Ok lets say cvs is the tool. Is it also useful for working on a file together?? Should he install cygwin to use cvs. I first thought about only giving him pdf output and having him write changes in emails, pretty akward though...
I am most concerned about ease of use and a way to both work seperately and at the same time on a file. We have tried vnc but I don't get how to share files that way. I guess with cvs the files would reside on a server and we would backup daily. I have a web server I could use I guess. I was wondering if there was something built for sound and midi or in the lists opinion is CVS the best tool out there?? Thanks Aaron On Mon, 2003-09-29 at 19:38, Rutger Hofman wrote: > Aaron wrote: > > > My main concern now is versioning and project management. > > Has anyone out there had experience with this kind of thing and could > > they recommend an application, methodology or structure for this > > project?? > > cvs is available for unixes (linux, cygwin) and also for Windows. > cvs allows concurrent versions, merging of changes from different > authors etc. An obvious limitation is that it only works on text > files -- but .tex and .ly are text files, of course. > > One can maintain the CVS repository at a shared server machine. > In this case (or in all cases?) it is best to use ssh as the underlying > remote connection engine, and set CVS_RSH=ssh. > > See, e.g: > For cvs: http://www.cvshome.org > For ssh: http://www.openssh.com or http://www.ssh.org > > Both packages are generally bundled with Linux and Cygwin (but here > you must specify OpenSSH and CVS support at configure time). > > Rutger > _______________________________________________ Lilypond-user mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mail.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user
