Hi Ryan, Thanks for your valuable suggestion.. Can you provide Software and installation/Setup guide documents?
It would be help to setup and meet my requirement. On 1/23/12, Ryan Schmidt <subversion-20...@ryandesign.com> wrote: > On Jan 22, 2012, at 23:42, sureshkumar nandakumar wrote: > >> I hope currently we don’t have "Multisite" perception in Subversion. >> In earlier we had a discussion with CollabNet and Windisco team. >> Windisco team have a solution with Multisite concept. I am sure about >> Subversion other support. >> >> Can anyone suggest me, whether Multisite Concept is incorporated with >> Subversion or not. >> Our clients are working in different countries, it would be great if >> we have Multisite solution. > > Subversion works on the idea of a single master repository. You can host it > wherever you like -- perhaps the site where most of your developers are > located, or the site with the fastest Internet connectivity -- but there is > only one of them. > > You can additionally configure as many read-only slaves as you want. For > example you could have a read-only slave at each site, other than the site > where you have the master. > > The slaves can be configured to proxy write requests back to the master. > Users at each site would then connect to the server at their site, and any > read operations (like checking out, or looking at the log) would be fast. > Write operations (like committing) will take a longer for those sites that > have the slave copies and not the master. > > The concept of multiple master repositories is a special thing that the > people at the WANdisco company have developed. You can pay them lots of > money to use that software, and they will probably tell you many reasons why > you need it. I recommend trying a normal Subversion setup, with a single > master server (and if desired any number of slave servers) first, since the > software to do that is free. > > > >