Yes, I almost wrote to say you might be more interested in a setup
that subversion calls "vendor branches". The script to copy from a subversion repository to your web directory should be pretty easy, see "svn export". You don't need a subversion server to run that, but you can just run it on your local files.
On Thu, 1 Jun 2006, Eric Stadtherr wrote:
Phil,
You probably don't want to have your SVN working copy in your web space. It forces your webserver to deal with the subversion files in the .svn directories, and potentially opens you up to breaking your live server when playing around with something. I keep my working copy in a development location (~/dev/roundcube), and I can do updates, merges, etc. from there. When I want to deploy my working copy, I wrote a little script that copies everything over to the web space (/Library/WebServer/Documents/roundcube) while excluding the .svn directories, backup files, temporary files, etc., and then sets the permissions to the www user. Anyone care to see the script?
On Thu, 1 Jun 2006 15:17:01 -0500, phil wrote:
On Thu, 1 Jun 2006 14:53:36 -0400 (EDT), Jon Daley roundcube@jon.limedaley.com wrote:
On Thu, 1 Jun 2006, phil wrote:
On Thu, 1 Jun 2006 14:12:49 -0400 (EDT), Jon Daley
roundcube@jon.limedaley.com wrote:
Why not "svn update"? It takes puts less bandwidth on both servers, and runs much quicker.
So sure, it would remove the need to press 'p' on the first SVN run,
since it wouldn't be using https, but I was going by the RC Wiki page:
No. It uses the same URL as the first run (and you still have to do a 'svn checkout' once), but since you already checked it out once, it doesn't have to get every file, but instead just the stuff that has changed since your last update.
Any reason to use the https way vs a basic svn up?
Hopefully this isn't an insult, but have you used subversion before? I don't understand the question.
no, not insulted at all. I've used CVS for years, and I've used SVN from my days with Hula a year or so back, but yeah, looking at my script for that it just did a 'svn up' to get the latest code before the build. I guess what I did was looked up the 'dev' way to do it, (wiki link) then did it that way, saw that it put it in ./trunk/roundcubemail and I knew I didn't want ${WEB_ROOT}/trunk/roundcubemail - I wanted ${WEB_ROOT}/roundcubemail and that's why I have the full checkout each time and the mv commands. That's really kinda dumb though no reason in taxing the server for all the files each time, lemme read up on svn, maybe you can set a target dir to put the files for checkout/update? Thanks for the feedback, I've never written a script and left it alone for long. P -- http://fak3r.com - you don't have to kick it
Jon Daley http://jon.limedaley.com/
Things should be made as simple as possible, but no simpler. -- Albert Einstein