On Sat, Jan 14, 2006 at 01:40:51AM -0800, Shawn Wilton wrote: > Peter, you'll be just fine. Yes, you can have more than one project in a > repo. > > I personally have *everything* in SVN. I keep my CV in there, all my > documents in the "My Docs" folder on windows. I keep all my development > materials in there. I mean I have **gigs** worth of material in SVN repos. > Right now my dev directory is 1.5 gigs in size. I also have about 5 gigs > worth of photos in another repo. That's great news! Sounds just like how I'd probably set things up. > What you would want to do is possibly have multiple repos for projects that > different people will have access to. But I would say the same of CVS. > Just makes the permissions issue a little easier. Though you can do > multiple projects and permissions, etc. just fine with one repo. Sounds about right. Fine in my case, all my projects are single developer for now. Arts school is not known for it's technical collaborations... > I don't know if it will work in your case or not. Ideally you have one > location as a repo, and push and pull from it as you need. You don't > usually copy the repo from location to location...Suppose you could do it > that way though. TortoiseSVN gives you the option of creating a local > repo. So I would say sure, though I've never tried it. I've always > uploaded all my materials to my server with RAID5 on it. You do NOT need > Apache to use SVN. There just happens to be an apache module that makes SVN > use "easier". Thanks for your help, I think I'll take a close look at the subversion docs sometime, see exactly how I can go about setting that up. Of course it may well be the case that this sort of local archive that I want is a new feature, don't remember hearing about it before, but we'll see. And anyway, it's opensource, and I'm somewhat of a programmer! -- pete@petertodd.ca http://www.petertodd.ca -- http://www.piclist.com PIC/SX FAQ & list archive View/change your membership options at http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/piclist