I'm apparently able to get to it now - apologies.

In the first quarter or so of the year, I tried to install both. Neither
install went very well - it is definitely not a low-maintenance task to
do either. Perhaps someone else would have better luck...

John apparently suggested trac. I've used trac before, and it's fairly
effortless to set up for multiple repos. I also think the wiki and bug
tracking functionality are also somewhat mediocre in comparison to other
alternatives. For this, however, I think it would do pretty well.

Double props on going for Subversion, though - CVS really, really sucks
in comparison.

-DMZ

On Wed, 2005-11-23 at 09:57 -0500, Angelo Bertolli wrote:
> Anant Kaushiva wrote:
> 
> >I'm not on campus and had no trouble viewing the site.
> >
> >Basically the idea is to set up our own little sourceforge-like
> >repository on campus for student projects in order to build a sense of
> >community as well as display student work to potential employers, etc.
> >
> >I think it's a great idea, but I'm not sure the server would be able to
> >handle such a load (multiple development environments). It would make a
> >good addition to some sort of student-run cluster.
> >  
> >
> I think it could be worth a try... I mean after all how many projects do 
> you really anticipate?  If there were enough I bet the school would 
> provide more funding.
> 
> I'm not sure which you would want to use, gforge or savane.  They both 
> support subversion, but savane seems to support it more natively.  I 
> havent' been able to test them both much.
> 
> Angelo
> 
> 
-- 
David Zakar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

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