My solution would be to switch to BitKeeper. We use it for rtlinux and
linux/ppc with no troubles. The windows/unix interaction is very clean,
too. Take a look at www.bitkeeper.com.
BitKeeper exports and imports CVS so you won't lose history in a switch.
That will also let you give it a test drive pretty easily.
} This is a little off the subject of this list, but please bear with me.
}
} We have just begun (only about 6 months ago) controlling our source code
} with CVS. I'm having a problem, several of our software engineers use
} windows editor (a personal preference thing). There are countless ^M's in
} the files after they edit them. I remove those ^M's and commit them to the
} repository, when I check them out again, the ^M's are still there.
}
} My boss is paranoid that these updates to the repository and possibly some
} of our other changes are not getting commited to the repository. So his
} level of confidence in the tool is degrading, even though he knows that
} thousands of people are using and that it really does work, it's an
} emotional issue around.
}
} Anybody got a glimmer of what is happening? How to Correct and how to
} avoid (beyond the obvious of bagging windows and dumping it in the river)?
}
} I have a workaround but it's drastic and I'd rather not blow away the
} repository ad recreate it if I don't have to.
-- [rtl] ---
To unsubscribe:
echo "unsubscribe rtl" | mail [EMAIL PROTECTED] OR
echo "unsubscribe rtl <Your_email>" | mail [EMAIL PROTECTED]
--
For more information on Real-Time Linux see:
http://www.rtlinux.org/rtlinux/