On Mon, Mar 26, 2012 at 9:16 PM, Stuart Dallas <stu...@3ft9.com> wrote:
> Rene: please read a book / website / something on PHP security. Some > things are important whether you believe they are or not. > > Yea, I will do that within a week or so.. I can also confirm that I'm not using any source of source control at the moment. I have used visual source control of Microsoft in the past, but that was on a windows-only environment. I now have several domains on a shared unix hoster that I have to update with files from a windows 7 system. Basically, I have on the windows dev server X:\data1\www\htdocs\code (the copy I work on), which have to be updated to X:\data1\www\htdocs\sites\[domainname]\code, preferably as quickly as possible, and then, once release worthy, to the accounts on the shared unix hoster. On the shared unix hoster (godaddy.com 4G hosting), I have 1 FTP account which points to a "primary domain" (abc.com), which has a filesystem underneath it also with the /sites/[domainname], and the non-primary domains there point to these /sites/[domainname]/ for their $_SERVER['DOCUMENT_ROOT']. I do not have seperate FTP accounts for each domain on the unix hoster. If someone could explain to me which (free) source control system to use and perhaps how, or even point me in the direction of a good tutorial on that subject, you'd make me very happy. I also think it's time I got at least a bit more professional. Yet, I'm looking for the simplest and most efficient solution. I've done a search for "rsync windows", and I get some rsync apps allright, but it's not clear to me yet how I would use these windows rsync clones to get done what I want.