Arnold,
Thank you for your comments, but I have given up on wincvs and cvsnt
since I want to run a cvs front end with as much similarity
(identical,
if possible) under both linux and Winxx, which TkCvs seems to provide.
CVSNT is available for Linux and Windows - it works identically on
Arthur Barrett wrote:
I have already corresponded on the wincvs/gcvs issues with
some of those
newsgroups but have given up on those two since I did not find them
similar enough, even though they seem to share a web site.
I think they were originally written by different teams.
I have been
I've just downloaded the win32 version of the cvs client to be used with
tkcvs (under WinME) and had to do a lot of digging to resolve some basic
installation problems.
The problems I ran into was the strict requirement to have the
environment variables HOMEDIR and HOMEPATH defined and even so
From: Arnold Wiegert
I've just downloaded the win32 version of the cvs client to be used with
tkcvs (under WinME) and had to do a lot of digging to resolve some basic
installation problems.
I've never used Windows ME and won't speculate about it's behavior.
The problems I ran into was
]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
] On Behalf Of Arnold Wiegert
Sent: Tuesday, 15 February 2005 6:24 AM
To: info-cvs@gnu.org
Subject: win32 questions
I've just downloaded the win32 version of the cvs client to
be used with
tkcvs (under WinME) and had to do a lot of digging to resolve
some basic
Arthur Barrett wrote:
Arnold,
I'm not familiar with tkcvs but WinCVS and TortoiseCVS both include
CVSNT for Windows.
CVSNT is free (open source GPL just like CVS) and can be downloaded
from:
http://www.cvsnt.com/
Thank you for your comments, but I have given up on wincvs and cvsnt
since I want