>> BinĂ¡ris <[email protected]> wrote: > --===============1254137196686846447== > Content-Type: multipart/alternative; boundary=000e0cd5983ca588a1049da3585b > > --000e0cd5983ca588a1049da3585b > Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 > Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable > > Hi, > > I have just installed TortoiseSVN on my machine, and I am trying to > understand it from documentation. > I need it for > -- restoring the older versions of my misdeveloped programs (after some sad > experiences) > -- making diffs/patches to upload onto SF > -- update Pywikipedia (by this time I used nightlies for this purpose) > > As far as I understand, I need an own repository here for the first goal. I > thought I would synchronize my working copy (which should be the active > pywikibot) with my local repository first and then update it from Pywiki > repository. > > Is this a good concept? > What will happen to the rev numbers this way? Will they confuse? > Or how do you solve this (those who develop and not only use the bot)?
There is a "svnsync" utility which allows you to keep a full local copy of the repository. There is also "svk" utility to have a kind of peer-to-peer model in SVN (but I never used it). I am using svnsync to have a local copy of the FreeBSD source tree repository. I don't have a commit right there, so it's not a problem. But actually I never commit to my local repository either, I use it only to have my svn diffs, svn logs etc. fast and when I'm off-line. //Marcin _______________________________________________ Pywikipedia-l mailing list [email protected] https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/pywikipedia-l
