Ryan Speed wrote: ----------------->>>> Hmm, I wouldn't really consider CVS overkill for anything, I use it for personal use, and it's included with all the major distros (I would assume). Why not take the time to install it, you'd be giving yourself the ability to scale as large as you want in the future, with basically no configuration changes. ----------------->>>>
Cameron Simpson wrote: ----------------->>>> Um, why? I have my own CVS for my own code. It's no hassle at all. And much easier to use than RCS. ----------------->>>> OK on your all advise I installed cvs and went to the website and got the manual and last weekend read the 176+ pages. Today I setup my repository, edited my etc files, restarted the daemons, setup the client systems with a CVSROOT env variable, logged in to set the .cvspass file, and started importing my code projects and documents. That last step took most of the morning. Then this afternoon, I started working on a checked out project. I updated and committed it and I have to say that it was fairly straight forward. I then backed up my all the old files and removed them from my disks. I'm a cvs man now...! Thanks for the direction! Makes my life much easier now. _______________________________________________ Redhat-list mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] https://listman.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list