Greg, as someone else pointed out. It's a rare project that does not have a
few binary files peppered in the source for various reasons. Although, in
your mind it would make the most sense to maintain those in a seperate
facility, in my opinion, it's stupid and inefficient. Just because you
Don't know why that would have anything to do with the faq, but you do need
lt; instead of in your code examples...
Daniel
- Original Message -
From: Jeroen van Wolffelaar [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, July 10, 2001 3:36 PM
Subject: [PHP-DOC] cvs: phpdoc
Um.. I'm terribly sorry about this post. I somehow typed The wrong address
in the To: field.
Daniel Beckham
- Original Message -
From: Daniel Beckham [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: info-cvs [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, July 10, 2001 4:12 PM
Subject: Re: [PHP-DOC] cvs: phpdoc /en/features
You know.. something I've noticed...
On one side there are the people who will never read the manual, but will
expect the mailing list, forums, et. al. to answer every little question
they have whether it's I can't get my webserver to run cgi scripts or how
do I import a new project or I don't
This could be a permissions issue on the cvs server itself. Check the group
permissions of the fintaltesting import and see who actually can read/write
to it.
Daniel
- Original Message -
From: Adam Reynolds [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, July 06, 2001 8:47 AM
- Original Message -
From: Philip J Mucci [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, July 03, 2001 5:35 PM
Subject: A repository on a Unix box being served to NT vai Samba...
Let me say, how much I hate WinCVS, Samba, and the permissions issue. I
now
Someone else might be able to answer the question as to whether it has
anything to do with cvs, but I would think it's a simple matter of network
performance. It would make sense that using compression will speed up the
checkout process, but what kind of speed problems are we talking about? Do
You may not have gotten an answer because your questions aren't very clear.
What do you mean, without deleting previous version in the directories?
What directory do you mean? Have you exported a module to a certain
directory in the past and are trying to export a newer copy of the module on
top
Of course, you can do what you wish.. simply modify the source code of cvs.
The GNU license specifically allows that. As a matter of fact, I believe
there is a answer in a FAQ or in some document in the distribution that
explains exactly how to turn on behavior that allows root to commit files.
Actually.. you should be using the system() call to get the error code
returned. See the perlfunc manpage for details. 'perldoc -f system'.
e.g.
chdir(/my/cvs/directory/);
if (system('/usr/local/bin/cvs', 'update') == 0) {
print it worked!\n;
}
Daniel
- Original Message -
From:
- Original Message -
From: Harald Kucharek [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, June 28, 2001 9:46 AM
Subject: Re: exporting without deleting, I need help !!!
PS: A few remarks:-)
1) English is not only spoken in the US.
2) In the US, not only english is
- Original Message -
From: Schwenk, Jeanie [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, June 28, 2001 11:03 AM
Subject: Re: cvsweb
If I had more than a one day of experience with web servers or cgi scripts
I
might have a clue. The sysadmin doesn't
It doesn't work as a daemon. You either have to use it as a pserver with
inetd (or whatever flavor of inetd) or you have to use rsh/ssh/etc to
connect and execute the cvs command remotely.
I think it's quite odd that it works like this, but I think the reasons are
that cvs was never meant to
- Original Message -
From: Schwenk, Jeanie [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: 'John Minnihan' [EMAIL PROTECTED]; 'Daniel Beckham'
[EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]; 'David Luchin'
[EMAIL PROTECTED]; 'Furmaniuk, Michael' [EMAIL PROTECTED];
'Maarten de Boer' [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, June 28
You really need to give us more details. I'm sure thousands of people have
sucessfully installed the cvsweb scripts on their web server, but without
knowing exactly what your problem is, no one can help you. What errors were
you receiving? Have you checked the cvsweb website for installation
to take the time to
read over the installation and readme files for you. (BOFH)
c. It's possible that cvsweb doesn't have proper instructions to help
someone get started. (seriously unlikely, being that it's pretty popular.)
Regards,
Daniel Beckham
- Original Message -
From: Schwenk
I'm assuming you are using a pserver here? To stop the first error, you
need to put -f in your cvs startup command. I have no idea about the second
error unless it's related to the first.
Daniel
- Original Message -
From: vignesh [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday,
The best way to do it IMHO is to create a
seperate cvs group and change the permissions of the CVSROOT directory and its's
files so that they are only rwx root.cvs. Then whenever someone needs to
have access, just add them to the cvs group. Or add whoever is the cvs
maintainer to that group
- Original Message -
From: Greg A. Woods [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: CVS-II Discussion Mailing List [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, June 20, 2001 11:53 PM
Subject: Re: repository surfing
ViewCVS must be better though, if for no other reason than it's not
written in Perl! ;-)
Now,
No one can possibly answer your question unless you actually give us some
details other than, it's broken. What errors were you receiving? What
are you building? Is it a build error or CVS error? What do you mean when
you say multiple src trees? Do you mean two modules or two directories in
ActiveState's version of TCL worked flawlessly for me the first time. If
Bill's solution does not work for you, consider installing ActiveTCL
instead.
www.activestate.com
P.S. Watch for flames from Larry and Greg.. this isn't a WinCVS mailing
list.. =0)
Daniel
- Original Message -
Personally, ViewCVS http://viewcvs.sourceforge.net/ is a better product
IMO, but very close to the original CVSweb. Of course both of them require
that you have an available server you can run apache on. (Or the equiv.)
At any rate, both do what you are looking for quite well.
And my 2 cents:
I swear, Greg and Larry must be having heart attacks daily due to the amount
of mailing list traffic that just pisses them off.
Since you didn't understand Larry's explanation, you really should go talk
to your local system administrator about this issue and not this list. It
appears that your
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