NOTE: this is mostly obsolete these days (circa early 21st century CE) see git notes or gitlab notes for more recent attempts at managing branching, versioning and distributed editing.
using CVS
cvs is a Version Control system for managing branching messes. just dont try renaming anything…
required reading, the “cvs book” http://cvsbook.red-bean.com/cvsbook.html
notes
- checkout a source tree cvs -d:ext:user@host:/path/to/cvs/public co tx-code
- add a file/director cvs -d:ext:user@host:/path/to/cvs/public add file
- commit changes cvs -d:ext:user@host:/path/to/cvs/public commit file
tools with a GUI
CVL
…is an OsX app http://www.sente.ch/software/cvl/
Using MacCVS
…its relatively painless for MacOS9 usage http://sourceforge.net/projects/maccvspro/
- Checkout a source tree (should add notes for this)
- modify stuff, add things, make everything better
- use the “Find lurkers” command in the Edit menu to list all files that have been (changed or) added
- select those that need to be added
- select Action:Add for these. make a comment for them
- select Action:Commit to put them into the CVS
- Note: I havent updated any files with this, perhaps this needs only be committed somehow too…must check sometime
- June2006: Not getting it working (MacCVSPro?) with error -116 each attempt
Using MacCVSClient
http://www.heilancoo.net/MacCVSClient/ seems to work a touch more (Tim June 2006).
YAY! If it has write access to the directory it is trying to reach, you can set up a repository and access it.
Steps to use this:
Create the CVS repository in general:
- create a repository on the server with cvs -d /home/tim/cvs/public init
- nothing else needs to be done on the repository!
Create a profile on your working machine
- create a login profile for that machine under MacCVSClient? X:Preferences
Import files from the local machine into the repository:
- import files from somewhere on your machine to it with the client, Repository:Import
- give the module a name
- select a local folder with the files to upload
- create a vendor tag and branch tag
- then these files are a module and can be checked out
Check out the module on any machine you like:
- check out with Repository:checkout
- the folder with the name of the module will be created on the desktop
- then open a sandbox , this is the folder created by checking out the module
- changes will be indicated, sandbox:commit will put these changes into the repository
- then all other changes will be dealt with (hopeully) properly
- a new file in the sandbox/checked out folder will be grey in the sandbox
- this can be selected and added to the repository with Sandbox:Add
- it still needs to be commit-ted to the repository
- there may be a problem that to check out a module, the user needs write access in the repository folder
– TimBo - 21 Jun 2006