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Re: CVS question
From: |
Pierre Asselin |
Subject: |
Re: CVS question |
Date: |
11 Apr 2002 23:44:39 -0400 |
In <address@hidden> =?iso-8859-1?q?Nicolas=20PEZRON?= <address@hidden> writes:
>I thought that to you use CVS, you had to copy the
>source of your first version of your program and
>after, you will be able to retrieve all the versions
>of your program
More or less. You clean up your source tree of compiled objects
and other generated files and you import it into CVS. You can then
delete the sources (!) but most people get a bit nervous at this point
and prefer to tar or zip the tree into an archive before blowing it
away.
You then check out a new copy ("sandbox") from CVS and work on it
forevermore, never going close to the original source tree or its
archive.
>but, if you want to add a new file to your CVS tree,
>do you have to copy first the source of this file in
>order to be able to retrieve its versions after ?
Copy it from where? Normally you will have created the new file
right in the sandbox, since that's where you normally work. You
do need to tell CVS about the new file with the 'cvs add' command,
but that's about it. The next time you commit, the first revision
of your new file will be created in the repository.
- CVS question, Nicolas PEZRON, 2002/04/11
- Re: CVS question,
Pierre Asselin <=