Hey Martin, et al.,

I hope you had a wonderful holiday.

As for Subversion, I think I'm in the "Why fix it if it isn't broke" camp
that Nick mentioned in his previous reponse.

I really don't think we have any resources to put on this, and I'm very
happy with CVS and my WinCVS client that I don't really see any need to
switch.

If we were experiencing problems with CVS or we desperately needed some
feature in Subversion that doesn't exist in CVS I think this would be more
of an issue.

Just my $0.02. Of course with the U.S. Dollar being at an all time low
verse the Euro, I guess my 2 cents doesn't go as far as it used to! :-)

--Keith

> Hello,
>
> is there already any plan to switch from CVS as source code repository to
> the successor "Subversion"?
> I think Subversion has now become quite stable, and we could take
> advantage of reworked new tool. Here you can read about all the new
> features compared to CVS:
> http://subversion.tigris.org/
>
> There exists a python script "cvs2svn", which makes the conversion of the
> CVS repository quite easy. I shortly did this transition with two CVS
> repos,
> and found now problems. The complete history is preserved, and even tags
> and branches are available after.
>
> On the client side there are available several different SVN clients.
> First of all there is the standard command line client. For integrated
> Java development there is Eclipse plugin called "Subclipse". And there
> is also a Explorer interface for MS Windows named "TortoiseSVN".
>
> If there is interest, I could help in setting up the SVN server.
>
> Regards,
>
>    Martin
>
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