Chris Cheshire wrote:
I have a project in source control called mylib (for example) that
contains libraries used for my various programs. Currently I need to
make some changes to a development branch, as well as some changes to
the head. I have been deleting one, checking out the other,
In bash (and ksh), you can also do it on just one line:
export CVSROOT=:pserver:[EMAIL PROTECTED]:/usr/local/cvs-rep
Like Chris suggested, you should put this in the .bashrc file.
Thanks,
Don Zielke
American Electric Power
Direct (614) 583-6337
Audinet 8-220-6337
Email dzielke (at) aep.com
---
Jate Sujjavanich wrote:
I am having trouble cvs add-ing a very large source tree (500mb). I
take the following steps:
1) create a blank module by importing an empty directory
2) check out the empty module into my source root
3) do a find . /( -type d -name CVS -prune \) -o \( -type d \) |
Mark D. Baushke wrote:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Manuel Ledesma [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I was using CVS in local machine fine; running on top of Fedore Core 4.
my cvs version is 1.11.20 and after updating my system, I started
getting this error:
cvs [login aborted]:
On Thu, Apr 21, 2005 at 09:20:04AM -0400, Jim.Hyslop wrote:
Chris Cheshire wrote:
I have a project in source control called mylib (for example) that
contains libraries used for my various programs. Currently I need to
make some changes to a development branch, as well as some changes to
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Manuel Ledesma [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Mark D. Baushke wrote:
Manuel Ledesma [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I was using CVS in local machine fine; running on top of Fedore Core 4.
my cvs version is 1.11.20 and after updating my system, I started
On 4/21/05, Jim.Hyslop [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Chris Cheshire wrote:
I have a project in source control called mylib (for example) that
contains libraries used for my various programs. Currently I need to
make some changes to a development branch, as well as some changes to
the head. I
Doug Lee wrote:
I have often wished for an automatic way to check out all existing
branches of a given module with one command. Example: If I have
module mymod with HEAD and branches named rel1 and rel2:
mkdir cvs_co
cd cvs_co
cvs co -b mymod
cd mymod
ls # would list HEAD (or head),
Russ Sherk wrote:
On 4/21/05, Jim.Hyslop [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Sure, piece of cake. Check out [sic] the -d option to the
checkout command.
To be clear:
[etc].
I was _trying_ to encourage Chris to study the manual so he'd be more
familiar with the options. Oh, well :-)
--
Jim Hyslop
Hong, Yi writes:
It seems that the system was still trying to connect to the old IP
address 141.106.32.35.
Exactly. This is *NOT* a CVS problem -- it's a name resolution problem.
Either the client system is using a hosts file that needs to be updated
or you have a DNS problem you need to
Hello Doug,
* On Thu, Apr 21, 2005 at 09:59:30AM -0400 Doug Lee wrote:
I have often wished for an automatic way to check out all existing
branches of a given module with one command. Example: If I have
module mymod with HEAD and branches named rel1 and rel2:
SVN has such an option (if you
I contacted our IS people. They said no problem with DNS. I'll double
check the hosts file.
Thanks a lot,
Yi
-Original Message-
From: Larry Jones [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, April 21, 2005 10:46 AM
To: Hong, Yi
Cc: Jason Viers; [EMAIL PROTECTED]; info-cvs@gnu.org
Subject:
The simple cvs commit doesn't work for me. It errors out with a
Protocol error: too many arguments. Hence my current solution to break
it up with finds.
The directory tree is created, but I believe I have tracked the problem
to find. Because it finds deeper directories first, and CVS directors do
Jate Sujjavanich wrote:
The simple cvs commit doesn't work for me. It errors out with a
Protocol error: too many arguments. Hence my current
solution to break
it up with finds.
Ah, I see.
How many files are you dealing with? If you're having difficulties just
adding the modules, you are
What is the syntax for creating a module alias when there is a space in the
module name?
For example, if my repository has a root directory named spaced name
(without the quotes), how would I define an alias for it in CVSROOT/modules?
I'm able to checkout and commit files from modules with spaces
Ed J writes:
What is the syntax for creating a module alias when there is a space in the
module name?
There isn't one.
-Larry Jones
It's clear I'll never have a career in sports until I learn
to suppress my survival instinct. -- Calvin
___
Jim.Hyslop writes:
find's -depth argument may help; if I understand the man page correctly, it
switches find from depth-first to breadth-first processing.
