Pragmatic Version Control Using Subversion 235
Pragmatic Version Control Using Subversion | |
author | Mike Mason |
pages | 224 |
publisher | The Pragmatic Programmers |
rating | 8 |
reviewer | Dean Wilson |
ISBN | 0974514063 |
summary | An excellent guide to version control with Subversion for developers and sysadmins |
Chapters on repository layouts, integrating third party code (into your source tree and products) and conflict resolution all help raise this book from just being a single application tutorial into a best practices guide that you'll come back to long after you've gained confidence with Subversion itself.
Pragmatic Version Control Using Subversion is very similar to Pragmatic Version Control Using CVS, but this is in no way a criticism! The previous book was the best introduction to CVS that I've read, and this related volume manages to retain the winning formula while adding useful sections, such as CVS hints, to help people migrating across.
While the book has a broad appeal, the ideal audience are those developers who know they should be doing version control but have heard it's too complex, have been burnt by previous mistakes, or just don't know where to start. Seasoned developers will also find this book useful, but in different ways. For instance, using it as an easy to scan and follow reference, handing it down to less experienced colleagues, or even just for quickly bringing themselves up to speed when moving from CVS to Subversion.
Considering the book's slim size (or quick download, if you purchase the PDF version) it packs in surprisingly wide coverage of the important topics. The first two chapters provide an overview and sell the benefits of using a version control system. They cover what should and shouldn't be under version control, and clearly explain the terminology required to understand both the technology in general and the book's later chapters.
Chapters 3, 4, and 5 get you working from your own Subversion repository and introduce the essential commands. They show how to create, add and import your projects in a clear, easy-to-understand way. Once you have some files to work with, they take you through a well-paced tour of the simple operations; checking out, committing and accessing the files in different ways.
Following these, Chapter 6, "Common Subversion Commands," shows some of the more complex but essential tasks you'll want to perform in Subversion; setting properties, looking at changes and their associated history and how to handle merge conflicts. These are all presented in short sections that provide enough information to be useful on a day-to- day basis while not leaving beginners bogged down in the minutiae.
Jumping ahead slightly, we leave the part of the book that everybody using Subversion should read and move onto the more powerful, and complex, functionality such as "Using Tags and Branches" (Chapter 8) and the more abstract topics of "Organising Your Repository" (Chapter 7) and dealing with "Third Party Code" (Chapter 10).
Chapter 8 stands alone in the second half of the book due to its coverage of a very technical subject; chapters 7, 9 and 10 are more abstract. Tagging and branching are one of the more notorious areas of version control, but this book -- much like the CVS book before it -- manages to explain not only when and how to use both tags and branches, but also provides enough guidance to allow the reader to 'smell' when something's wrong and adding them would make it worse.
Chapters 7, 9 and 10 logically combine to cover the issues surrounding setting up your own project, including the project's structure, the integration of third party code, external projects, and binary libraries such as Nunit or Java mock libraries. Considering the amount of maintenance coding (as opposed to new projects) that happens in the world, these chapters might not be immediately useful to a fair chunk of the readership. I don't think they should be removed, though -- better to leave them in and show best practices and experience-driven common sense than remove them and let people make the same mistakes over and over again.
It's worth noting that the appendices are a lot more useful than the filler material typically found lurking at the back of a book -- they cover a couple of topics that don't fit elsewhere and help round out both the book's coverage and appeal.
Appendix A is more relevant to system administrators than developers. It shows how to install Subversion on the server. It then gives a brief introduction to configuring, serving (using either the native svnserve, svn over SSH or via Apache) and adding basic security to your repositories. It finishes off with a short, but useful, digression into backing up your hard work.
This appendix provides a valuable, quick guide to getting a Subversion install in place. It's a good starting point for anyone who needs to actually run and maintain a Subversion server.
The remaining appendices vary in usefulness. Appendix B is a concise introduction to migrating a CVS repository to Subversion; this is something you either need desperately or won't care about. Most of Appendix C shows how to perform common tasks using the TortoiseSVN extension for Windows Explorer; this won't appeal to the Unix/Linux crowd but might help sway Windows developers away from the hell that is Visual Source Safe.
