You'll be happier using a distributed version control system, such as Git. I
recently switched my company to Git earlier this year and have never looked
back. So much better and less problematic managing repositories. Dead easy
to create a repository on any box and have clones on any other box.
Push-pull between them. I used to be a die-hard Subversion fan.
/TheDO/
On Thu, Sep 8, 2011 at 7:14 AM, Imaje shwiin...@googlemail.com wrote:
Hello,
I am tasking myself to get into Versions in order to improve our
workflow for our small two-man team however, I cannot get my head
around how the setup and architecture of versions and our existing
systems.
At the moment, we have a server which we work off, all the sites we
develop are kept on a local server which myself and one other access
when working on projects. These local versions are then deployed onto
our remote server.
I have been exploring Versions and also beanstalk, however I don't
want to store our sites online, I want to keep everything as local as
possible before deployment.
So in a nutshell, I am looking to use versions to help manage our
sites locally. and also to manage sites after deployment like so.
Developer (local) -- Local Server Remote
(Live site) Server
Can versions use a local repository - but (when satisfied that
development is complete) Commit the site to remote server?
I hope I'm making sense.
Many thanks for your help.
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