No, -depth switches *to* depth-first processing. The default is
pre-order traversal, which means that a directory is processed before
its
Ed J wrote:
What is the syntax for creating a module alias when there is a space in the
module name?
Not Possible, but it can be worked around.
SNIP
Is this a TortoiseCVS issue?
No.
See:
http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/info-cvs/2001-06/msg00350.html
My solution, put a simlink in the
My theory was wrong. A log file of the find ... -type f | xargs cvs add
shows that it never schedules the missing file for addition. I'm not
sure why yet.
- Jate S.
-Original Message-
From: Larry Jones [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, April 21, 2005 2:30 PM
To: Jim.Hyslop
Cc:
Jate Sujjavanich wrote:
My theory was wrong. A log file of the find ... -type f | xargs cvs add
shows that it never schedules the missing file for addition. I'm not
sure why yet.
- Jate S.
SNIP
how about trying
`find ... -type f | xargs -l cvs add`
From the size of the tree you
Todd Denniston wrote:
[1] IMNSHO, spaces in file and directory names are one of the
many evils in
computers, remove them when possible and re-educate the
creators (as much as
you are allowed :).
Well, at the risk of starting up a jihad, I'd disagree with that statement.
Computers are no
Jate Sujjavanich writes:
My theory was wrong. A log file of the find ... -type f | xargs cvs add
shows that it never schedules the missing file for addition. I'm not
sure why yet.
Do any of your files have spaces in the names? If so, find/xargs won't
process them correctly (if you have the
Todd Denniston writes:
My solution, put a simlink in the repo to the directory of interest, and in
the modules file use the link.
Note that this only works if you're not using LockDir= in your
CVSROOT/config file. Otherwise, you defeat CVS's locking and put your
repository at risk of
I'm trying to set the environment variable
CVSROOT=/usr/local/cvs-rep. I use the export command like this in
the terminal:
export CVSROOT=/usr/local/cvs-rep.
When I exit the terminal, (which runs the default bash) the variable
cvsroot goes away. I have looked in a bunch of places which say
Jim.Hyslop wrote:
Tools should conform to the way people use them. Not the other way around.
Automobiles never should have forced people to adapt to using a wheel
when everyone already knew how to use reins.
--
Stephen Carville [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Unix and Network Admin
Nationwide Totalflood
6033
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 automatically at
Stephen Carville wrote:
Jim.Hyslop wrote:
Tools should conform to the way people use them. Not the
other way around.
Automobiles never should have forced people to adapt to using a wheel
when everyone already knew how to use reins.
Jim.Hyslop wrote:
Stephen Carville wrote:
Jim.Hyslop wrote:
Tools should conform to the way people use them. Not the
other way around.
Automobiles never should have forced people to adapt to using a wheel
when everyone already knew how to use reins.
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
On 4/21/05, Stephen Carville [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Jim.Hyslop wrote:
Stephen Carville wrote:
Jim.Hyslop wrote:
Tools should conform to the way people use them. Not the
other way around.
Automobiles never should have forced people to adapt to using a wheel
when everyone already
Mark D. Baushke wrote:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Manuel Ledesma [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Mark D. Baushke wrote:
Manuel Ledesma [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I was using CVS in local machine fine; running on top of Fedore Core 4.
my cvs version is 1.11.20 and after
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Manuel Ledesma [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Mark D. Baushke wrote:
Manuel Ledesma [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Mark D. Baushke wrote:
Manuel Ledesma [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I was using CVS in local machine fine; running on top of Fedore Core 4.
my
On Thursday 21 April 2005 17:27, Manuel Ledesma wrote:
I was using CVS in local machine fine; running on top of
Fedore Core 4. my cvs version is 1.11.20 and after updating
my system, I started getting this error:
Didn't CVS just move to the list of apps now under SELinux control?
Could
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Mike Klinke [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
On Thursday 21 April 2005 17:27, Manuel Ledesma wrote:
I was using CVS in local machine fine; running on top of
Fedore Core 4. my cvs version is 1.11.20 and after updating
my system, I started getting
Ahh, thank you very much :) Now I know why it doesn't work! Thank you!
