Hi Sidney, Thks for the detailed description. 25 years ago at university I learned C, Assember, Fortran, Cobol, HPUX... But later I was never a programmer. Today I'm using most time Shell Script or Perl. I don't nedd more as a SysAdmin I have no experience wit any version control system and it would be not so easy create a C program for "Hello World" without help from Google.
Greetings Frank 2017-06-22 6:26 GMT+02:00 Sidney Markowitz <[email protected]>: > Frank Urban wrote on 22/06/17 8:35 AM: > > So "committer" is the allowed access level for a sysadmin? > > When I translate committer to German and than the translation back to > > English I will get "offender" > > My attempt at dictionary lookup seems to have either "sich verpflichten" or > "anvertrauen" as the better translation of "commit". > > I also looked up some documentation that comes in both English and German > and > saw that where the English one talks about committing with svn the German > version uses "checking in" as in "da du jemanden brauchst, der zum > einchecken > berechtigt ist" which could be in English "since you need someone with > commit > access". > > We use subversion (svn) as our version control system. The svn command to > check a file change into the system is "svn commit". People on our project > who > have the access right to commit files are called "committers". If you are > going to do sysadmin work on our project you will have to have the ability > to > commit files in our svn repository. > > I do have a concern that not being familiar with the word "commit" > indicates > that you aren't familiar with using svn, as that is the version control > system > we use. Do you have experience with using any version control systems? > > Sidney >
