PuTTY is a suite of SSH programs.  You need to connect to the CVS server
through SSH, otherwise you'd be sending a clear text password over the net,
which is insecure.  That's why SourceForge uses SSH.

Leif

----- Original Message ----- 
From: Jesse Vitrone
To: Raymond Irving
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, June 06, 2003 10:42 PM
Subject: Re: [Dynapi-Dev] compressing files


Raymond, Leif,
    Greg, glad to see you both like the idea.  I'll sign up with sourceforge
and use the patch system.
    I grabbed the code from CVS when I first started making the changes, but
I tried to do an update today, and there were lots on conflitcts that CVS
didn't seem to merge very well.  So I grabbed a clean copy of the code
again, and I'll go through and make the changes again.  Didn't take too long
the first time.
    I have WinCVS, but I've been using Tortoise CVS.  What do I need Putty
for?

    I found a bug today in my Java compression tool, and I'd like to get
that fixed before I sent it out.  I also wanted to add a feature in the XML
where you can specify a comment that will be put at the top of the merged
file, since it rips out all comments, and a lot of people want something in
the file for licensing and stuff like that.  Once I get that stuff in, I'll
let you know and send you a copy.


Jesse

Raymond Irving wrote:

Very cool indeed Jesse, very cool. Well done.

IMO the merge feature is a major plus for the DynAPI
libraries.

There're two ways to check in your updates. You could:

1) Use the Patch system available on the DynAPI
SourceForge web site

2) Setup WinCVS and Putty on you computer can check in
you changes via CVS.

Are your changes based on the lasted version in CVS?

--
Raymond Irving




--- Jesse Vitrone <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

Ooops, sorry, hit send too soon :(  Here's the whole
email

Hello all,
    I've never contributed to an open source project
before, so I'm not
sure of the proper ettiquite.  Please correct me if
I do something stupid :)
    I've been email with Raymond Irving about some
idea's that I had,
and he encouraged me to post it here and see what
people think.
    I wrote a Java version of the JavaScript
compressor that comes with
DynAPI.  Along with everything that the DynAPI one
does, it reads in a
config file that says "compress these files, then
merge them into this
one file".  This enables me to keep a good amount of
JS files when I'm
coding, but then when I "build" to apache, I
compress them all into 1
file, so the browser doesn't have to hit the server
multiple times to
get the files.
    Then, I took it a step farther, and added what I
had to in order to
be able to compress the DynAPI files I was using,
and it worked!  I was
able to get all my files, plus the DynAPI files I
was using and compress
/ merge them all into 1 file. It sped things up on
my server dramatically.
    The changes were all just adding semi-colons
where they were needed,
except for one case:
       The mouse_ie.js, dyndocument.js and
mouse_dom.js files all have a
method called "main" and that doesn't seem to work
very well when
they're all combined into the same file.  To fix it,
I renamed them,
which names like main_mouse_ie, etc, and fixed all
the other references
to them.  Seems to work fine, but I haven't tested
extensively all the
examples and such.

I'd like to check in my changes, as well as send in
my Java compressor,
since Raymond said he'd like to post it on the site.
 I'd also like to
make a Swing front end for the java app to make it a
little easier to use.

What do you guys and gals think of this idea?
Should I check in the
changes?  What's the right process for checking in
changes?

Jesse





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