___
Info-cvs mailing list
Info-cvs@gnu.org
http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/info-cvs
Mark D. Baushke wrote:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Mike Klinke [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
On Thursday 21 April 2005 17:27, Manuel Ledesma wrote:
I was using CVS in local machine fine; running on top of
Fedore Core 4. my cvs version is 1.11.20 and after updating
my system,
Ins't
# cvs history -c -a
what you need? The -c shows only the commits instead of -e that shows
all.
-a means every user. Use -u user to limit the output.
http://computing.ee.ethz.ch/sepp/cvs-1.10-to/cvsbook/main_80.html
Thorsten
-Original Message-
From: Todd Denniston [mailto:[EMAIL
Hello Jim,
* On Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 04:33:48PM -0400 Jim.Hyslop wrote:
I see. That's a tricky one to overcome. Sometimes, you just gotta bend
the rules a little: how important is it, really, for everything to be
lower-case? Of course, this is all perfect hind-sight, and doesn't
help you in
Hello Frederic,
* On Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 04:31:39PM -0400 Frederic Brehm wrote:
How about renaming the *repository* directory ABC to abc? Try it (in a
copy of the repository) and see if it breaks anything that you care
about.
Thank you for this suggestion. I already tried it, but without
Hello,
* On Wed, Apr 20, 2005 at 10:15:42AM +0200 I wrote:
Actually, though, I should think a 'cvs update -P ABC' followed by a
'cvs update -ld abc' should do the trick for you.
Thanks, Jim! This is the solution to my problem.
Doing some more tests, this is not a solution to the
Hi,
it's possible to block/disable single
cvs commands for several users ?
We use pserver-access and it would be
nice (better :-)) that some users
cannot tagging or create branches.
Thanks and regards,
Maik Walter
___
Info-cvs mailing list
Maik Walter wrote:
it's possible to block/disable single cvs commands for
several users ?
We use pserver-access and it would be nice (better :-)) that
some users
cannot tagging or create branches.
First of all, do you really need to block tagging? Creating tags and
branches is pretty
Thanks Jim,
I'll try it first via taginfo.
Regards,
Maik Walter
---
InterComponentWare AG
Phone: +49-6227-385-106
Fax: +49-6227-385-199
Jim.Hyslop
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent by: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
20.04.2005 17:58
Thanks, Jim!
I tried to check out with the command cvs -d 141.106.32.35 co
healthlink but got the following message:
Cvs checkout: CVSROOT 141.106.32.35 must be an absolute pathname
Csv [checkout aborted]: Bad CVSROOT.
Any idea about this? Could you please let me know how to check out a
fresh
Either
1. set your CVSROOT environment variable in your startup scirpts
appropriately. Ex, for c-shell's .cshrc file
setenv CVSROOT :access type:141.106.32.35:/your_cvs_path
access type here is either pserver, rsh, ssh, etc.
2. Or from directly from command line
cvs co -d
I was able to check out with the new IP address by using the command:
cvs -d :pserver:[EMAIL PROTECTED]:/usr/local/cvs-rep co healthlink
But I still got the same error message after I tried to update the file:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] images]# cvs update prevpic.gif
cvs [update aborted]: connect to
I am having trouble cvs add-ing a very large source tree (500mb). I
take the following steps:
1) create a blank module by importing an empty directory
2) check out the empty module into my source root
3) do a find . /( -type d -name CVS -prune \) -o \( -type d \) |
xargs cvs add
4) do a find .
I have a project in source control called mylib (for example) that
contains libraries used for my various programs. Currently I need to
make some changes to a development branch, as well as some changes to
the head. I have been deleting one, checking out the other, deleting it,
checking out
I was using CVS in local machine fine; running on top of Fedore Core 4.
my cvs version is 1.11.20 and after updating my system, I started
getting this error:
cvs [login aborted]: unrecognized auth response from localhost: cvs
pserver: cannot open /var/cvs/CVSROOT/config: Permission denied
I
Hello,
I have monitored this list on and off for about 6 years and have never
written to it.
I am in, for the first time, in the spot where I must manage the code
repository rather than just use CVS as an end user.
