On Tue, Sep 30, 2008 at 5:20 PM, aslak hellesoy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>wrote:
> On Tue, Sep 30, 2008 at 9:02 PM, Evan David Light > <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Subject says most of it. I'd love to use Cucumber in my project but I > need > > to be able to install it in a Rails app and by a particular version > number. > > > > You can do that with git pull and git checkout. Would it help if > detailed instructions were posted to the wiki? > That gets you whatever the latest is, which is good if you want to live on edge. I'm behind a firewall, and living on edge isn't necessarily a good option. Would it be too much to ask if you could tag the repo when you jump to a new release, like David is doing with rspec? Github lets you download a snapshot of the repo by tags, and I just build the gems from that, and toss them up into a behind-the-firewall gem server, and let everyone gem install from there. It's a bit harder with cucumber, because I'm not sure where the "released, stable" point is ... > > > I forked it and struggled with getting GitHub gems deployer to behave > > itself. > > > > Maybe a "canonical" version can be kept and updated in RubyForge > > occasionally because of occasional gem problems with GitHub? > > > > Yes, I'll probably do that soon. GitHub fails to build the gem every > time for me (not occasionally). > http://logicalawesome.lighthouseapp.com/projects/8570-github/tickets/945 > > Aslak > > > Evan > > _______________________________________________ > > rspec-users mailing list > > rspec-users@rubyforge.org > > http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/rspec-users > > > _______________________________________________ > rspec-users mailing list > rspec-users@rubyforge.org > http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/rspec-users > -- // anything worth taking seriously is worth making fun of // http://blog.devcaffeine.com/
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