One more comment - I mentioned in my instructions below that you should
click on the RW button to get read/write access. The HTTP button will also
give you read/write access to the repo and may present a better access
mechanism for you. In this case, the URLs are formatted as follows:

 

https://svn.code.sf.net/p/openslp/code/trunk openslp-code

 

so you can use this command to check out your work area

 

svn checkout --username=sfuserid
https://svn.code.sf.net/p/openslp/code/trunk openslp-code

 

Using the HTTPS protocol can allow subversion to save your password locally
(in your ~/.subversion config directory). The ssh+svn requires that you
management passwords using a local agent and private key. Either way works,
but the https option may be easier to get going on if you're not an ssh
expert.

 

John

 

From: John Calcote [mailto:john.calc...@gmail.com] 
Sent: Wednesday, November 14, 2012 11:30 AM
To: OpenSLP Devel Mailing List
Subject: RE: SourceForge.net site update in progress...

 

The import has completed - you may check out a work area using the new URLs
anytime now. The current status is "Analyzing", but it's okay to check out
while in this state.

 

From: John Calcote [mailto:john.calc...@gmail.com] 
Sent: Wednesday, November 14, 2012 11:13 AM
To: OpenSLP Devel Mailing List (openslp-devel@lists.sourceforge.net)
Subject: SourceForge.net site update in progress...

 

OpenSLP developers,

 

I have two issues to bring up this morning.

 

OpenSLP Site Update

 

While out on sf.net today, I noticed that there was a site update available
to which project admins must "opt in". I carefully read the documentation
about the update to ensure that it would have no negative impact on our
project or developers, but apparently I missed the part where the
repositories are updated to new locations and directory structures. Thus
(and I apologize for any inconvenience this may cause) you will need to
check out a new work area using the new svn repository locations before
committing any more work to the repo. You can find the new repo locations
listed on this page:

 

    https://sourceforge.net/p/openslp/code/

 

Click the "RW" button to ensure you're using the URL that will grant you
read/write access. The new location follows this pattern (where sfuserid is
your sourceforge user id):

 

    ssh://sfuse...@svn.code.sf.net/p/openslp/code/trunk openslp-code

 

Thus, you can use the following command to get your new work area:

 

    svn checkout --username=sfuserid
svn+ssh://sfuse...@svn.code.sf.net/p/openslp/code/trunk openslp-code

 

The repo is currently updating, so please wait till the import has completed
before checking out your new work areas. The import status is available at
the top of the page on the link above.

 

Distributed Version Control

 

Now on to the next topic: I'm considering switching to a distributed version
control system (DVCS) like git or mercurial. These tools are nearly
identical, so I'm not particularly concerned which one we use, but since
I've started using a DVCS professionally a couple of years ago, I've begun
to wonder why anyone stays with centralized VCS systems like CVS or
Subversion anymore. The mercurial patch queue features alone are worth the
switch. 

 

My only concern, at this point, is that some of you may not be familiar or
comfortable with DVCS's because your work experience hasn't taken you in
that direction yet. So I'll leave it up to you - let's take a vote and see
if we're willing and able to switch over to a DVCS, and which one we would
prefer. My vote is:

 

    +1/mercurial

 

I have to tell you that, while I don't mind using git, there are a couple of
reasons I prefer mercurial: 1) I've been using mercurial so I understand it
completely, and 2) mercurial is written in python, so it has none of the
(Windows) portability issues associated with git (Cygwin/msys, etc).

 

John

 

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