What I have is not a CVS specific question per se, but CVS is the
software I
I think I asked this before, but I can't find it: Is there a way to
update just the CVS/Entries files so they reflect the current directory
structure that's checked in? Due to the way I've been partially adding
pieces of our tree over time, I seem to have ended up with some top
level Entries
Hi,
I need to install CVS for our software development. At the
same time, a team sitting across globe would also be using the same CVS server
for version control
Under the circumstances, will it be good to install CVS on Windows
or UNIX? What are the pros and cons ofn installing CVS on
Hi,
Just wondering if anyone has had any problems with cvs import on solaris
10.
The version of cvs we are using is 1.11.19.
The previous setup that worked was solaris 8 with cvs 1.10.8.
Cheers,
Ryan Lea
Web Developer
n Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
n Tel: 0207 318 9080
n Fax: 0207 318 9099
hi all,
Could anyone tell me how to get user commit comments in the
cvs history -e -a
output ?
cheers
dave
___
Info-cvs mailing list
Info-cvs@gnu.org
http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/info-cvs
Daniel,
Some things you might find useful in your quest:
Branching Patterns for Parallel Software Development
[http://www.cmcrossroads.com/bradapp/acme/branching/]
Software Release Methodology [ISBN 0136365647]
The latter source goes over some of the basic of source control management
such as:
dave frost writes:
Could anyone tell me how to get user commit comments in the
cvs history -e -a
output ?
Only by rewriting CVS.
-Larry Jones
I've got an idea for a sit-com called Father Knows Zilch. -- Calvin
___
Info-cvs mailing list
mgrd wrote:
Jim.Hyslop wrote:
[..]
Who's minding the store? How do we get in touch with them?
More to the
point, how do we get rid of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
from this list? I'm
getting really annoyed with all the bounce messages I get
from the server
saying No such user in German.
Steve Sapovits wrote:
I think I asked this before, but I can't find it: Is there a way to
update just the CVS/Entries files so they reflect the current
directory
structure that's checked in?
Sure. Just issue a 'cvs update -d' command. That will retrieve any new files
and directories.
As a
Ritesh_Srivastava wrote:
I need to install CVS for our software development. At the
same time, a team sitting across globe would also be using
the same CVS server for version control
Under the circumstances, will it be good to install CVS on
Windows or UNIX? What are the pros and cons
Jim.Hyslop wrote:
Sure. Just issue a 'cvs update -d' command. That will retrieve any new files
and directories.
I was wondering if there was a way to do that without retrieving any
files.
As a side note, though: don't be poking around the Entries file. There is
rarely, if ever, any need to examine
Larry Jones wrote:
dave frost writes:
Could anyone tell me how to get user commit comments in the
cvs history -e -a
output ?
Only by rewriting CVS.
-Larry Jones
Or by re-writing your question to ask how to get the information you need,
not how to make a command do something
Steve Sapovits wrote:
I agree. We got ourselves into a weird state where I'd like
to be able
to have Entries reflect what can be updated so I can start at the root
and selectively update pieces. In its current state it
thinks there are
only two subdirectories. But I think doing 'cvs -n
Hi Ryan -
Just wondering if anyone has had any problems with cvs import on
solaris 10.
The version of cvs we are using is 1.11.19.
As part of our CVS Replicator testing, we run long stress tests with
imports and other command on various Solaris versions including Solaris
10. Haven't noticed
Cvs is sgementation faulting when an import is run. I have tried this
both remotely and locally on the machine with the cvs server.
The filesystem has correct read/write permissions for CVSROOT,
checkouts, updates and everything else in cvs works fine - only the
imports seem to be failing.
Ryan Lea writes:
Cvs is sgementation faulting when an import is run. I have tried this
both remotely and locally on the machine with the cvs server.
Can you use a debugger to get a traceback?
-Larry Jones
I'm getting disillusioned with these New Years. -- Calvin
* On Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 10:53:28AM -0400 Jim.Hyslop wrote:
As a side note, though: don't be poking around the Entries file. There
is rarely, if ever, any need to examine the contents of the file.
You mean, do not poke around with them unless you are working on a
Windows system, the server
Spiro Trikaliotis wrote:
* On Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 10:53:28AM -0400 Jim.Hyslop wrote:
As a side note, though: don't be poking around the Entries
file. There
is rarely, if ever, any need to examine the contents of the file.
