[Twisted-Python] Announcing twisted-dev-tools
http://labs.twistedmatrix.com/2013/06/announcing-twisted-dev-tools.html I'd like to announce the release of twisted-dev-tools. It is a project that collects various python scripts useful for developer working on twisted itself. Right now, it contains the following tools. - force-build: This is an updated version of force-builds.py from twisted-trac-integration. It has a different (more flexible) syntax. If run from a git repository, where the current commit has been pushed to svn, running it with no arguments will automatically build the corresponding branch. - mkbranch: A helper for thos use git: it creates a branch in svn, with a standard commit message. Eventually, this should be enhanced to automatically fetch that commit, and switch to the branch locally. - review-tickets: Command-line list of tickets currently in review - fetch-ticket: Command-line tool to view a ticket - get-attachemnt: Tool for interacting with trac attachments. - list: list all attachments on a given ticket - get: gets a gien ticket (defaults to the lat) - apply: applies that last attachment to the current git repository, and commits it with an appropriate message Most of the functionality is also exposed as a python library, so custom scripts are possible as well. The code is available at https://github.com/twisted/twisted-dev-tools and on pypi https://pypi.python.org/pypi/twisted-dev-tools
On Jun 14, 2013, at 3:45 PM, Tom Prince
http://labs.twistedmatrix.com/2013/06/announcing-twisted-dev-tools.html
I'd like to announce the release of twisted-dev-tools. It is a project that collects various python scripts useful for developer working on twisted itself.
Cool! It's nice to have all this stuff in one place now. Maybe we can even get some documentation? :)
- mkbranch: A helper for thos use git: it creates a branch in svn, with a standard commit message.
Eventually, this should be enhanced to automatically fetch that commit, and switch to the branch locally.
This is all great, but, would you mind re-naming it so that I can have both this, and Combinator installed locally? Until we switch to Git, I'd like to preserve the capacity to work with Subversion natively :). -glyph
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Tom Prince