Christian Weisgerber writes:
> I've mostly switched to Got for all of OpenBSD, and treat CVS as
> write-only. From the format of the patches flying around, it's
> obvious that there are a number of committers that use Got or Git.
>
>> [0] https://github.com/openbsd/ports
>
> https://codeberg.org/
Johannes Thyssen Tishman:
> Subject says it all. I'm wondering if using the git conversion
> of the ports tree[0] is regarded as a good alternative to CVS for
> working with ports.
If you are more comfortable with Got[1] or Git, by all means use
them. sthen@ has already explained the limits of t
Thanks for the offer Niklas. I mainly only need -current to maintain a couple
of ports though, so no need. Thank you anyways.
2024-01-30T23:35:00Z Niklas Hallqvist :
>
> On 2024-01-31 00:20, Stuart Henderson wrote:
>> On 2024/01/30 22:58, Johannes Thyssen Tishman wrote:
>>> Subject says it al
2024-01-30T23:20:52Z Stuart Henderson :
> On 2024/01/30 22:58, Johannes Thyssen Tishman wrote:
>> Subject says it all. I'm wondering if using the git conversion of the ports
>> tree[0] is regarded as a good alternative to CVS for working with ports. Are
>> the conversion updates frequent enough
On 2024-01-31 00:20, Stuart Henderson wrote:
On 2024/01/30 22:58, Johannes Thyssen Tishman wrote:
Subject says it all. I'm wondering if using the git conversion of the ports
tree[0] is regarded as a good alternative to CVS for working with ports. Are
the conversion updates frequent enough to
On 2024/01/30 22:58, Johannes Thyssen Tishman wrote:
> Subject says it all. I'm wondering if using the git conversion of the ports
> tree[0] is regarded as a good alternative to CVS for working with ports. Are
> the conversion updates frequent enough to not cause any issues? Do any of you
> port
Subject says it all. I'm wondering if using the git conversion of the ports
tree[0] is regarded as a good alternative to CVS for working with ports. Are
the conversion updates frequent enough to not cause any issues? Do any of you
porters use it instead of CVS? Any issues?
For the record, I've