In short, whether you're new to version control in general or just Subversion itself, this book is highly recommended. Clear, concise and crammed full of useful, important and dare I say, pragmatic, advice and information. An excellent book in its own right and a worthy addition to the Starter Kit Series.
Dean Wilson is a System Administrator at Outcome Technologies. His personal site is unixdaemon.net. You can purchase Pragmatic Version Control Using Subversion from bn.com. Slashdot welcomes readers' book reviews -- to see your own review here, read the book review guidelines, then visit the submission page
Another subversion book (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Another subversion book (Score:4, Informative)
Lots of folks are switching over... (Score:5, Informative)
Is there a StatCVS [sf.net]-type reporting tool for Subversion? I suppose StatCVS could be modified to support Subversion... there's been some discussion of it on their mailing list...
Re:Lots of folks are switching over... (Score:2)
Re:Lots of folks are switching over... (Score:3, Informative)
I need to practice reading... (Score:3, Funny)
Pragmatic Version Control Using Subversion
as
Pragmatic Version Control Using subterfuge ?
Maybe I've just been doing too much sneaky stuff today...
Is it better than the Subversion Book? (Score:5, Informative)
from the review it does seem to have a couple of chapters about general project organization that aren't in TSB. Otherwise it the list of topics seems to be right out of the oreilly book.
Their reputation (Score:4, Funny)
Good for them, how do you edit a book author though? Remove a finger or two if they don't send you their rough draft?
Re:Their reputation (Score:3, Funny)
Anyone considering switching to SVN... (Score:5, Informative)
Executive summary:
By the way, the GCC team is starting to make experiments with svn, and it looks like they might switch in 2 or 3 months.
Re:Anyone considering switching to SVN... (Score:3, Insightful)
That's something of a disappointment -- I'd hoped to see them on Arch. Given the magnitude of their project and the number of 3rd parties interested in maintaining their own branches, I'd think that distributed revision control support would be as valuable a feature for them as it's proved to be for Linus.
Re:Anyone considering switching to SVN... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Anyone considering switching to SVN... (Score:2, Interesting)
another interesting one (Score:3, Interesting)
http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham
(much) smaller project than mono, obviously; interesting all the same.
why is this better than cvs? (Score:3, Interesting)
And this is a real question asked for the puposes of gaining information, just just a snide "here is a nickel go buy a real computer" kind of remark.
Re:why is this better than cvs? (Score:5, Informative)
Subversion's Features
When discussing the features that Subversion brings to the version
control table, it is often helpful to speak of them in terms of how they
improve upon CVS's design. If you're not familiar with CVS, you may not
understand all of these features. And if you're not familiar with
version control at all, your eyes may glaze over unless you first read
Chapter 2, Basic Concepts, in which we provide a gentle introduction to
version control in general.
Subversion provides:
Directory versioning
~ CVS only tracks the history of individual files, but Subversion
implements a virtual versioned filesystem that tracks changes to whole
directory trees over time. Files and directories are versioned.
True version history
~ Since CVS is limited to file versioning, operations such as copies
and renameswhich might happen to files, but which are really changes to
the contents of some containing directoryaren't supported in CVS.
Additionally, in CVS you cannot replace a versioned file with some new
thing of the same name without the new item inheriting the history of
the oldperhaps completely unrelated file. With Subversion, you can
add, delete, copy, and rename both files and directories. And every
newly added file begins with a fresh, clean history all its own.
Atomic commits
~ A collection of modifications either goes into the repository
completely, or not at all. This allows developers to construct and
commit changes as logical chunks, and prevents problems that can occur
when only a portion of a set of changes is successfully sent to the
repository.
Versioned metadata
~ Each file and directory has a set of propertieskeys and their
values associated with it. You can create and store any arbitrary
key/value pairs you wish. Properties are versioned over time, just like
file contents.
