working area as branch 1.1.2, but
since there is no change from the original version, the only revision is
1.1. This revision is on both the trunk and the branch right now. That's
what it looks like to me.
David H. Thornley| If you want my opinion, ask.
[EMAIL PROTECTED
David Leskovac writes:
Okay. So, just to be clear, this is actually a 3-step process:
1. Checkout branch:
cvs co -r branchname module
2. Rename from sandbox:
cd to root of module in sandbox
cvs admin -n newname:oldname
3. Delete original tag name sandbox:
cd to root
You still need a 2-step process, you just use admin -n to create a new
name for the existing branch rather than using tag -b to create a new
branch:
cvs admin -n newname:oldname
cvs tag -d oldname
(Note that there's no radmin command so you need to have a checked out
working
Would this work for each branch to be renamed?:
cvs rtag -b -r original_branch_name new_branch_name module
No, that creates a new branch off of the existing branch rather than
renaming the existing branch. You need to use admin -n instead.
Okay. So rather than the 2-step process I
Is any one doing Continuous Integration with CVS ?
Yes. We use CruiseControl 2.2.1
-Dave
___
Info-cvs mailing list
Info-cvs@gnu.org
http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/info-cvs
It's working just as designed. :-) Variables that stay
around permanently only stay that way as long as you are
logged in. I suggest adding it to your .bashrc file in your
home directory. UNIX/Linux process that file every time a new
terminal session is opened and will set it
- and experiences welcome.
Dave
-Open up your eyes, open up your mind, open up your code ---
/ Dr. David Alan Gilbert| Running GNU/Linux on Alpha,68K| Happy \
\ gro.gilbert @ treblig.org | MIPS,x86,ARM,SPARC,PPC HPPA | In Hex /
\ _|_ http://www.treblig.org
a repository which has had my patch inflicted on it.
(The existing cvs code that rewrites the file will remove any
excess white space you added up there anyway.)
Dave
-Open up your eyes, open up your mind, open up your code ---
/ Dr. David Alan Gilbert| Running GNU/Linux on Alpha,68K
* Jim Hyslop ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
Dr. David Alan Gilbert wrote:
2) I could do with a better under standing of the directory locks;
pointers? I've read the top of lock.c but it still doesn't tell me
enough; for example there seem to be multiple lock files used - but
then surely
; but I'm up for suggestions.
Dave
-Open up your eyes, open up your mind, open up your code ---
/ Dr. David Alan Gilbert| Running GNU/Linux on Alpha,68K| Happy \
\ gro.gilbert @ treblig.org | MIPS,x86,ARM,SPARC,PPC HPPA | In Hex /
\ _|_ http
to ensure consistency, or is the
locking that is carried out sufficient?
Does this make sense?
Dave
-Open up your eyes, open up your mind, open up your code ---
/ Dr. David Alan Gilbert| Running GNU/Linux on Alpha,68K| Happy \
\ gro.gilbert @ treblig.org | MIPS,x86,ARM,SPARC,PPC
[Resend: I sent it with the wrong 'from' address - apologies
if you get both]
* Mark D. Baushke ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Hi Mark,
Thanks for your reply.
Dr. David Alan Gilbert [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
So - here are my questions/ideas
* performed by cvs itself? i.e. would my
trick (if I can solve the interrupted write case) be completely
safe with any use of cvs as long as you didn't access the files
externally?
Dave
-Open up your eyes, open up your mind, open up your code ---
/ Dr. David Alan Gilbert| Running GNU
* Mark D. Baushke ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Dr. David Alan Gilbert [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
OK, if I create a dummy ,foo.c, before
modifying (or create a hardlink with that name
to foo.c,v ?) would that be sufficient?
I would say
Larry Jones writes:
Reinstein, Shlomo writes:
I would like to use cvs release to get rid of a sub-tree of my
project.
However, I noticed that cvs release does not update the
CVS/Entries (or
CVS/Entries.log) file, which causes a problem later when I want
to run
other commands, like cvs
Hi,
Will the following commands work to rename a file in the
trunk but retain the old file name in all its branches?:
cvs co module
cvs remove -f oldfile
cvs add newfile
cvs commit -mRenamed oldfile to newfile oldfile newfile
Thanks,
-Dave
___
, is there any other way to rename a file in the trunk
retain the history of the oldfile in the newfile while keeping the
oldfile intact in the branches?
