I know I'd find this useful as well, for several reasons: -If you simply let continuum build every 5 mins, there could potentially be more than 1 commit during that time, and you would be building multiple revisions worth of changes. Ideally, you would want to build once/revision so if the build breaks, you know which commit broke it. -The continuum server would not be making as many hits to the svn server. If you're building dozens and dozens of projects, this adds up when it's once every 5 mins.
If you got rather fancy, it would sure be nice to have the commit check if there were new projects added, and automagically add them to continuum as well. -----Original Message----- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] on behalf of Carlos Sanchez Sent: Thu 6/8/2006 1:54 PM To: [email protected] Subject: Re: Subversion post-commit hook why do you need that, setting a short period like 5 min is not enough? On 6/8/06, Chris Wall <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > We'd like to trigger Continuum builds upon developer commits in > Subversion. It sounds like to do so we need to develop an xml-rpc > client. > > Has anyone developed a post-commit hook into Continuum from Subversion? > Is there related documentation available? > > Thanks. > > -Chris > > > _______________________________________________________________________ > Notice: This email message, together with any attachments, may contain > information of BEA Systems, Inc., its subsidiaries and affiliated > entities, that may be confidential, proprietary, copyrighted and/or > legally privileged, and is intended solely for the use of the individual > or entity named in this message. If you are not the intended recipient, > and have received this message in error, please immediately return this > by email and then delete it. > > -- I could give you my word as a Spaniard. No good. I've known too many Spaniards. -- The Princess Bride
