for more details.
Qct can run as a plugin inside both Mercurial and Bazaar. Please consult the packaged INSTALL file and each plugin\(cqs built-in help for more information.
If you require a sign-off (or other) message to be appended to all of your commit messages, you can specify this message in the Qct preferences dialog. The sign-off message will not show up in the commit message window, but will be automatically appended to your message when passed to the VCS for commit.
Qct will allow you to select individual changes made to revisioned files, temporarily storing the remaining changes under a .qct/ directory until the commit has been completed. To enable this feature, you must configure a two-way merge application in the Qct preferences dialog. Kompare, meld, and kdiff3 are all known to work correctly in this mode. Any merge application which takes two file-names on the command line and allows them to be merged together can be used.
You can register an external editor with the Qct preferences dialog. Your editor will be presented as a context-menu option for all non-deleted commitable files in the file list.
If your VCS supports external diff tools, you may register one of these with the Qct preferences dialog. Your diff tool will be offered in the context menu of all modified files in your file list. The diff tool will be provided with the list of selected files so it must be capable of retrieving the file diffs itself, typically by getting them from your revision control system.
~/.config/vcs/qct
This file contains persistent data stored by Qct between invocations. It is not meant to be user modified.
Probably lots, please send them to be via e-mail when you find them. Patches (or mercurial bundles) are always welcome.
Windows has a known limitation of 32Kbytes for it\(cqs command line. Since Qct operates directly with the VCS command line tools, it is possible to run into this limit.
Written by Steve Borho <\m[blue][email protected]\m[]\s-2\u[1]\d\s+2>
\m[blue]Web Page\m[]\s-2\u[2]\d\s+2 \m[blue]Source code repository\m[]\s-2\u[3]\d\s+2
Copyright (C) 2006 Steve Borho Free use of this software is granted under the terms of the GNU General Public License (GPL)
Steve Borho <[email protected]>
Author.
mailto:[email protected]
Web Page
http://qct.sourceforge.net/
Source code repository
http://qct.sourceforge.net/hg/qct