This is the kind of e-mail that attracts replies like (insert
something very attractive) In essence replies of the form "Oh
I wouldn't do it that way ...
I'm using a CVS (Solaris) repository with pclient (W2K) clients and
I keep finding things 'a bit flaky' I suspect:
1: I've set things up
On 04 Apr 2001 16:40:28 +0100, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
cvs --what-did-I-change wwwroot
And get a simple list of filenames that changed. I can then review if
I want to commit or abandon the changes. If I use:
Sounds like cvs update to me. Good options to CVS include -q to stop
cvs
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
The use of samba means I can check a file out of the repository on
Unix (local) to a (local) sandbox and access the files on Unix (local)
or W2K (samba) "I DON'T SHARE THE REPOSITORY" (actually I do ... but
nobody has access :-)
Not sharing the reppository is
: Re: shooting one's self in the foot.
On 04 Apr 2001 16:40:28 +0100, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
cvs --what-did-I-change wwwroot
And get a simple list of filenames that changed. I can then
review if
I want to commit or abandon the changes. If I use:
Sounds like cvs update to me
On Wed, Apr 04, 2001 at 12:16:21PM -0400, Larry Jones wrote:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
cvs -d release something
cvs checkout something --- Since other developers may have
changed (e.g deleted)
file/directory structure.
On Wed, Apr 04, 2001 at 11:27:28AM -0500, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Another method is cvs diff, something like:
cvs -q diff --brief
This gives you a little less extraneous data than does update.
But it:
1. doesn't list the junk files
2. doesn't list the files that other people have