Thanks,
-Dave
-Original Message-
From: Jim.Hyslop [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, March 11, 2005 10:33 AM
To: David Leskovac; info-cvs
On Thursday 24 February 2005 11:33 pm, Guus Leeuw jr. wrote:
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:info-cvs-
[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of David A. Bartmess
Sent: vendredi 25 février 2005 06:53
On Thursday 24 February 2005 08:24 am, Jim.Hyslop wrote:
rakesh
that relies on the datetime stamp to know
if a build has already included that change (i.e., cruisecontrol).
Just FYI...
--
David A. Bartmess
Software Configuration Manager / Sr. Software Developer
eDingo Enterprises
http://edingo.net
[I sent this msg 10 days ago noone responded. So, I'm trying again.]
Hello,
We are currently using an ancient version of CVS (1.11.1p1) on a rather old
Linux server (Red Hat 6). I intend to upgrade to CVS 1.11.19 eventually
upgrade the Linux OS. In the course of our CVS upgrade discussion we
Install cvs in a different place than the version you are using.
Make a script named cvs in the current location of cvs. That
script should check the cvs commands vs. valid users. If
everything is OK, then it should invoke the new cvs in the
new place with the arguments passed to it.
This
:
David Bartmess wrote:
Used in the cvswrappers file, the -m gives the mode of the
file to the cvs
admin command, setting the mode of the file to either COPY (do
not delta the
file, put a full version in every time) or to MERGE (put only
delta of file
changes into the repository
/
___
Info-cvs mailing list
Info-cvs@gnu.org
http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/info-cvs
--
David A. Bartmess
Software Configuration Manager / Sr. Software Developer
eDingo Enterprises
http://edingo.net
Vad Kristensen
Aarhus, Denmark.
___
Info-cvs mailing list
Info-cvs@gnu.org
http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/info-cvs
--
David A. Bartmess
Software Configuration Manager / Sr. Software Developer
eDingo Enterprises
http://edingo.net
* Serbulent UNSAL [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
# cvs -d /var/cvsroot init
# chown -R cvs.cvs /var/cvsroot
#export CVS_RSH=ssh
Here is the error message
usta:/home/usta# cvs -d :ext:[EMAIL PROTECTED]:/var/cvsroot checkout
module
Password:
Did you import anything in your repository before
are in
| confederacy against him. -- Jonathan Swift,
writer.
___
Info-cvs mailing list
Info-cvs@gnu.org
http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/info-cvs
--
David A. Bartmess
Software Configuration Manager / Sr. Software Developer
eDingo
(Jesper Vad Kristensen)
3. Re: Undo check out (David A. Bartmess)
--
Message: 1
Date: Wed, 16 Feb 2005 17:47:30 +0530
From: Rajeev R [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: jar files in cvs repository
To: info-cvs@gnu.org
Message
Hello,
We are currently using an ancient version of CVS (1.11.1p1) on a rather old
Linux server (Red Hat 6). I intend to upgrade to CVS 1.11.19 eventually
upgrade the Linux OS. In the course of our CVS upgrade discussion we started
discussing how to increase security with regards to CVS
Hi, I have a question about how access permissions on branches and
HEAD. I want to restrict certain CVS users to only be able to commit
their changes to branches but not the HEAD. Yet at the same time, I
want to allow them to check out modules from the HEAD. Is this doable?
Thanks!
David Jiao
Chris Weiss [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I've got one client who is having trouble connecting to our CVS
server. I'm trying to troubleshoot the problem, but am not having much
luck.
Our setup is CVS server 1.11.5, client 1.11.1.3, we're connecting via
SSH tunnel. We've got the keys
Chris Weiss [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
J. David Boyd wrote:
Chris Weiss [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I've got one client who is having trouble connecting to our CVS
server. I'm trying to troubleshoot the problem, but am not having much
luck.
Our setup is CVS server 1.11.5, client
is interesting is that between the master and the /CVSROOT is a
0x0d character. This seems to be causing trouble, Any idea where this is
coming from? Any idea what to try?