Choice of network layers
~ Subversion has an abstracted notion of repository access, making it
easy for people to implement new network mechanisms. Subversion can plug
into the Apache HTTP Server as an extension module. This gives
Subversion a big advantage in stability and interoperability, and
instant access to existing features provided by that
serverauthentication, authorization, wire compression, and so on. A
more lightweight, standalone Subversion server process is also
available. This server speaks a custom protocol which can be easily
tunneled over SSH.
Consistent data handling
~ Subversion expresses file differences using a binary differencing
algorithm, which works identically on both text (human-readable) and
binary (human-unreadable) files. Both types of files are stored equally
compressed in the repository, and differences are transmitted in both
directions across the network.
Efficient branching and tagging
~ The cost of branching and tagging need not be proportional to the
project size. Subversion creates branches and tags by simply copying the
project, using a mechanism similar to a hard-link. Thus these operations
take only a very small, constant amount of time.
Hackability
~ Subversion has no historical baggage; it is implemented as a
collection of shared C libraries with well-defined APIs. This makes
Subversion extremely maintainable and usable by other applications and
languages.
sounds interesting... (Score:2, Insightful)
Not Available Yet (Astroturf?) (Score:2, Informative)
What reason do we have to to believe that this review isn't complete astroturf? What is his relation that caused him to get an advance copy?
It may well be an honest review, but I'm inclined to be a lot more skeptical. Especially since there is no mention in the review of the fact that he got an advance copy.
Re:Not Available Yet (Astroturf?) (Score:3, Informative)
I'm still curious why he gets lots of free advance copies of books. (Where do I sign up...)
Re:Not Available Yet (Astroturf?) (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Not Available Yet (Astroturf?) (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Not Available Yet (Astroturf?) (Score:3, Informative)
Don't be so paranoid.
Re:Not Available Yet (Astroturf?) (Score:2)
Reviewers receiving advance copies is standard practice. If you're going to be suspicious of that, you pretty much have to ignore reviewers in general.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Benefits of Subversion's revisioning system? (Score:3, Informative)
In addition to that, read:
which outlines some of the properties you want in a version control system. Tools like CVS and VSS don't capture all the information they could, which means you don't actually have an accurate history of what happened. :)
There are also a few rants by Greg Hudson and Tom Lord about changeset vs tree-history. Search google
Re:Benefits of Subversion's revisioning system? (Score:5, Informative)
The general idea is that in a given set of interrelated files, it does not make sense to think about revisions on the file level, as a change to one file is really a change to an entire project. Simply assigning revision numbers on a repository-wide basis simplifies the revision number system and does away with one bit of weirdness in CVS. It's a bit strange if you're coming from a system that works with per-file rather than per-repository versions, but it makes a lot of sense when you get used to it.
As to difficulty tracking the files -- no, it's not difficult. Finding the revisions associated with changing a file is easy, so tracking the changes is no more difficult than in CVS.
Re:Benefits of Subversion's revisioning system? (Score:3, Insightful)
It's still easy to tell when individual files were changed using somet
Re:Benefits of Subversion's revisioning system? (Score:2)
If you have the foresight to tag your source tree, or you happen to know the
date that you want to grab (cvs log foo.c, will greatly assist in this if you
keep usuable logs). SVN does it better, but it's not really all that hard with
CVS.
Re:Benefits of Subversion's revisioning system? (Score:5, Insightful)
This doesn't make it any harder to track changes to individual files. When you run "svn log" on a file or directory, you only see the log messages/revisions listed where that file or directory was changed.
It's really quite an elegant system.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Benefits of Subversion's revisioning system? (Score:2, Insightful)
That's fine, and if it's working for you you don't need to change it, but personally I find it hard to remember that in version 1.15 I added a new table and that branched version 1.2.4.15 corresponds to the current production code.
In Subversion you'd use symbolically named tags, which are copies of directory t
Sample excepts (Score:4, Informative)
Sample excerpts from the book are available in PDF format from the book website [pragmaticprogrammer.com]. You can also download the full Using Tags and Branches chapter artima.com [artima.com] (free login required).
