On Sunday 26 October 2003 03:22 pm, Rodolfo Schulz de Lima wrote: > For instance, is kind of interesting and educative to > have all releases of linux kernel since linux-0.01 in a CVS repository so > you can see how the kernel evolved through time.
What you've learned the hard way is that CVS vendor support is pretty limited. But the good news is that it doesn't look like what you're trying to do is all that hard with normal CVS. Instead of trying to "cvs import" each release, try just checking the updated code in to CVS. Tag it where tags make sense, branch it where branches make sense, etc. The one thing that the vendor support does that is interesting is helping you reconcile your changes to the vendor's code. But you don't seem to need that, so the easiest answer may just be "don't use it." -- Ross A. Patterson Chief Technology Officer CatchFIRE Systems, Inc. 5885 Trinity Parkway, Suite 220 Centreville, VA 20120 (703) 563-4164 _______________________________________________ Info-cvs mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mail.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/info-cvs
