Thanks.

As to sharing apps: I'm all for open-sourcing what I'm working on, and either sharing it as a sample (I used the "accountant" sample as a base) or a separate directory in the tree. I guess this means I'll have to find out how to make SVN work over the Internet. So far, I've only used it on local drives as a backup/versioning tool.


On 7/9/06, John Hurliman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Tom Wilson wrote:
> Can you set up a separate repository with its own users and
> permissions? This way, you could maintain one set of permissions on
> the library and let application developers have separate permissions.

I could, but this would require either registering a new project at gna
or using my own repository at svn.jhurliman.org (where libsecondlife
used to be hosted). It's easier to just use a single svn tree; if
someone makes a mistake it's easy enough to rollback, and if someone is
hacking away on the libsecondlife-cs folder when they shouldn't be they
won't be a developer for long.

>
> As an aside, does anybody know of a PHP or CGI based SVN server? My
> hosting company runs Linux servers with PHP and CGI, and I was hoping
> I could host a repository on my web space for my own projects.
>
>
I'm not aware of a full subversion implementation in PHP or Perl,
generally it's run as either an apache module or a standalone app. There
are PHP web interfaces for it, but you would probably need your own
server or a hosting provider that supported subversion or running your
own daemons to host a repository.

John

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Tom Wilson
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KI6ABZ
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