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Re: RES: CVS import
From: |
Geoff Beier |
Subject: |
Re: RES: CVS import |
Date: |
Thu, 15 Apr 2004 14:07:56 -0400 |
On Apr 15, 2004, at 1:34 PM, McNamee, John wrote:
<flame heat="50%">
Unfortunately, the whole world doesn't run Unix...
Unfortunately, OP did not identify his platform, so it seems reasonable
to assume (since he's asking on this list) that he's either using UNIX
or cygwin (which is the best way to run the cvshome.org version of CVS
on windows). Both of those provide a find command that works as
described. If you're not running in the cygwin environment on Windows,
I'd suggest using cvsnt along with some other way to collect files and
execute commands on them. Most of the time, I advise windows users who
are not using cygwin to get TortoiseCVS for everyday CVS use:
http://tortoisecvs.sf.net/
It's very well documented, beautifully integrates explorer, cvsnt and
ssh, and does contain the "add recursively" command you want.
Does *anyone* use the cvshome.org version of cvs on windows OUTSIDE of
cygwin as a matter of general practice? (AIUI, both wincvs and
tortoisecvs use cvsnt, and eclipse has its own cvs client, so if your
cvs use is one of those products the answer is no.) If so, what
environment do you use it in?
C:\foo\bar>find . -exec cvs add {} \;
'find' is not recognized as an internal or external command,
operable program or batch file.
What version of Windows is this? The output I get from that command
outside of the cygwin environment on a windows 2000 or xp box is:
FIND: Parameter format not correct
At any rate, what benefit does adding files recursively carry over
using "cvs import" and ignoring the vendor branch if you don't want to
use it?
Regards,
Geoff
Re: RES: CVS import, Larry Jones, 2004/04/15
Message not available