On Wed, Apr 01, 2009 at 07:05:53AM -0300, Andrew Hamilton-Wright wrote: > > [ snippage of question re: svn and cvs ] > > On Tue, 31 Mar 2009, Chuck Robey wrote: > > > Andrew Wright wrote: > >> > >> The primary advantage of using svn is that the _server_ uses a > >> different protocol to track objects. > > > > I think that's unclear, you can't mean that just having the protocol be > > different, that's not that much of a win. Having svn track extra things, > > like > > directories, that I'd think was a win. > > I chose the word protocol poorly. For "protocol" read "way of > doing things", or perhaps "algorithm". > > What I was trying to make clear is that the choice of tool between > cvs and svn is made based on server related criteria. > > > > > What I don't know is, I use cvsup all the time, but when I switch to svn, > > what > > does the "cvsup" job of tracking an archive (not tracking the sources, I > > mean > > the archive)? Does svn do it all itself? If so, I can find out how, I just > > want to know if that's how its done. If not, what's the general tool used > > to > > track the freebsd archive, so I can investigate it? > > If you are asking "what is the name of the subversion client, and how > can I use it?", then the answer is "svn" (which is also the executable > used for the server, a la cvs with the "pserver" option). Usage
No, 'svnserve' is normally the executable running on the server. > instructions are available via: > http://subversion.tigris.org > > > If you are asking "what can I type to get a readonly copy of the > repo?", then according to the ROADMAP.txt at: > http://svn.freebsd.org/viewvc/base/ROADMAP.txt?view=markup > the answer appears to be: > svn co http://svn.freebsd.org/base/head No, that is not going to get you a copy of the subversion repository, but just a checked out copy of HEAD. There is no 'svn' command that will give you a copy of the whole repository. Personally I have found 'rsync' to be quite useful in replicating a subversion repository, but that of course requires the server to support it, which is probably not the case for the FreeBSD repo. I don't know if there currently is any supported method for ordinary users to get a copy of the whole FreeBSD subversion repository. I suspect there isn't. > > Strong Caveats: > o One of the peculiarities of subversion is that if you > leave off the "head" portion of the URL, you will get _all_ of > the nodes in the repository -- that is, the history at every point. > > o As I mentioned earlier, this will produce a newly checked out working > space that is incompatible with cvsup (or cvs in general). > > o ***Early Adopter Warning***: There has not been (as far as I know) a > general call for people to move to this type of repository access except > for committers -- therefore expect rough edges until a general > announcement > is made. > > A. > -- <Insert your favourite quote here.> Erik Trulsson ertr1...@student.uu.se _______________________________________________ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"