> Hello,
> 
> We did our first release in SVN today. I used the copy command (shown below)
> to copy from /trunk to /tag.  Since not everything in /trunk was needed for 
> this
> release, I had to specify the directories which were needed.
> 
> Q1. Is this the normal/correct way of doing things? For the new release, just 
> the
> Docs, MKVIE and Screens dirs. were needed. The others were not.

Not sure what you mean by "not needed". However, you don't save anything by not 
just copying trunk to tag. Since svn uses "cheap copies" copying the full trunk 
folder doesn't take any more space than copying certain folders. Also, if you 
released your product from a certain svn revision, aren't ALL the files in that 
revision part of that release version?


> Our repo structure is as follows:
> 
> C>svn list https://X.X.com/svn/muxbopcs_svn/trunk/MUX
> 
> Control/
> Docs/
> MKVIE/
> Screens/
> sem_modbus/
> 
> Q2. Are we better off using release branches instead of copying to /tags?

To svn a copy is a copy. tags and branches are semantic names. In general a tag 
isn't ever committed to. But, this is only by convention. 


> Q3. Sometime down the line, if I had to re-create a view of "Release 1.6", do 
> I
> just base my workspace on what's in /tags/release-1.6? Or is there
> another/better way of re-creating a prior release?

I would copy the tag to a branch and work from the branch. 


> Q4. I was also expecting /tags to contain just the new files for Release
> 1.6.  However, that wouldn't be case, right? I have a feeling I am confusing
> myself over nothing.

Basically, all a copy is, is a pointer to the location that it copied. So, the 
state of the path you copy to includes everything from the source path. But, 
once again, it is a cheap copy so no files are really copied. 

BOb



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