You mean, do not poke around with them unless you are working
Hi,
I got the following error message after I tried cvs
update command:
cvs [update aborted]: connect to cvs-rep(141.106.32.35):2401
failed: Connection timed out
We just readdressed IP of our test server. We are using CVS
to transfer modified files from test server to production
I dual boot Windows and Linux. In linux, I have a CVS repository set
up. Is there a way to access (commit, checkout, update, add, etc.) this
repository from Windows (using cvs in cygwin). If there was some way to
have windows map the ext3 drive so that it could be accessed from a
drive letter,
Hello Jim,
* On Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 03:31:33PM -0400 Jim.Hyslop wrote:
If you get into that situation, then the solution is to (a) go rap
somebody's knuckles, then (b) fix the collision in the repository.
Well, renaming ABC/ to abc/ was a deliberate decision as all directories
should be
Hong, Yi wrote:
I got the following error message after I tried cvs update command:
cvs [update aborted]: connect to cvs-rep(141.106.32.35):2401
failed: Connection timed out
We just readdressed IP of our test server. We are using CVS
to transfer modified files from test server to
How about renaming the *repository* directory ABC to abc? Try it (in a copy of
the repository) and see if it breaks anything that you care about.
Fred
Spiro Trikaliotis wrote:
Hello Jim,
* On Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 03:31:33PM -0400 Jim.Hyslop wrote:
If you get into that situation, then the
Spiro Trikaliotis wrote:
Well, renaming ABC/ to abc/ was a deliberate decision as all
directories
should be lowercase on our side. We did not know that CVS has such a
problem with this.
I see. That's a tricky one to overcome. Sometimes, you just gotta bend the
rules a little: how important is
I wrote:
Actually, though, I should think a 'cvs update -P ABC'
followed by a 'cvs
update -ld abc' should do the trick for you.
Sorry, the -l option wouldn't be necessary: 'cvs update -d abc'
--
Jim Hyslop
Senior Software Designer
Leitch Technology International Inc. (
Mr. Question wrote:
I dual boot Windows and Linux. In linux, I have a CVS repository set
up. Is there a way to access (commit, checkout, update, add,
etc.) this
repository from Windows (using cvs in cygwin). If there was
some way to
have windows map the ext3 drive so that it could be
Jim.Hyslop wrote:
I'm not entirely clear on what exactly you're trying to achieve. Could you
rephrase what you're trying to do, but leave out any references to the
CVS/Entries file?
I'm not sure. Maybe someone can help explain to me how I ended up
where I am and we can go from there.
We had a
Hello,
* On Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 12:56:50PM -0700 Mr. Question wrote:
If there was some way to have windows map the ext3 drive so that it
could be accessed from a drive letter, all would be well.
While not CVS related, EXT2IFS (http://www.fs-driver.org/) might help
you. It can mount ext3 (as
Hello,
* On Mon, Apr 18, 2005 at 10:26:58AM +0530 Balaji D wrote:
When I import few object files and exeuctables, through cvs import
command through command line, I dont get these files reflected in the
cvs area.
Can some one help me to find out the option for importing those files.
Most
On 4/18/05, Spiro Trikaliotis [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello,
* On Mon, Apr 18, 2005 at 10:26:58AM +0530 Balaji D wrote:
When I import few object files and exeuctables, through cvs import
command through command line, I dont get these files reflected in the
cvs area.
Can some one
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I use cvsnt and I have the following problem:
You will get better, more complete answers if you contact a list that
focuses on CVSNT. This list focuses on CVS available from www.cvshome.org
Try http://www.cvsnt.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/cvsnt
or
Hi, I am trying to commit a file to the CVS. CVS returns the following
mesg:
cvs commit -m testing test.pas
cvs [commit aborted]: error writing to lock file
//srv1/stor3/cvsroot/test/main/,test.pas,
This file used to be fine until one day CVS crashed. After the crash, I
am unable to commit any
Hi Anthony,
Take a look in the actual repository (//srv1/stor3/cvsroot/test/main/)
and look for cvs.lock and cvs.hostname.pid.lock. If the dates on
this file are old (about the same date as the cvs crash), you can just
remove the locks manually.
Also, make sure you have write permissions in
Anthony writes:
cvs commit -m testing test.pas
cvs [commit aborted]: error writing to lock file
//srv1/stor3/cvsroot/test/main/,test.pas,
That file (//srv1/stor3/cvsroot/test/main/,test.pas,) is probably a
remnant of the crash -- simply removing it should solve the problem.
