# [EMAIL PROTECTED] / 2004-01-08 18:33:40 +1100: > On Wed, Jan 07, 2004 at 09:08:38PM +0100, Roman Neuhauser wrote: > > Limitations of CVS don't exactly help either. The fact that you need > > direct access to the repository to be able to copy a tree with > > history (repocopy) as opposed to this operation being part of the > > interface[1], which means being lucky enough to find a committer, > > and get them commit the stuff within the blink of an eye ports is > > open, further constrains people's ability to work on FreeBSD with > > some satisfaction. > > I'm not sure what is meant by this paragraph. CVS doesn't support > renaming files or directories - which can be a nuisance. As used > within the Project, "repocopy" means manually copying parts of the > repository to simulate file/directory duplication or renaming. This > ability is restricted to a very small subset of committers - normal > committers have to request repocopies as do non-committers.
I somewhat lumped two things together there: * general port updates from lot of people going through a handful of committers, which on one hand helps QA by adding eye balls, but OTOH slows the process down. * repocopies go through a fraction of the abovementioned handful Now, I'm by no means advocating everybody should get ssh login on [dnp]cvs.freebsd.org; I just can't wait for the day when FreeBSD uses a SCM that handles tags and branches efficiently (so that people can freely create branches of areas they hack), that has permissions model with file- or directory-level granularity (so that people can be granted commit e. g. in /ports/x11-wm/openbox and nowhere else), etc. -- If you cc me or remove the list(s) completely I'll most likely ignore your message. see http://www.eyrie.org./~eagle/faqs/questions.html _______________________________________________ [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-hackers To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"