Have we thought about projects related to quality, e.g., performance
regression test framework and tests; documentation; multi-server
testing; website enhancements; monotone public hosting; etc.?
Adding projects like this may enable people who are interested in
Monotone but do not have the
Btw... what do you mean with public hosting?
Sourceforge offers CVS hosting; gna.org offers Arch, Subversion, and CVS
hosting.
So enabling one of these sites to offer Monotone hosting. I would
imagine that the process of setting this up could drive some feature
development in Monotone as
See http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/monotone-devel/2006-01/msg00123.html
Peter Simons wrote:
Nathaniel Smith writes:
Monotone 0.26pre1 has been released.
I tried to connect to venge.net to get the revision tree,
but the port seems to be blacklisted:
| $ telnet venge.net 5253
| Trying
Matthew A. Nicholson wrote:
Monotone contains a diff command. Should it contain a patch command
as well? The reason I suggest this is because if you have a diff that
monotone has generated, and it contains information about file renames
(which I think diffs can support). patch applies the
I don't have any particular plans to implement it myself, and
writing my own crypto protocol makes me Very Very Nervous. And SSL
and SSH libraries seem to be uniformly horrid.
I haven't looked at any SSH ones, but OpenSSL doesn't seem too
horrible---I'd guess it's not much more horrible
+1. I think lua is a good place to put policy (sort of a vague heuristic).
I think yet another option is not a good idea. You want to avoid option
explosion for usability and backwards compatibility, especially for
boundary cases.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
IMHO this should be a lua hook.
Hi,
I have been a happy user of monotone since 0.13 or so. I use it daily
to manage a small repository of files. I compiled a list of some
things that I think could make monotone better.
monotone log
I have a bunch of requests for monotone log. Note that I am somewhat
colored by my previous