Source control (VS2005 integrated, comunity approved)
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What source control would you recommend for personal use? VS2005 integration is a must, because I'm a spoiled child. Free is preferred, as this is currently only for my rare dabblings in articleable code. (moved from.. errr.. wrong forum)
We are a big screwed up dysfunctional psychotic happy family - some more screwed up, others more happy, but everybody's psychotic joint venture definition of CP
Linkify! || Fold With Us! || sighistEven I'm a big fan of subverion, I have to admit that I haven't tested Source Safe for VS2005. Marc Soleda.
... she said you are the perfect stranger she said baby let's keep it like this... Dire Straits
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Even I'm a big fan of subverion, I have to admit that I haven't tested Source Safe for VS2005. Marc Soleda.
... she said you are the perfect stranger she said baby let's keep it like this... Dire Straits
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What source control would you recommend for personal use? VS2005 integration is a must, because I'm a spoiled child. Free is preferred, as this is currently only for my rare dabblings in articleable code. (moved from.. errr.. wrong forum)
We are a big screwed up dysfunctional psychotic happy family - some more screwed up, others more happy, but everybody's psychotic joint venture definition of CP
Linkify! || Fold With Us! || sighistI really like Perforce -- it is hands down the best config management software I have used. Client and server both run on pretty much any platform you can name (Windows, UNIX/Linux, Mac, etc.), and the Visual Studio integration is excellent. For a small development team (1 to 2 devs) Perforce is free, and they also offer free licenses to open source projects. Cheers, Doug
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Now that really sounds scary :)
Rocky <>< Latest Code Blog Post: ASP.NET HttpException - Cannot use leading "..".. Latest Tech Blog Post: Getting up and running on Microsoft Windows Vista
hmm...don't know how that's scary in any way. Having nothing is a scary idea.;) Actually, it's been working as a system perfectly now since at least 1996 so it's got a proven track record. Of course I also burn cd's on a regular basis and store them offsite and all this is on top of our regular daily tape backups which are also stored offsite.
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I 2nd the Vault suggestion. Works great.
Jon Sagara When I grow up, I'm changing my name to Joe Kickass! My Site | My Blog | My Articles
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Impractical for a single developer like me.
Jon Sagara When I grow up, I'm changing my name to Joe Kickass! My Site | My Blog | My Articles
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I've had some very bad experiences with VSS integration and VS2003/2005 (it integrated so well, that detaching it from VSS desintegrated my projects several times; I needed detaching for automated builds), so from experience I wouldn't recommend it. Because my company uses VSS, I've managed to change the policy to use VSS as a stand-alone app, not integrated from VS2005 (and ever since things work rather well). Go for SubVersion. If you use Borland Developer Studio, you can use VSS from within BDS with VssConnexxion, that on the other hand works rather well and doesn't mess up your project. Microsoft should have a look at it and rework its integration with VSS. If you are using Delphi, you can also use VssConnexxion to integrate with VSS.
so you're saying Visual Source Safe is groovy as long as you don't use the Visual Studio Integration features?
"Quality Software since 1983!" http://www.smoothjazzy.com/
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What source control would you recommend for personal use? VS2005 integration is a must, because I'm a spoiled child. Free is preferred, as this is currently only for my rare dabblings in articleable code. (moved from.. errr.. wrong forum)
We are a big screwed up dysfunctional psychotic happy family - some more screwed up, others more happy, but everybody's psychotic joint venture definition of CP
Linkify! || Fold With Us! || sighistI have had a lot of success with the Perforce system. And it is free for personal/small group usage. From the Perforce website:
Licensing You may use software downloaded from Perforce for any purpose you want and for as long as you like. The Perforce Server supports only two users and five client workspaces unless used with a Perforce License. We will be happy to issue you a free Evaluation License to remove the user/workspace restrictions for a limited time.
The best part, is being able to access the server from any machine on the network or internet. You can use port forwarding and ssh tunneling to access the server through a firewall. -
What source control would you recommend for personal use? VS2005 integration is a must, because I'm a spoiled child. Free is preferred, as this is currently only for my rare dabblings in articleable code. (moved from.. errr.. wrong forum)
We are a big screwed up dysfunctional psychotic happy family - some more screwed up, others more happy, but everybody's psychotic joint venture definition of CP
Linkify! || Fold With Us! || sighist -
What source control would you recommend for personal use? VS2005 integration is a must, because I'm a spoiled child. Free is preferred, as this is currently only for my rare dabblings in articleable code. (moved from.. errr.. wrong forum)
We are a big screwed up dysfunctional psychotic happy family - some more screwed up, others more happy, but everybody's psychotic joint venture definition of CP
Linkify! || Fold With Us! || sighistPerforce (www.perforce.com) is free for up to 2 users, and is the best source control app I've used professionally. It may be a bit more complicated for the average user than some apps, but it's fast and stable (and has a great track record with professional developers).
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What source control would you recommend for personal use? VS2005 integration is a must, because I'm a spoiled child. Free is preferred, as this is currently only for my rare dabblings in articleable code. (moved from.. errr.. wrong forum)
We are a big screwed up dysfunctional psychotic happy family - some more screwed up, others more happy, but everybody's psychotic joint venture definition of CP
Linkify! || Fold With Us! || sighistWe recently switched from SourceGear Vault, which is an excellent replacement for Visual SourceSafe (this program is a no-no!) and integrates well within VS2005. Our development team is distributed around Australia, and we were using SSL to access the Vault. However, source control integration in Visual Studio we found gets in the way - we find the paradigm in Subversion much more palatable. Also as it is Open Source if we add a new developer we don't need to worry about license costs. Tortoise works extremely well and its diff/merge tools are the best I've seen. We've been much more productive with Subversion. There are a few Visual Studio integration tools for it, but I've actually appreciated not having source control in Visual Studio.
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What source control would you recommend for personal use? VS2005 integration is a must, because I'm a spoiled child. Free is preferred, as this is currently only for my rare dabblings in articleable code. (moved from.. errr.. wrong forum)
We are a big screwed up dysfunctional psychotic happy family - some more screwed up, others more happy, but everybody's psychotic joint venture definition of CP
Linkify! || Fold With Us! || sighistSourceGear Vault is free for a one developer situation. I've used it for about three years at home. Works good -- simple, etc... Timothy Lee Russell www.anatone.net
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hmm...don't know how that's scary in any way. Having nothing is a scary idea.;) Actually, it's been working as a system perfectly now since at least 1996 so it's got a proven track record. Of course I also burn cd's on a regular basis and store them offsite and all this is on top of our regular daily tape backups which are also stored offsite.
John Cardinal wrote:
hmm...don't know how that's scary in any way. Having nothing is a scary idea.
I think the scary part is the number of zips. For some reason I was born with the packritis (the kind of person that should never attend a yard sale). I have keep copies of files and add them to larger zips which down the road I throw into even larger ones and before you know it, I forgot what all is even in them but have a huge chuck of backup space devoted to those files :)
John Cardinal wrote:
regular daily tape backups which are also stored offsite.
Wow, did not know a lot of people were still using tape systems. I won one in 2002 (I think it was) where was 66 GB (big for back then), but only used it a couple times as the tape was spendy and it required a SCSI interface, which I had to borrow one.
Rocky <>< Latest Code Blog Post: ASP.NET HttpException - Cannot use leading "..".. Latest Tech Blog Post: Getting up and running on Microsoft Windows Vista