-Larry Jones
Folks,
I'm COMPLETELY new to CVS, and am assisting the CVS
administrator configure the tool on a Linux server. I've got a cursory
understanding of the CVSROOT directory structure; my question is one of
permissions. I realize that this has probably been addressed in the past, but
reading
I found this e-mail (below) from Derek a while back. Can I use this
method
to revert a branch to a certain tag date? IOW,
cvs up -r branchA -j tag_yesterday_branchA -j branchA
cvs commit
Will this revert latest branchA's code to tag_yesterday_branchA's code?
-chris
No, you will only
Folks,
I'm COMPLETELY new to CVS, and am assisting the CVS
administrator configure the tool on a Linux server. I've got a cursory
understanding of the CVSROOT directory structure; my question is one of
permissions. I realize that this has probably been addressed in the past,
but reading
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Stable CVS 1.11.20 has been released. Stable releases contain only
bug fixes from previous versions of CVS. This version fixes many
minor security issues in the CVS server executable including a
potentially serious buffer overflow vulnerability with
Or maybe this...
cd to branchA sandbox
cvs up -j branchA -j tag_yesterday_branchA
cvs commit
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
] On Behalf Of Fouts Christopher (IFNA MP DC)
Sent: Monday, April 18, 2005 2:30 PM
To: info-cvs@gnu.org
Michaelis, Daniel writes:
This is a multi-part message in MIME format.Please do not send MIME and/or
HTML encrypted messages to the list.
Plain text only, PLEASE!
SNIP
there doesn't seem to be anything that prevents User1
from going into the ProjectDir1/bin directory and
removing file2
Todd,
Thanks for the answers.
Regarding your comments, my intent is less to provide a secure environment
(we don't expose cvs outside the internal network), and I'm not terribly
worried about malicious destruction of data; I'm much more concerned with
the occasional fat-fingered mistake that
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Or maybe this...
cd to branchA sandbox
cvs up -j branchA -j tag_yesterday_branchA
cvs commit
I found this e-mail (below) from Derek a while back. Can I use
this method to revert a branch to a certain tag date? IOW,
cvs up -r branchA -j
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Derek Price wrote:
We recommend this upgrade for all CVS servers!
Cut and paste error. Should have read:
We recommend this upgrade for all CVS clients and servers already
running the feature release and for those who simply like to stay
on
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Feature CVS 1.12.12 has been released. Feature releases contain new
features as well as all the bug fixes from the stable releases. This
version fixes many minor security issues in the CVS server executable
including a potentially serious buffer
I have tried on many occasions to get hold of the list owners to complain
about a particular user. I have not received any responses from
[EMAIL PROTECTED], or from [EMAIL PROTECTED]' (the 'mailto'
link at lists.gnu.org). I have received neither an acknowledgement of my
request, nor a bounce
Jim.Hyslop wrote:
[..]
Who's minding the store? How do we get in touch with them? More to the
point, how do we get rid of [EMAIL PROTECTED] from this list? I'm
getting really annoyed with all the bounce messages I get from the server
saying No such user in German.
If nothing helps, can't you just
Philliph,
You are using CVSNT in local mode (F:\cvs), for another computer to
use the repository you need to use it in client server mode.
Firstly open the CVS for NT control panel and check that the CVSNT and
Lock services are running and in the compatibility settings set all
the switches on
Michaelis, Daniel wrote:
Todd,
Thanks for the answers.
Regarding your comments, my intent is less to provide a secure environment
(we don't expose cvs outside the internal network), and I'm not terribly
worried about malicious destruction of data; I'm much more concerned with
the
All,
We have two Branches, Head and Branch A.
Branch A is created in order to help defect fixes.
We use to merge from Branch A to Head on a weekly basis.
After we merge we used to create a version tag in Branch A, which will
be used as the Starting point for the next merge.
Now here comes the
Suhas -
You may want to look at -
http://www.jcvs.org
--
Rahul Bhargava,
CTO, WANdisco
http://www.wandisco.com/cvs
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Info-cvs@gnu.org
http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/info-cvs
Hi!
I use cvsnt and I have the following problem:
I have an path like C:\mod\dir\test.txt where mod is an cvs-module.
When I delete the directory dir and try to recreate it with an
update in the way like this:
C:\modcvs update -d dir
everything is okay, the directory dir and the file test.txt is
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