The qrefresh command is only useful if you are using Mercurial Queues You say that you're still a Hg newbie so I assume you're not. But yes, if you were using queues, the current patch's commit message can be edited with the following command: hg qrefresh -e "new commit message Again, Mercurial Queues (or MQ) is an advanced topic and I'd advise you read up on it here MQ is powerful, but until you're comfortable with them, stEdit is a good way to go, as Macke has mentioned.
The qrefresh command is only useful if you are using Mercurial Queues. You say that you're still a Hg newbie so I assume you're not. But yes, if you were using queues, the current patch's commit message can be edited with the following command: hg qrefresh -e "new commit message" Again, Mercurial Queues (or MQ) is an advanced topic and I'd advise you read up on it here MQ is powerful, but until you're comfortable with them, stEdit is a good way to go, as Macke has mentioned.
You might want to look at the stEditExtension which helps with editing a whole bunch of commits (renaming, changing files, combining, dropping, etc. ) Also, it usually doesn't matter that much what version the server uses. It's more about what you're using locally.
My "local" environment is sshing into the server – Faramir Mar 16 at 15:00 Ok, so either install a slightly newer hg version (1.3+) in your local account, or make a second clone at your desktop computer (or somewhere else) where you can install histedit and run it. I think it's your best option since there are several commits and you're not using mq. – Macke Mar 16 at 15:25.
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