Too many posts on SVN to keep up :-)


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-----Original Message-----
From: Andrew Scott
To: CF-Talk
Sent: Wed May 09 21:44:23 2007
Subject: Re: Adobe CS3 Web Edition leaves me wanting, moving to Eclipse! W
AS (RE: Frameworks)

Neil,

If that was directed at me, I posted that right above yours about exporting
code from SVN without the svn directories..


On 5/10/07, Robertson-Ravo, Neil (RX) <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
>
> It all depends on what you deem "production code". You don't keep a
> seperate
> code branch per system do you? (dev, test etc) surely you have a single
> release build as part of your software cycle and that same build is on all
> of your servers apart from dev which will be that build + more?
>
> You can also check out code without svn folders, but I am sure you know
> that.
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> "This e-mail is from Reed Exhibitions (Gateway House, 28 The Quadrant,
> Richmond, Surrey, TW9 1DN, United Kingdom), a division of Reed Business,
> Registered in England, Number 678540.  It contains information which is
> confidential and may also be privileged.  It is for the exclusive use of
> the
> intended recipient(s).  If you are not the intended recipient(s) please
> note
> that any form of distribution, copying or use of this communication or the
> information in it is strictly prohibited and may be unlawful.  If you have
> received this communication in error please return it to the sender or
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> our switchboard on +44 (0) 20 89107910.  The opinions expressed within
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> Visit our website at http://www.reedexpo.com
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Andrew Scott
> To: CF-Talk
> Sent: Wed May 09 20:43:40 2007
> Subject: Re: Adobe CS3 Web Edition leaves me wanting, moving to Eclipse! W
> AS (RE: Frameworks)
>
> Thats why tools like Beyond Compare is good, you only migrate the files or
> merge what has changed.
>
> But I still wouldn't modify code on production, or even SVN production
> code.
> the reason being is that you also end up with all the svn directories
> there
> as well.
>
> But hey if it works for you... I just frown upon the idea that you are
> doing
> it this way, and DO NOT consider what you do, to be best practice at all.
>
>
>
> On 5/10/07, Russ <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> > > -----Original Message-----
> > > From: Andrew Scott [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > > Cool,
> > >
> > > Still curious why Russ trunks a production server...
> > >
> > >
> >
> > We have a fairly large codebase, and it takes a while to check it all
> out.
> > If I'm doing a small change (lets say a spelling change, etc).  I can
> just
> > go into that folder and do an update and it will take only a second or
> > two.
> > Or I can even do an update of the whole source tree, and it will still
> not
> > take very long.
> >
> > I really don't see the point of exporting a whole fresh copy of the code
> > just for a simple change.  Even for larger changes svn update would be
> > much
> > more efficient then exporting a new copy of the code.
> > We also use FRS to replicate the files between cluster members, and if I
> > were to export the whole code tree, it would have to sync every file to
> > the
> > other cluster members.
> >
> > Obviously developing straight on production is a no-no... but if there's
> > an
> > emergency, I can either roll back to an older revision, or fix the code
> in
> > place and then commit it straight from production.
> >
> > With all these benefits, I don't see why you wouldn't trunk to
> production.
> >
> > If you're talking about why we use trunk instead of a branch, that's
> just
> > a
> > decision we've made that works for us.  Trunk is always the latest
> stable
> > code that's on production, and it makes making small changes easy.  As I
> > mentioned, for larger changes we use branches which get merged into
> trunk
> > once they've passed QA.
> >
> > Russ
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
>
>
>
> 



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