> If you do a reimport, could you please make sure to preserve the changes > I already made inside of SVN? It would be a shame if my changes would be > the victim of the initial SVN problems. Please remember I was the one > that warned that some smaller problems are very likely to pop up in the > first two weeks and that we should not be using SVN without a test > phase. This was voted down, but now I seem to be the only one actually > using SVN :-)
True, you did warn of this. And yes, I have noticed that there are two patches sent to the new svn repository and a few that were made after the cvs2svn conversion so I will consolidate everything and make sure that shows up in the import. I am (I believe) running the final cvs2svn conversion. I wrote a program to diff the differences in trunks between all the subprojects (CVS vs. svn) and went through the 40,000 diff to see some valid newline changes (people committing windows-style newlines) and many were just keyword changes ($Revision$ etc..) However, there were still a few "Binary files differ" but I think I have added the changes for all of these now. (Ended up being around ~1500 lines of binary file exceptions, eek). > BTW, will we have mails for SVN code changes again? It was a rather nice > feature just to see if an update was worthwhile or not. I'm pretty sure there is a way to sign up for svn notifications on gna.org. I remember reading about it at one time. - Andy _______________________________________________ Gnustep-dev mailing list [email protected] http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/gnustep-dev
