I'm rather new to fossil, but I've been using different VCS for almost 10
years.
I strongly recommend having a copy of the repository on each
station. Considering that disk space is cheap and the repo is small, maybe
less than 100M.
Furthermore you don't have a single point of failure on several
Hello,
I tried to create an event for a date different than the one given in the form,
and it looks like it does not care on the value of the date field.
I see the same editing an event. Does anybody see the same?
I'm using Fossil version [1d93222627] 2011-03-01.
Thank you,
Lluís.
Hello again,
After a quick glance in the code it looks like one sets cert:host
to the client certificate one wishes to use against server host.
But how does one actually set this value?
fossil set ... yields the error that there's no such setting
cert:blah.com, which I guess is true.
At the moment the way I start a shared repo, is to create it on the server
and then clone the shared repo to a local copy.
However, it is more useful to be able to do this the other way round, that
is to start a repo locally (perhaps when you are offline) and later upload /
sync this with a
On Mon, Mar 14, 2011 at 4:12 PM, David Bovill da...@architex.tv wrote:
At the moment the way I start a shared repo, is to create it on the server
and then clone the shared repo to a local copy.
However, it is more useful to be able to do this the other way round, that
is to start a repo
I do the following for all our published repositories:
1. Create the repositories offline
2. Add users, Adjust Ticket Pull-downs, mark which files are binary, ...
overhead stuff
3. Copy the finished repository to our server
4. Verify the CGI scripts are correct
5. Mail out the URL to the teams
While it is easiest to just copy the repository file to the sever, it
is also possible to run the clone command on the serve, giving it a
URL to your local machine.
On Mon, Mar 14, 2011 at 4:12 PM, David Bovill da...@architex.tv wrote:
However, it is more useful to be able to do this the other
On Sun, Mar 13, 2011 at 5:46 PM, tr...@tekwissusa.com wrote:
I’d like to setup fossil for a very small in-house team (1 to 3 people).
There’s no need ever for having outside access, everything is private,
firewalled and trusted. So I was wondering if I can create a repository on a
file
I find the horizontal menu link Logout to be confusing. When I clicked on
it, I expected to be logged out but apparently not. Rather it redirects to
a page where I can actually log out (or log in), but also where I can change
my password.
The latter (changing my password) was what I was really
On Mar 14, 2011, at 8:59 PM, Jan Danielsson wrote:
After a quick glance in the code it looks like one sets cert:host
to the client certificate one wishes to use against server host.
But how does one actually set this value?
fossil set ... yields the error that there's no such
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