Hello, I am working on a project which I have hosted as a repository on our university's network. The repository is in my home directory.
Now, I either work in my lab at the univ. or from home. Till now I have been using my univ. computer only for svn commands (update, commit, etc.) where I had checked out a working copy. And I just rsync from my lab machine to my home machine when I want to work from home and then rsync back to update my lab machine. The rsync command I use at home is this: $> rsync -auCvze ssh ./ labmachine:~/project/ However, this way I cannot give svn commands at my home machine. It would be nice to do so though. Basically, only my lab machine is the working copy in this situation. I tried checking out a working copy at both the machines. But if I use rsync after that to sync my changes between the two machines before I am in a position to commit, rsync wants to copy over many files, including the ones I have not modified at all. What do others do in such a situation? Sorry if this is a basic question. I am relatively new to SVN. I am trying to see if there is a way such that I can use both my lab machine and home machine copies of the source code as working copies. The way I understand is that when I am in the middle of some change, I will have to commit back from home or lab in that unfinished state, update my copy at home or lab and then continue working. Is this what is commonly done in such situations? Or perhaps there is way to rsync between two working copies while I am working on an unfinished change? Hope I am clear in the query. Thanks, Regards. -- Please reply to this list only. I read this list on its corresponding newsgroup on gmane.org. Replies sent to my email address are just filtered to a folder in my mailbox and get periodically deleted without ever having been read. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]