<gripe>Most tech books these days have a page on the publishers website, and some offer a sample chapter for download. Book reviewers should include a direct link to this book page, and note what excerpts/chapters are available for preview, if any (and prevent people like me karma whoring).</gripe>
Conflicts and Merging vs Locking (Score:5, Interesting)
My rationale is that if two people need to modify a file the conflicts exist independent of the version control mechanism, its just that locking serializes modifications and and merging has you modifying in parallel and then fixing it all at once, which is more efficient than making someone wait. Not to mention the idiots who lock everything and then go on vacation.
I usually just say 'try it and you will see that subversion is way easier to use and the rare conflicts are easy to merge'.
Any recommendations?
Re:Conflicts and Merging vs Locking (Score:5, Informative)
FWIW, the lock/unlock model (a.k.a., "reserved checkouts") is on tap for Subversion 1.2, according to the roadmap [tigris.org].
Other justification... (Score:4, Insightful)
With the "normal" source control systems that use the reserve/checkin style, a programmer may work on several files - perhaps they even work on them unreserved to be nice to others (as is becoming policy here).
You still have the issue of "The Merge" That is, the programmer doing the development is nt getting changes made to those files while he is working, and others are not seing his work.
So when it comes time to check in all the files, a prigrammer checks most of them in - but then possibly runs into issues with merges in the last few files. Lots of commercial merge tools seem poorly designed to help the average programmer deal with issues, sometimes they simply automatically hose the merge without the programmer even knowing.
Using a CVS system, the programmer is able to keep in sync all through development by constantly updating files. That means that issues caused by him will also be resolved by him on the fly, instead of someone else discovering a merge went wrong later. It makes the day of checkin no longer something to fear, since you are already synchronized and can be reasonably sure the system works BEFORE you do the checkin, instead of checking after and possibly having a broken build.
Sure that checkin might cause someone else issues, but they will tend to be isolated to a developer and not affect the whole team at once.
So basically CVS style operation encourages programmers to keep in sync with what other people are doing - I honestly believe that if it did not work this way and people were forced to deal with reserved files, the whole OpenSource movement would be a fraction of its current size and success.
Yes I know ClearCase can kind of do something like that, but not very well and I have seen clear case totally bungle automatic merges before.
Re:Other justification... (Score:2)
No, it can do exactly that, and very well. If it is set up correctly, basically designers can create their own side-stream, and do repeated merges into it to keep up to date.
and I have seen clear case totally bungle automatic merges before.
I have seen *designers* totally bungle merges before. A perfect merge tool or process does not exist; but it nearly always works fine. Automated merge tools are nearly always a big help though.
More information on side-streams... (Score:3, Insightful)
So where can you find more information on ClearCase side streams and bringing in external changes? I have ever been frustrated by a lack of good ClearCase documentation, and whoever set up our ClearCase systems at work sure does not know about this.
However, I still find setting up a sidestream (private branch? Google had nothing on
Re:Other justification... (Score:3, Insightful)
No it is not (Score:2)
The if you can do that, how do you specify a real merging tool that will not screw up the file or get lost if someone alters whitespace?
Re:No it is not (Score:2, Insightful)
As for the screwing up on whitespace, no idea. But CVS does sometimes, too.
And no, I don't prefer clearcase... that thing was like a tank without an engine: you'd just have a bunch of people inside turning the wheels.
I'll check out findmerge... (Score:2)
I'll check out findmerge and see if I can get a script using that to approximate an auto-merge into my existing file.
Seriously though, if anyone knows how to tell clearcase to ignore whitespace for diffs, that would be fantastic. We've had a few people look at that but no luck.
I could see somewhat why companies would use a VC system that supported dir
Re:I'll check out findmerge... (Score:2)
Seriously though, if anyone knows how to tell clearcase to ignore whitespace for diffs, that would be fantastic. We've had a few people look at that but no luck.
I sympathize with your plight, but treating whitespace as significant has a number of benefits.
