Then how does CVS know which box's repository I am trying to access?
I have CVS istalled on box A and B.
I would telnet into Box B.
Login to CVS Server on Box A: /usr/local/bin/cvs -d
:pserver:veronica@boxA:/usr/local/repos_on_A login
To this point it has been successful.
However, if I try to check out a module, I ran into problems.
/usr/local/bin/cvs -d co /usr/local/repos_on_A/myproj (failed)
/usr/local/bin/cvs -d co repos_on_A/myproj (failed)
It appears that instead of looking for /usr/local/repos_on_A/myproj on
Box A, it looked for the repository on box B. When it cannot find it,
CVS gave me errors.
--- Larry Jones <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Veronica Lee writes:
> >
> > Do we need to install CVS Server on box B as well to use it as a
> > client?
> > Or is there any other tool we need as a CVS client in UNIX.
>
> You need *some* kind of CVS client -- the way it's typically built,
> the
> Unix version of CVS is a client, a server, and a stand-alone CVS all
> in
> one, so you can use it as a client without installing it as a server.
>
> There are also a number of GUI clients you can use -- see
> www.cvshome.org for details.
>
> -Larry Jones
>
> Isn't it sad how some people's grip on their lives is so precarious
> that they'll embrace any preposterous delusion rather than face an
> occasional bleak truth? -- Calvin
=====
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veronica lee [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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"Kindness comes from a place in the heart." ~Flavia
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