On Wed, 4 May 2005, Joshua D. Drake wrote: > > Just how many incidents where people change the wrong files do you except. > > Maybe it's just easier to handle one such case every third year than to > > set up some system to prevent it. > > The number of incidents isn't the issue, the fact that it could happen > at all is. > > This isn't a web browser.
Du you have anything against browsers? :-) > This is a system that companies, very - very big companies rely on. We > must have a controlled, documented process for comitters. And? If you tell someone he/she is just allowed to commit in the pl/foo subproject then that's probably more then enough. The nice thing with cvs is that old things are not lost and all the commits are sent out on a mailinglist. I don't see how this is any different just because some very - very big companies are involved. If it's easy to do, fine. I just don't see it as a very important thing. Anyway. I think it's a good thing that postgresql do as little as possible and stuff that can be handled separately are. -- /Dennis Björklund ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 3: if posting/reading through Usenet, please send an appropriate subscribe-nomail command to [EMAIL PROTECTED] so that your message can get through to the mailing list cleanly