Tony,
Thanks for the reply, but I dont think that's the problem, here is the
actual text I type on the server NT box (in an MS-DOS window):
Microsoft(R) Windows NT(TM)
(C) Copyright 1985-1996 Microsoft Corp.
C:\users>cvs -d :ntserver:ntsrvr01:c:\pserver\cvsroot history
C:\users>cvs -d :local:c:\pserver\cvsroot history
O 04/06 20:10 +0000 Administrator CVSROOT =CVSROOT= <remote>/*
O 04/09 03:19 +0000 Administrator menus =menus= <remote>/*
C:\users>
Now surely if it has anything to do with my current directory or some such
thing, then the :ntserver: and :local: versions would give similar results
when executed directly after one another? Of course I have no idea what the
current directory of the server process is...
BTW the directory c:\users is NOT a CVS directory ...
I certainly can't say I know the details of CVS that well, so I could be
missing the obvious....
I haven't tried :pserver: yet, but I really enjoy the convenience of
:ntserver: and not having to cvs logon.
Any further assistance will be most appreciated!
Regards,
Arthur
> I just tried it with pserver and ntserver mode and it produces gobs of
> output here... Are
> you sure it's using the cvsroot you expect (it will pick up and CVS/Root
> files off the current
> directory first)?
>
> Tony
>