I dunno about other CVS clients (though I suspect they might not all support this), the CVS client in Eclipse allows you to right-click the project (I have CS mounted in its own project), do Team/Switch to a different Branch/Version... and click "Add Date..." If you add a date, (say last Friday), you should be able to click Finish and watch it swap out your local working copy for whatever had been committed as of last Friday.

So Ken, if you either use Eclipse or a rollback tool in your favorite CVS client, you should be able to roll back to Friday's code with no problem.

That's part of why we all love CVS so much. :)

Laterz,
J


------------------------------------------------

Jared C. Rypka-Hauer

Continuum Media Group LLC

http://www.web-relevant.com

Member, Team Macromedia - ColdFusion


"That which does not kill me makes me stranger." - Yonah Schmeidler


On Apr 18, 2006, at 4:33 PM, Simeon Bateman wrote:

If this were svn I would say just check out the revision 1.21 codebase. It appears that was just before the new things that bust reactor.  I am not a cvs user, so i dont know if you can get that or not :)  I dont think that works because cvs doesnt do atomic commits.

anyway.... An earlier version is a good idea for the time being :)

simeon


On 4/18/06, Ken Dunnington < [EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Oh, nuts. :) Well, thank goodness for version control, I'll try reverting to a previous rev until it's fixed. Thanks Sean.

On 4/18/06, Sean Corfield < [EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On 4/18/06, Ken Dunnington < [EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I updated CS today (why I did not keep a pristine copy of the version I had
> that was working, I don't know) and suddenly my app has come to a screeching
> halt.

Yup, the latest BER of CS breaks use of Reactor as a factory bean.
I've already sent a test case to Chris Scott.
--
Sean A Corfield -- http://corfield.org/
Got frameworks?

"If you're not annoying somebody, you're not really alive."
-- Margaret Atwood




--
Quidquid latine dictum sit, altum sonatur.
- Whatever is said in Latin sounds profound.


Reply via email to