For instance consider Python, whose control flow structure is defined by whitespace alone. White space which is mere ornamentation in some contexts is critical in others. For rigor and consistency the only sound approach is to consider each byte sig
Yes, during analysis... (Score:2)
Re:Conflicts and Merging vs Locking (Score:2)
Re:Conflicts and Merging vs Locking (Score:2, Informative)
For knowing what is last in still works as intended, upd
Re:Conflicts and Merging vs Locking (Score:3, Insightful)
The fundamental argument is, "If it's so horrifying to be without [X], why doesn't the doom and gloom actually happen to people who try living without it?", followed by pointing out the large number of people living without it.
This same argument can be applied to a lot of dogma that we've accreted over the past few decades... s
Re:Conflicts and Merging vs Locking (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Conflicts and Merging vs Locking (Score:3, Interesting)
Also, assuming you use Windows desktops, use TortoiseSVN.
Re:Conflicts and Merging vs Locking (Score:3, Interesting)
One argument I can already hear is 'by minimizing changes we can ensure quality/safety/etc/etc'... this is a false sense of safety. We know that minimal changes really never are safe, the classic 'one line fix' which breaks the world.
The onl
Subversion better than CVS? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Subversion better than CVS? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Subversion better than CVS? (Score:4, Interesting)
As expected, there were some hassles at first, due mostly to me not knowing subversion as well as I knew CVS. But in the end, my view is, it's much much better.
Improvements are what you list. The only minus that I've found is that the "svn:externals" entry isn't as good in some ways as the CVS submodule system...that is, if I have a several projects in a repository that share some library code, the only real way to do this is to pull the shared code in via svn:externals. But when you do this, you have to do separate commits on the project and on each so-called "external" library, even though they are all from the same svn database. In CVS, this wasn't necessary, you can pull in submodules all you want and they commit with one command (of course internally CVS breaks them up into separate commands due to the CVS multi-directory problems, but at least it looks like a single checking). It's not a huge issue, but it's the only thing I can find where subversion is clearly worse than CVS.
End result: the switch was definitely worth it to me. Love being able to move and/or copy files and have the history carry over. Love being able to truly delete a directory, not just blow away all files. Love the system wide version numbering. Love getting rid of the crufty x.y.z.p.d.q.r.s.t numbering system of CVS. Overall, once you have the system down, you'll be glad you switched.
Re:Subversion better than CVS? (Score:2)
Atomic commits? I proposed an algorithm for adding these to CVS in a straightforward way.
darcs (Score:2, Interesting)
I've played with cvs, subversion, arch, darcs and I honestly think darcs is easiest to use and best of all of them I've played with.
The only thing I would change in darcs is the way it handles binary files. It can't apply patches to binary files, it has to save full copies of them. Not very condusive to projects with lots of binaries.
Subversion, on the other hand handles this better.
But I still like darcs better... its features are sweet.
Second that emotion (Score:2)
Re:Second that emotion (Score:3, Informative)
Right, but ... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Right, but ... (Score:4, Insightful)
The problem is that sense of security is very misplaced. CVS doesn't do any integrity checking. So you can easily have corruption problems and not know it until it is way too late. And if you add a binary that you haven't configured CVS for, well, he's dead, Jim. A scrambled text file isn't going to be any more recoverable than a scrambled binary.
You might not like binary formats. But I don't see how you can avoid them if you are really going to handle binary data well. Otherwise you are ducking the issue.
As far as using grep on a repository, yeah, I have done that too. It's ok if you have small projects. But for larger projects that is not a useful benefit. My current employer has an 11GB SourceUnsafe Repo that has to be a disaster in the making. And of course a $0 budget to move it to something else.
Subversion isn't the cureall either. It's got some bad design in it that has got me holding back from recommending it. What I want is stuff like keywork expansion in Unicode. Merge tracking. etc.
But at least it isn't a one man project like darcs. That would never fly for any sane corporation.
Probably not a sparse file problem (Score:2)
It may have been perfectly normal, but I didn't like it, and didn't want to find out the hard way that it had made a boo-boo.
