Date: Tue, 30 May 2006 01:35:48 -0400 From: "N.J. Thomas" <njt@ayvali.org> To: Kyrre Nygard <kyrreny@broadpark.no> Cc: questions@freebsd.org Subject: Re: Sharing /usr/local/www Message-ID: <20060530053548.GB3413@ayvali.org> In-Reply-To: <7.0.1.0.2.20060527111043.022bfb40@broadpark.no> References: <7.0.1.0.2.20060527102456.022a6fb0@broadpark.no> <200605270046.04333.beech@alaskaparadise.com> <7.0.1.0.2.20060527111043.022bfb40@broadpark.no>
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* Kyrre Nygard <kyrreny@broadpark.no> [2006-05-27 11:12:19 +0200]: > > > I have a team of designers working on web 2.0 like sites. > > > > > > I have added them all to this box, now I'm wondering what's the > > > most convenient way of giving them all access to /usr/local/www? > > > CVS is your friend. > > Yeah I hear a lot of people like CVS. > > But I fail to realize how it might assist me though. Kyrre, CVS is a version control tool. A version control tool manages changes to information, sometimes among multiple people. It sounds like to me like you really need a version control tool for what you want to do. CVS is a good choice for this, Subversion is better. Yes, there might be scripts that accomplish this, but most (good) version control tools will: - allow you to manage changes to data over time - remember every change ever made to your data, allowing you to recover older versions, or see the history of how it changed - allow access across networks, which allows it to be used by people on different computers - give you the ability for various people to modify and manage (i.e. collaborate on) the same set of data from their respective locations (The above was paraphrased from "Version Control with Subversion", by Collins-Sussman, Fitzpatrick, and Pilato, v1.2, Ch 1.) You will run into this problem over and over again. Do yourself a favor and learn how to use a good version control system now, or else you will find yourself doomed to reinvent it, poorly. (Apologies to H. Spencer.) Thomas -- N.J. Thomas njt@ayvali.org Etiamsi occiderit me, in ipso sperabo
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