Using FSIS, I'm finding that FLAs are committing much quicker than they
should with my current upstream, which leads me to think it is performing
some sort of binary patch and uploading that. I may be wrong but if it is
that's cool because it saves disk space and commit time! :)

Richard

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Aral Balkan
Sent: 03 November 2005 04:41
To: Open Source Flash Mailing List
Subject: Re: [osflash] What happens to a fla if you upload it to your server
with SVN?

Hi Mani,

 From my experience, the Berkeley DB system is prone to issues (that's why
we only offer the file system option at SourceSecure nowadays). SVN has no
issues with FLAs but make sure your FLA is not open in Flash if the
possibility exists that someone else might have changed it (ie., if you get
a conflict and it's locked in Flash weird things can happen.) Otherwise, you
can't do a *meaningful* diff of FLAs (unless someone has come out with an
FLA-aware diff tool that I'm not aware of -- I know there was some work on
this...) At the end of the day, I treat FLAs as high-risk and try to keep as
much out of them as possible (Flex makes this very easy) :)

Take care,
Aral

Manuel Saint-Victor wrote:

> Thanks, I appreciate the feedback.  I am in the pocess of trying to 
> pull a whole lot of files that got damaged from my SVN.
>
> Mani

<snip>

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