Re:darcs (Score:2)
Multiple saves of indentical blocks of data are aggregated in the file system such that there is no replication of the actual bytes on the disk, a look up system is employed.
It is currently only available for plan9, though ports are in progress through the plan9ports project.
CVS Admin's be afraid ... very afriad. (Score:5, Interesting)
I love it so much, I am actually considering installing svn on my families computer so they can keep track of their most beloved digital documents as well.
JsD
Re:CVS Admin's be afraid ... very afriad. (Score:3, Informative)
love it so much, I am actually considering installing svn on my families computer so they can keep track of their most beloved digital documents as well.
If you're using Windows, look into TortoiseSVN [tigris.org], a Subversion shell extension for Windows. The neat thing is that you it doesn't even need a server if you file access to the repository is available (and possibly in other cases as well). This means it's the only program needed.
As for myself, I actually use it for school homework in addition to my program
Re:CVS Admin's be afraid ... very afriad. (Score:5, Interesting)
configuration and maintenance is a breeze.
No discussion of Subversion is complete without a considering the relative merits of the two types of the repository storage system, Berkeley DB and FSFS.
The Subversion book at red-bean.com has an informed discussion [red-bean.com] in Chapter 5.
It appears that FSFS, which is basically the regular file system like CVS uses, is better in every way. The books says, "In theory, it promises a lower barrier to entry for new administrators and is less susceptible to problems." New administrators should take note because diagnosing and repairing problems with the Berkeley DB and Managing Disk Space [red-bean.com] is a whole other level of skill compared to administering CVS.
Unless you are going to administer a huge project, in which case you should NOT be a new administrator, the Berkeley DB offers nothing but potential headaches.
Re:CVS Admin's be afraid ... very afriad. (Score:3, Informative)
I have a zero chance in convincing my coworkers to switch to svn if we cannot preserve CVS history. Period.
I've been trying for months to get a test import into svn, and still doesn't work yet. That that it takes a few days to import doesn't make it any easier - by the time, if it doesn't bomb out, it's done I've totally forgotten about it
Re:CVS Admin's be afraid ... very afriad. (Score:2)
How? Using cvs2svn I hope?
Okay, there seems to be a tool for converting from CVS to svn, but after skimming the documentation, there are still loads of questions. Can anyone familiar with Subversion help out?
If I convert from CVS to Subversion will it retain all the tags, commit comments, etc.? Can I retrieve an old version of the source code (pre-Subversion)?
Is there anything in Subversion like the commitinfo stuff in CVS that allows you to call other scripts/programs and do verifications before a c
Re:CVS Admin's be afraid ... very afriad. (Score:2)
Yes. You have to understand that the SVN model of "everything is a directory" requires a different way of thinking from the CVS "everything is a file with attributes" model, but cvs2svn does an excellent job of preserving your entire project history.
Also, it is not mentioned anywhere that I've seen in any documentation, but the output of cvs2svn is
getting permission to switch (Score:3, Funny)
Will SourceForge move to Subversion? (Score:4, Interesting)
But it is hard to say how well subversion would handle the load. I'm guessing sf.net has done a lot of tweaking to get CVS to handle the number of projects they currently have, and moving everyone over... or just supporting both, is greater than the effort they want to put in.
Maybe some day...
Re:Will SourceForge move to Subversion? (Score:3, Informative)
Speed compared to Perforce? (Score:4, Interesting)
I've thought about moving to Subversion just so it would be cheaper if I ever had to scale my "personal project" up past two people. But honestly, I think Perforce is well worth the US$750/seat for the sheer speed it offers.
Anybody have any idea how SVN compares?
Re:Speed compared to Perforce? (Score:5, Informative)
It has the ability to collect changes for grouped check-in against an issue. And it has the excellent, albeit somewhat clunky GUI. I loved using Perforce and I recommended it.
However, after trying SVN, I would have to say that Perforce is not $750 per seat better than SVN. SVN has most of the functionality I looked originally to Perforce to get (mostly the atomic commits) and it is slowly but surely maturing.