Any help would be appreciated.
David Robison
--
David R Robison
Open Roads Consulting, Inc.
708 S. Battlefield Blvd., Chesapeake
I rolled back to an older version of cygwin1.dll and all works fine now!
David
Tony Hoyle wrote:
David Robison wrote:
I recently did an update from cygwin and updated to OpenSSH version
3.9p1. Now, every time I try to work with a CVS repository that uses
SSH authentication, the csv process hangs
I have a question about how people use CVS. How common is it to always
checkout and update read-only, and then use cvs edit when you start
working on a file? Or, do people checkout read-write and never use cvs
edit? I have always thought that modules should be checked out
read-only, and cvs
?
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Tom Copeland
Sent: Wednesday, July 07, 2004 11:12 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Do most people checkout read-only and use cvs edit?
On Wed, 2004-07-07 at 14:01, Karr, David wrote
compression method
cvs [update aborted]: reading from server: Input/output error
Server:
cvs 1.11.16
RedHat 7.2
Client:
cvs 1.11.1p1
RedHat 7.2
Note that I have many clients deployed, so I'd like to understand the
problem (not just deploy newer clients).
Thanks,
David
Please respond
of any
changes with that particular capability.
-Original Message-
From: Jim.Hyslop [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, June 28, 2004 11:45 AM
To: Flagg, David; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: File date and timestamp
Flagg, David wrote:
This is a re-post. This seems like it could
I have a binary file that is in my repository, libtemp.a, which has the following
timestamp in cvsroot (i.e., timestamp in the Unix filesystem): Jun 18 09:42.
Apparently, this is the time when I last tagged the file.
When I check out the file (with WinCVS, by the way), the date on the file is
May someone tell me how to checkin a binary file into my repository?
Thanks a lot..
man 1 cvs
Look for the -k options.
___
Info-cvs mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://mail.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/info-cvs
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
revision numbers are for CVS's internal use, you should not care what
they are. Use tags if you want meaningful information.
Weee... for the most part I agree.
However, there are times when you need to compare two revisions that are not
tagged. If we
[ On Wednesday, February 18, 2004 at 10:21:41 (-0500), Jim.Hyslop wrote: ]
Subject: RE: Binary release announcements?
If you can't, or won't, build the software you use yourself then you
need to find someone who can _and_ who you trust to do that for you.
Some people seem to be awfully
What are the pros and cons of concurrent editing?. CVS supports and
advocates concurrent editing, whereas configuration tools like VSS use the
locked model of editing, to which the developers are very much used to.
What are the benefits of concurrent editing ( using CVS ) and what
On the flip side, and maybe this is what Jim really meant, you can tag
your committed versions on the contributor branch when the bug fix is
done (and after the merge is complete). Then remember that tag for the
next bug fix. You can use that tag as the common ancestor for the next
merge.
Jim,
Just wondering what minor problems you had, just in case they might pertain
to other peoples' migration strategies (or my own someday)?
Thanks!
David R. Chase
Senior Unemployed Software Developer ; )
- Original Message -
From: Jim.Hyslop [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED
[ On Tuesday, January 20, 2004 at 15:13:08 (-0600), [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: ]
Subject: Re: what's to stop a developer from nuking the repository?
If you have a trusted network and you do feel comfortable with telnet
and rlogin then USE THEM -- DO NOT USE PSERVER.
The logic for
[ On Tuesday, January 20, 2004 at 11:03:38 (-0500), Larry Jones wrote: ]
Subject: Re: what's to stop a developer from nuking the repository?
I think that's still overstating the case. If you run CVS on a network
where you can trust people enough that you're confortable running
telnet
___
Info-cvs mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://mail.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/info-cvs
are correct in fact via the command line and tortoisecvs it works fine.
Anyone have experience with this problem?
