Ralf Corsepius <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On Wed, 2007-09-19 at 21:01 -0700, Russ Allbery wrote:

>> I think in practice adoption drives portability more than the other way
>> around.  I don't think CVS became popular because it was portable;

> Well, I think it became popular, because it had been and still IS lean,
> simple to use/administrate and matches the demands of most projects.

I'm fairly certain that's not the case.  The primary advantage of CVS that
got people to switch to it was that it did considerably more than RCS and
had considerably more available administrative features and supported
multiuser development (in other words, was much fatter and was much more
complex to use, but did more).

As soon as something came along that was reasonably polished, did even
more, and was still free software, CVS started declining fast.  A lot of
projects had a love/hate relationship with CVS long before there even was
a replacement, and some free software projects (Perl, for instance) even
went with proprietary systems because CVS was so limited.  It's almost
impossible to find new projects these days that start with CVS instead of
at least Subversion.

-- 
Russ Allbery ([EMAIL PROTECTED])             <http://www.eyrie.org/~eagle/>


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