The GUIs are coming along and even the ANT and Eclipse plugins. And eventually SVN will have a more fully implemented WebDAV interface (Perforce does not).
I feel bad that now that SVN is getting up to speed that Perforce is going to lose out. However, this is something that is happenning across the entire Developer tools market. Everything in the developer tools market space will eventually go Open Source. (most already are)
Perforce had their run and now they will need to branch out or make a new version of themselves by adding on significant new features.
Or otherwise they will disappear from the market. If so, they will be missed.
Re:Speed compared to Perforce? (Score:3, Interesting)
speed: how you install svn makes a difference (Score:2)
I've actually never had an svn repository local to me. (I used perforce locally for 3 years.) I suspect svn+ssh is within a factor of 2 or 3 of perforce..l. certainly fast enough for anyone used to cvs.
Windows users (Score:4, Informative)
http://www.cvsnt.com/cvspro/ for the server
and http://www.wincvs.org/ for a gui client
Mergepoints in cvsnt are very cool and wincvs is a powerful client. Since cvsnt runs on Windows and many unixes, you also have your choice of platform as well.
cvsnt is a project that has been around over five years (at my reckoning) and has a good following. Plus you can get commercial support for it from March... what more can you ask for from Free software?
Subversion? (Score:5, Funny)
I perfer to use intimidation:
"Touch my code and I will beat you with silly with a rolled copy of the original spec docs."
Seems to work for me.
-- TMKWith SVN people about, could someone answer... (Score:5, Informative)
We tested Subversion in November against our working CVS system. It was fun, and we were all really happy with it until...
When switching between two branches, a file that was moved caused the switch to fail. The local sandbox was broken to the extent that nothing short of re-rechecking out the repository would fix it. All subsequent commits, updates, or attempts to switch back would not work.
The second thing that bit us really bad was that we have applications that set source code controlled files read-only. This is intentional and necessary; if they are not read-only, the files will be changed automatically when certain tests are run which is something we do not want. Despite this, there are times when those files need to be updated. SVN crashed and burned trying to checkout changes over read-only files. All the research reading mailing list indicated that the prevailing thought at the time was that read-only meant read-only from SVN.
That's not how it works in CVS at all where we currently use watches and locks to get this functionality. Read-only is an attribute of the file. When some checks out the file, it must be read-only when it arrives in their sandbox. The file and the sandbox is managed by source control so aside from user permissions, the last word on whether a file can be modified is that of the sandbox manager, not the filesystem. In short, if CVS or SVN need to write over a read-only file they should be able to do it so long as the file is read-only when the job is done.
With the read-only detail and the sandbox corruption issues open, we had no choice but to return to CVS. I am seriously looking forward to what Subversion has to offer in the future though.
Hope
Re:With SVN people about, could someone answer... (Score:2)
Local changes of the directory structure are merged against the repository delta. Fix them with a text editor, re-update, and all is well.
There is no bug database for Meta-CVS. I do web searches for it from time to time and find out about people who are happy with it, and don't bother w
Has Anyone Considered Parallel CVS/SVN? (Score:2)
The biggest problem in changing source control is the fact you must block all dev work while the transition happens. If your software moves fast enough there might never be a window of opportunity to lock the archive, move the code and open the new archive.
What would make any transition easier is somehow maintianing both. Knowing the basics of how both CVS and SVN work and only giving in a few minutes of thought (beca
charge sets required (Score:2)
I would love to be able to duplicate a project and then import their changesets into mine keeping it synced no matter what source control they are using. This would save bandwidth because I only need changes not the whole repository.
To my knowledge there is NO standard for change sets and if there are it certainly is not actively being used.
Eclipse support? (Score:2)
Jon.
Re:Eclipse support? (Score:3, Informative)
Great tool (Score:3, Informative)
Most people just use Tortoise though. The web-interface is nice for browsing repositories and downloading single files but when you need more stuff done, then Tortoise is ideal.
