I don't think it's a nightmare, but you need to be painfully aware of the differences between windows and linux. Case in point, file name sensitivity...example: someFile.cfm is not the same as somefile.cfm - so, make sure that the developers aren't getting 'lazy' when they do cfmodules, cfincludes, cfinvoke, etc.
CFCs filenames should be in all _lowercase_. I cannot stress this enough, you cannot do mixEd Cases in a CFC filename. I learned this the hardway, nevermind that my invoke statement was the same case as the filename itself, apparently that's just how it works. Once you nail differences like those down, then... everything should be good. If you're doing new development, great you won't have much to change. If you're 'porting' code over, good luck.. QA, QA, QA. ~Todd On Mon, 25 Nov 2002, Andy wrote: > Hi All, > > Apologies if this is a FAQ, but I've been given a > fairly tall order, to comment on a Windows -> Linux > migration for our servers within a day. > > The proposal is that we move to a setup that includes > clustered webservers running Apache, CFMX and either > Redhat or Suse Linux on the Web side, and PostGreSQL > on the database side. > > For development, we would have a central dev server > mirroring the production environment and individual > developers (2 or possibly 3) would run their own > Windows environments with IIS and probably SQL server. > Code migration would be managed by CVS and Tortoise, > moving from individual developer, to central > development, to production. > > Has anyone any comments to make on that setup ? > > I'm looking out for any major No-Nos, like (possibly) > "CFMX on Linux not stable yet" or "mixed Windows/Linux > development is a nightmare". > > Any thoughts or observations much apreciated. > > Thanks, Andy > > > __________________________________________________ > Do You Yahoo!? > Everything you'll ever need on one web page > from News and Sport to Email and Music Charts > http://uk.my.yahoo.com > ______________________________________________________________________ Structure your ColdFusion code with Fusebox. Get the official book at http://www.fusionauthority.com/bkinfo.cfm ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Archives: http://www.mail-archive.com/cf-linux%40houseoffusion.com/ To Unsubscribe visit http://www.houseoffusion.com/index.cfm?sidebar=lists&body=lists/cf_linux or send a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with 'unsubscribe' in the body.