Thanks,
-Dave
David E. Muller
Configuration Manager
Overture Services, Inc.
www.overture.com
Office: 760.476.6406
Mobile: 760.458.2714
The following command builds cvs-1.11.9, but not cvs-1.11.10 under
windows:
nmake /f cvsnt.mak CFG=cvsnt - Win32 Debug
The failure appears to be:
link.exe @c:\temp\nma01012.
filesubr.obj : error LNK2001: unresolved external symbol _assert
.\WinDebug/cvs.exe : fatal error LNK1120: 1
Greg Woods:
In CVS the release number of RCS-Id is like any useless and almost
atrophied organ -- however it's impossible to give it up without
also giving up backwards compatability of the internal repository
structure.
It also is necessary as a magic cookie - an otherwise meaningless
but
You could consider using xinetd alongside Solaris inetd (just for the CVS
port). It would be a simple experiment to set it up and see if it, too,
exhibits the problem.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote on 12/02/2003
03:38:25 AM:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Mark [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Two things.
First, did you work for 18 months on something without making backups?
If you never made backups, then whether it was a mistake setting up CVS,
some other kind of mistake, hardware failure, fire, or theft, you were
destined to lose your work. I hope, however you resolve this
separate (/home/cvs/repository
?). And of course, have another go at the manual (or some of the other
reading materials) to get a better handle on how the system works.
John Wards [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote on 11/26/2003 12:25:42 PM:
On Wednesday 26 November 2003 4:57 pm, David Wood wrote:
First
Is the problem that you're not sure how to get the network drive into the
sshd filesystem root? Or that when you try to that it fails?
If it were the latter, it would be reminiscent of a similar problem I had
trying to get apache to serve files from a network drive on Windows XP. We
found that
think of reasons why it wouldn't be.
Of course, there's not much to lose in performing the experiment, as long
as you take care and keep copies of everything. I'll be curious to hear if
following these instructions would work.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote on 11/26/2003
02:46:10 PM:
David
How do I set-up my self as a cvs admin on the server
side?
What do you mean by cvs admin? As a CVS administrator, you should
have full permissions on the repository or repositories. To use
cvs admin commands, either have no Unix group cvsadmin, or be
a member yourself.
--
Now building a CVS
I would like to run all commits of .h and .cc files through a pretty
printer to automatically assist in later merges and conformance to
style. I'm running a pserver. Are there any tips I should know of
how to do this before trying?
Thanks,
Dave.
___
I think the problem is the start and end points of your merge.
If I have a trunk, and I created a branch from that trunk, tagging it at
the point it was created, I would use the following to merge the branch
back into the trunk:
-j branch_CREATED -j branch
Often this can simply be abbreviated
Do you have a log of what happened during the import, and during your
attempt to check out?
How are you setting your CVSROOT, in an environment variable, or on the
command line?
Are you using the command line cvs, or wincvs (etc)?
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote on 11/11/2003
02:52:07 PM:
Dear
Derek Robert Price [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote on 11/06/2003 04:37:03 PM:
I see it now, and I thought that the conflicts you now say don't occur
were the ones you objected to in the first place.
Not at all. The conflicts that troubled me were happening because I was
double-merging (when bringing B
Derek Robert Price [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote on 11/06/2003 08:57:22 AM:
The way to avoid only processing this for whole branch merges is to
track individual commits as change sets. For example, store that the
sum of changesets for file1 1.2 - 1.2.4.7 have been merged into the
trunk. Then
/03, David Wood wrote:
I am not sure about something.
|If branch A and branch B in your example don't branch form the
same
|point on the trunk, a merge from point 2 to point 4 into the trunk
might
|still not do what you want. If branch B branched first, then 2-4
may
|back out
Derek Robert Price [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote on 11/05/2003 10:38:02 AM:
No. The GCA has not changed and CVS determines it correctly. You
simply no longer wish to merge from the GCA forward because some of
those changes were already merged to your destination (from another
branch and at your
Derek Robert Price [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote on 11/05/2003 12:43:14 PM:
Greatest Common Ancestor, or GCA, is a term that refers to the RCS
revision structure and always means the more recent revision two
revisions have in common, often a branch point, but in the case of a
branch of a branch and
child
If so, what happens to changes from before the first_child_merge_point?
-David
___
Info-cvs mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://mail.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/info-cvs
common chagnes by, and resolved conflicts
with) branchA... and the merge delta with the trunk must now use branchA
(at point 2) as a reference point in order to correctly reflect changes
against the trunk.