Wow. dotProject is still alive! (Score:2)
One switcher's experience... (Score:4, Informative)
We were able to migrate it all easily. We have developers using both WinXP and Linux. The Eclipse client was kind of broken at first, but recent versions have been acceptable. I've been able to forget all the workarounds and weird issues that caused us headaches with CVS.
Overall a very good experience - I would say Subversion doesn't add anything groundbreaking to revision control, but rather is CVS done really really well.
Binary file corruption???? (Score:2, Interesting)
I do a
svn add *
and it recognizes that a particular file (a CAD file) is binary, but when I commit, I see that the file size has increased and now my CAD software can't read the file!
What is svn adding to binary files? Surely not those properties you set with svn propset etc?
Re:yawn (Score:2)
Re:yawn (Score:5, Insightful)
Let me start off by saying that I'm firmly in the scientific camp, intending to start a PhD in CS this (northern) summer. It seems that an awful lot of popular things in IT are despised by computer scientists. Linux, as a monolithic kernel, is a famous example, as is C++, and I recently saw something about Perl being evil as well.
Now, these scientists have good reasons to call these things ugly, but people still use them. That means that either people are stupid, or the computer scientists are missing something. I think that it's mostly the latter.
In my software engineering course I was taught that the first and foremost thing you do in a project is gather requirements. It seems to me that computer scientists need to get out and ask people who work in IT what they actually expect from their kernels, languages, and development systems. Then they can try and create theories of how it all works or should work to fulfill those wishes, and use those theories to improve those real-world systems.
The alternative, sitting in your ivory tower inventing things that you think are pretty and everyone else thinks are useless, doesn't seem to be working too well.
Re:yawn (Score:2)
Perl is ugly too but you
Re:yawn (Score:3, Insightful)
It's interesting to note that while many things are stated by computer scientsts as evil, they are also practical. There are reasons why these languages are 'efficient' in a business sense: Linux is a widely used and widely known free *nix kernel. C++ leverages the existing C knowledge base; Perl is wonderful when you're trying to a
Re:yawn (Score:4, Insightful)
Other CS topics are dependent on physical devices with complex emergent behavior (computer systems and their constituent parts) and thus don't admit axiomatic proof; but are still "hard" in that repeatable controlled experiments can be conducted to generate solid empirical evidence.
However, many parts of "Computer Science" are dependent on economics and human behavior. It is at this junction that emotions are thrown into the mix and religion ensues.
"Hard" sciences do not have dependencies on soft sciences; the results of physics research do not depend on psychology or economics. Given this, I consider CS to be a soft science.
Re:yawn (Score:2)
Well of course the first thing you should do it start coding :-)
Gathering requirements/building a business model are the first things you should do. It just that you shouldn't always do all of it straight away. Sometimes a little bit of exploratory programming is what's needed to understand the problem.
But don't tar all academics with the same brush please!
Re:Is it better than Perforce? (Score:3, Insightful)
I think Perforce is better than Subversion if you're doing a lot of branching -- the merge point tracking that Perforce performs is really well implemented and saves you from a lot of manual tracking. Overall though if you're looking for a free alternative to Perforce I'd hi
Re:Is it better than Perforce? (Score:2)
Although, I've heard that Perforce is a locking version control system. If that's true, it's something you should definitely take into account since locking vcs is a whole different (and crappier imo) ballgame.
Re:Is it better than Perforce? (Score:2)
Re:Is it better than Perforce? (Score:2)
I really have no idea what the point of p4 edit is except that it allows Perforce to know who all is editing a file and it can warn you if you p4 edit a file that someone else has opened. But it's just a warning, there is nothing preventing two people from p4 editing the same file at the same time.
Locking is available in P4, but optional.
Re:Is it better than Perforce? (Score:3, Insightful)
If costs like $1000 per seat scare you off, and/or you don't have a need for planet-wide team development, then maybe Subversion would be suitable.
Chip H.
Re:Is it better than Perforce? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:NIce but where is WinSubversion (Score:3, Informative)
http://tortoisesvn.tigris.org/ [tigris.org]
Re:gnu arch (Score:2)
Re:SVN sucks (Score:2)