hi, Orr! Consider obsoleting svn. mercurial (or git) are much more fun and possibilities.
On Tue, May 1, 2012 at 8:53 PM, Orr Dunkelman <[email protected]>wrote: > Thanks everyone for the links and ideas. > > The repo is to be private, so I think I will go with bitbucket. > > Cheers, > > > On Tue, May 1, 2012 at 8:00 PM, Shlomi Fish <[email protected]>wrote: > >> Hi Orr, >> >> On Tue, 1 May 2012 14:07:23 +0300 >> Orr Dunkelman <[email protected]> wrote: >> >> > Hi everybody, >> > >> > I was wondering whether anyone is aware of open CVS/SVN servers that >> allow >> > users to open a small repository. >> > >> > The project I have in mind is actually a LaTeX project, and not an open >> > source one, so not much space is needed. >> > >> > Support of 4 users is needed, not much storage (LaTeX files, after all), >> > and of course, availability (but the project would end in a year or >> two, so >> > I am not looking for something that would stay forever). >> > >> >> Do you want the repository to be public (i.e: that everyone in the world >> will >> be able to read it) or do you want a private repository (which has a >> restricted read access)? One can easily set up a public >> Subversion repository on Google Code ( http://code.google.com/ ) - one >> needs >> to have a Google account, but your projects gets accepted immediately. >> Note >> that there are some limitations on the licence (to avoid the licence >> proliferation problem). There's also http://projectlocker.com/ which >> gives one >> private 200 MB repository for 2 users for free. >> >> Aside from those, there is http://sourceforge.net/ and >> http://developer.berlios.de/ , but these may require more red tape. >> >> Muli mentioned Bitbucket.org, and for completeness sake there's also >> http://github.com/ and http://gitorious.org/ , but these are Git-only >> (though >> Mercurial can work against a git remote). >> >> Regards, >> >> Shlomi Fish >> >> -- >> ----------------------------------------------------------------- >> Shlomi Fish http://www.shlomifish.org/ >> "The Human Hacking Field Guide" - http://shlom.in/hhfg >> >> I invented the term Object‐Oriented, and I can tell you I did not have >> C++ in >> mind. — Alan Kay (Attributed) >> >> Please reply to list if it's a mailing list post - http://shlom.in/reply. >> _______________________________________________ >> Haifux mailing list >> [email protected] >> http://hamakor.org.il/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/haifux >> > > > > -- > Orr Dunkelman, > [email protected] > > _______________________________________________ > Haifux mailing list > [email protected] > http://hamakor.org.il/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/haifux > > -- Maxim Kovgan
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