It is potentially confusing, but you have made it seem very simple. Thank
you!
-David
I am not sure about something.
|If branch A and branch B in your example don't branch form the same
|point on the trunk, a merge from point 2 to point 4 into the trunk
might
|still not do what you want. If branch B branched first, then 2-4 may
|back out changes made to the trunk between the
Title: checkin comments between tags
How do I get a list of all the checking comments between 2 labels (or since the last label).
-Dave
David E. Muller
Configuration Manager
Overture Services, Inc.
www.overture.com
Office: 760.476.6406
Mobile
assumptions about this mistaken? What circumstances allow
unresolved conflicts to be committed back to the repository?
-David
___
Info-cvs mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://mail.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/info-cvs
Thank you for the advice about commitinfo. I believe we will do exactly
that as a safeguard against future problems.
I totally respect that CVS should be content agnostic, although I did have
to rename my cvs java package to cvsutil because you can't have dirs
named cvs in the repository...
Hi,
I am able to login into Cvs as root as well as a user.
when I have logged in as a root i face some difficulties when trying to
commit a file after making changes to the file.It says root is not allowed
to commit files.
Right; root is not allowed to commit files. This is a design
is to
flag conflicts.
Then you'd do your build and any other tests you want to do.
The second use involves committing the merge and tagging the destination
branch.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote on 10/17/2003 02:51:30 PM:
David,
Read through your procedure, was quite interesting. Can you tell
I'll share what I've developed; it may be helpful to you and helpful to me
as well, if anyone has comments. Keep in mind that every situation may
require a different approach to CVS, and ours is _not_ the most common
usage pattern (the most common, I think, focuses on systems or application
By default, since 1.11.2, CVS refuses to delete and move branch tags
unless you tell it you know that you are disturbing a branch tag using
the `-B' option to tag or rtag. This is because disturbing branch tags
is usually a VERY VERY VERY etc. bad idea.
FWIW, if CVS had done that in 1.10.7
make them notoriously abusable (i.e. trivial, evil DOS attack), I assume I
must be doing something wrong.
Does anyone have any ideas?
Thanks,
-David
___
Info-cvs mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://mail.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/info-cvs
or anything since putting this in cvspserver?
Or typed
kill -SIGUSR2 xinetd
as root, to get xinetd to reread its configuration files?
If you've done either of these, then I don't know what could be
going on.
David H. Thornley| If you want my opinion, ask.
[EMAIL PROTECTED
On Thu, Oct 02, 2003 at 03:32:43PM MDT, Derek Robert Price wrote:
~From the NEWS file:
| Changes from 1.11.6 to 1.11.7:
. . .
| * The global '-l' option, which suppressed history logging, has been
removed
| from both client and server.
DOH!! I read that but didn't put two and two
Using pserver cvs-1.11.7 on solaris and client cvs-1.11.6 for aix,
hpux, or solaris, there is this problem which does not occur when
the client and server are the same version:
cvs release -d example
Protocol error: bad global option -l
cvs release: unable to release `example'
Thanks,
Dave.
Under cvs-1.11.7, the password is displayed on the client screen
as follows:
cvs login
(Password is not displayed while typing it, but is displayed after
pressing the ENTER key.)
I know pserver in general is not very secure, but is there any
way to have a patch or fix that might eliminate this
On Tue, Sep 30, 2003 at 03:10:08PM MDT, Larry Jones wrote:
David Everly writes:
(Password is not displayed while typing it, but is displayed after
pressing the ENTER key.)
On what platform?
-Larry Jones
All three have the same behavior of showing the password (which was
not present
Thanks Larry! This fixed it.
---BeginMessage---
David Everly writes:
All three have the same behavior of showing the password (which was
not present with 1.11.6). Output of uname -a:
AIX chanegw0 3 4 000110554C00
SunOS ndccsr02 5.8 Generic_108528-19 sun4u sparc SUNW,Ultra
On Tue, 2003-09-09 at 14:53, Greg A. Woods wrote:
[ On Tuesday, September 9, 2003 at 10:10:46 (-0400), Tom Copeland wrote: ]
Subject: Re: Countering the usual diatribe against binary files, was Re: cvs
diff, proposal for change
Hm. Do CVS branches not work right with binary
been a suitable solution for us.
