Subversion can do that on commit. You have a subversion server, and it accepts the commit, and then it has a post-commit script, that will update the working copy that the test server serves.

This happens virtually instantly. I cannot tell you how valuable a system like subversion is. Even if for just one guy, but if you have multiple people working on code, it is necessary.

--

Robert Garcia
President - BigHead Technology
VP Application Development - eventpix.com
13653 West Park Dr
Magalia, Ca 95954
ph: 530.645.4040 x222 fax: 530.645.4040
[EMAIL PROTECTED] - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://bighead.net/ - http://eventpix.com/

On Nov 13, 2006, at 5:45 PM, Wayne Irvine wrote:

Robert Garcia at [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

however, if you mount the server through the new tiger NETWORK icon,
it will have a very different path,

Cheers. I'll look into that. May well be the problem.

You will avoid a lot of headaches by
editing locally and saving to server.

The server in question is in the next room. It is the dev server. So I save
to it and test immediately.

Saving locally and then having to move the file to the server just adds another step. I am presently doing this but it is a pain in the but for debugging. I often save and forget to move the file before testing. It is
exactly this I am trying to avoid.

Wayne Irvine


                  Byte Services Pty Ltd
               http://www.byteserve.com.au/
                  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
   Ph 02 9960 6099   Mob 0409 960 609   Fax 02 9960 6088


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