Reza, You may be interested to compare CVSNT (free/GPL, runs on unix/linux/windows/mac - just like CVS) which matches SVN feature for feature and is generally more feature complete and oriented to commercial software developers.
For instance CVSNT contains native: * ACLs (including ACLs on branches) * mergepoints (track when merges occur) * change sets * commit identifiers * reserved and unreserved CM models * Failsafe audit to MySQL, MS SQL, Postgres, SQLite, UDB/DB2 * support for the entire enterprise with Mac, Linux, Unix, Windows, OS/400 and MVS clients CVSNT has a very active Open Source Community as well as commercial support and tools. CVSNT server is compatible with all CVS clients including Eclipse. Regards, Arthur Barrett -----Original Message----- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] on behalf of Reza Mostafid Sent: Fri 10/6/2006 9:01 PM To: [email protected] Cc: Subject: Compared against SVN: CVS access authorization scheme Hi everyone, I am currently evaluating Subversion and CVS for use by our project. Can somone provide info / pointers regarding the following: Does CVS provide any means to limit or prohibit access to certain parts of a source tree in its repository?? I know that you can do that easily in Subversion. Regards darbehdar _______________________________________________ info-cvs mailing list [email protected] http://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/info-cvs _______________________________________________ info-cvs mailing list [email protected] http://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/info-cvs