If there is something undesirable going on inside CVS that is problematic,
I would be interested to know, but the empirical evidence would tend to
suggest otherwise.
david
PS. With respect to the original thread, since our binary files are
a) of a specific format
hi,
can pserver handle multiple requests(say 15 - 20) at the same
time?
Always did whan I was administering it.
--
Now building a CVS reference site at http://www.thornleyware.com
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
___
Info-cvs mailing list
[EMAIL
I have read access to the CVS repository but no write access.
Obviously this means I cannot commit any changes. But it ought to be
possible to get a checkout. However even if I turn off history
logging, cvs co won't work because it wants to make a lock file.
Is there some option similar
Hi All
I am trying to add a file on a following specific path on a branch named
bname
Though I am able to add a file on some other location path.
The error is -
cvs server: cannot add file on non-branch tag bname
I have checked the other files existing on this path are branched,
When you remove a file from the repository you actually mark it as dead,
and it stays in the repository.. Therefore the upcount in revision numbers.
Yes. CVS has no way to distinguish between two different files with the
same names and the same location in the directory structure.
I think
revision, or
because your are using your class on another project.
Do you have any suggestion about how to handle such situation. For example I
would like to replace the expanded comments by $Log$, becase I wanto to use
such source files on another project.
Thanks in advance,
David
registered patch, see perl -V for more detail)
Copyright 1987-2001, Larry Wall
Binary build 631 provided by ActiveState Tool Corp.
http://www.ActiveState.com
Built 17:16:22 Jan 2 2002
Thanks in advance for any help,
David
-Mensaje original-
De: Zieg, Mark [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED
this behavour?
Thanks in
advance,
David
David Leal Valmaña
Tel
91 210 33 00
ext. 71 923
Fax
91 597 05
62
e-mail
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Soluziona,
Grupo Unión
Fenosa
I
think for your purpose the keyword $Author$ (it is the login name of the user
who checked in the revision), the author name or creator, you can introduce by
hand on the creation of the file.
-Mensaje original-De:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]En nombre de
deleted by the generator.
Thanks in advance,
David
___
Info-cvs mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://mail.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/info-cvs
Hello,
I would like to be able to update my project without CVS merging anything.
It should replace unedited files with newer ones if they exist. But files
which have been edited (by me but not checked in) should be left alone. I
often need to hack up a bunch of files in order to run
Hi,
I'd like to start by thanking everyone for the advice I've received from
previous posts...so thank you all.
Alas, I once more seek your advice though. I intend to build a
clustered linux solution for our developers to use.
This would comprise of one central server upon which all the
Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 17 June 2003 13:10
To: David Bowring
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED];
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: checkout/commit onto/from shared disks.
what is your concern?
The only one that I can see would be large files with frequent changes
over
Our cvs pserver is on Solaris. A cvs client is on windows 2000.
We are using the latest version for both server and client.
Initially, we had a directory in all uppercase (SOMEDIRECTORY). We
did cvs remove -f of all the files in that directory followed by cvs
commit. Then we made a different
On Tue, Mar 25, 2003 at 10:21:55AM MST, Brian G. Peterson wrote:
If your Windows 2000 client is using FAT or FAT32 as the filesystem, then
no, because the internal representation of the filename is case insensitive,
and stored as all upper. If the filesystem is NTFS, it should work.
The
hi all,
i m newbie regarding CVS repository used as storage.
we are using CVS with a document management system. for now
5000 files are added to the repository in a months time. but in
couple
of months this will go upto 10 times the current load. will this
affect
access to
Hi,
I am fairly new to CVS, I've been using it in a basic form for a few
weeks now, that's about it.
Here is my problem:
I have software which is used for a number of different countries, they
are very similar maybe a few different features and functions for each
country. For example: I will
Hi,
I am fairly new to CVS, I've been using it in a basic form for a few
weeks now, that's about it.
Here is my problem:
I have software which is used for a number of different countries, they
are very similar maybe a few different features and functions for each
country. For example:
1 - 100 of 724 matches
Mail list logo