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SVN Admin Client

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  • M Member 96

    Since when should a lowly network admin have *any* say over what the developers want and need? Their job is to facilitate your job, not the other way around. Someone there in management needs to get their priorities straight and you developers need to put your feet down collectively or next time it will be something else even more silly. Subversion is a great source control system and from what I've read probably the best source control system, would you really risk your source code with something lesser just to satisfy the whims of a 2 bit network tech who can be replaced in the blink of an eye?


    "It's so simple to be wise. Just think of something stupid to say and then don't say it." -Sam Levenson

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    Paul Conrad
    wrote on last edited by
    #8

    John C wrote:

    should a lowly network admin have *any* say over what the developers want and need?

    Absolutely not, they are not the key decision maker in the IT project. They are only to administer the network to keep things flowing.

    "The clue train passed his station without stopping." - John Simmons / outlaw programmer "Real programmers just throw a bunch of 1s and 0s at the computer to see what sticks" - Pete O'Hanlon

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    • M Member 96

      shiftedbitmonkey wrote:

      But thanks for the input without answering my question

      :laugh: I did, I was just thinking of the bigger picture is all. A network admin who desires graphical tools to manage things is a very scary thought indeed.


      "It's so simple to be wise. Just think of something stupid to say and then don't say it." -Sam Levenson

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      Paul Conrad
      wrote on last edited by
      #9

      John C wrote:

      network admin who desires graphical tools to manage things is a very scary thought indeed.

      Yes, indeed a very scary thought :rolleyes:

      "The clue train passed his station without stopping." - John Simmons / outlaw programmer "Real programmers just throw a bunch of 1s and 0s at the computer to see what sticks" - Pete O'Hanlon

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      • S shiftedbitmonkey

        Hello y'all, My first post, I hope this is the correct forum.. oh well, I'm sure you'll let me know if it isn't. Our network admin is suggesting we need to convert to a commercial scm for the admin capabilities and doesn't think SVN is up to the task. We the dev team, would like to stay on svn. So, I'm looking for suggestions for a decent gui admin client that can handle replication and repository restoration from backups in an intuitive manner. It can be either for Linux or Windows, the server is linux and we have Mac, Linux, and Windows client machines. Any and all suggestions are welcome, even if its just to flame me for being new. :) Thanks, bitshiftedmonkey

        I've heard more said about less.

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        Yusuf
        wrote on last edited by
        #10

        I've used this in the past to compare various scm tools. On personal side, i've worked in places where decent scm never has been a tool-of-the-craftman. (PVCS, VSS ...) :(

        shiftedbitmonkey wrote:

        Any and all suggestions are welcome, even if its just to flame me for being new.

        I never seen any one being flamed just because they are *new*. what torchs the posters is their attitude and arrogance, which I didn't see in your post. ;)

        Yusuf

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        • S shiftedbitmonkey

          Todd Smith wrote:

          Your admin has somewhat of a point. But he's just going to have to get his hands dirty and do his job.

          *sigh* That's too bad. If he can argue from a productivity stance he might gain management's ear. We're in a somewhat small shop and he wears many hats. What is our argument for Subversion against Perforce? In terms of developer productivity? We check out, check in, merge (which perforce handles well), both based off of cvs, so... this might not be a battle I can win.

          I've heard more said about less.

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          Thelly
          wrote on last edited by
          #11

          How much work is he really having to do on the repositories? If he's going to argue that switching to Perforce will be more productive (I take it he has experience with Perforce?), then how much adjustment will that require for the developers to get used to the Perforce interface and quirks compared to whatever you all are using for SVN? Also, if you use the scripting hooks at all, can that be easily recreated? All in all, I'd be a bit skeptical about any argument that is claiming to save admin time on account of a GUI for backups... I don't know your admin, but all the admins I do know generally complain when they *have* to use a GUI for that sort of thing, not when they can't. Does he perhaps have some other reason for preferring Perforce (is he suggesting that specifically, or a commercial product in general)? One admin's preference should not overrule the operating comfort of a room full of developers... if your team(s) prefer SVN, that should be argument enough.

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          • S shiftedbitmonkey

            Hello y'all, My first post, I hope this is the correct forum.. oh well, I'm sure you'll let me know if it isn't. Our network admin is suggesting we need to convert to a commercial scm for the admin capabilities and doesn't think SVN is up to the task. We the dev team, would like to stay on svn. So, I'm looking for suggestions for a decent gui admin client that can handle replication and repository restoration from backups in an intuitive manner. It can be either for Linux or Windows, the server is linux and we have Mac, Linux, and Windows client machines. Any and all suggestions are welcome, even if its just to flame me for being new. :) Thanks, bitshiftedmonkey

            I've heard more said about less.

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            Ed Poore
            wrote on last edited by
            #12

            VisualSVN Server[^].  I suppose if the box you're running is Linux you can set up a mapped drive on a Windows machine to administer it.  Integrates with Active Directory as well so nice and simple to use in a networked environment.

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            • T Thelly

              How much work is he really having to do on the repositories? If he's going to argue that switching to Perforce will be more productive (I take it he has experience with Perforce?), then how much adjustment will that require for the developers to get used to the Perforce interface and quirks compared to whatever you all are using for SVN? Also, if you use the scripting hooks at all, can that be easily recreated? All in all, I'd be a bit skeptical about any argument that is claiming to save admin time on account of a GUI for backups... I don't know your admin, but all the admins I do know generally complain when they *have* to use a GUI for that sort of thing, not when they can't. Does he perhaps have some other reason for preferring Perforce (is he suggesting that specifically, or a commercial product in general)? One admin's preference should not overrule the operating comfort of a room full of developers... if your team(s) prefer SVN, that should be argument enough.

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              shiftedbitmonkey
              wrote on last edited by
              #13

              While I appreciate everyone's input regarding the admin's place in the hierarchy, I really just want to help make his life easier and find a gui client that he can use. Not debate the merits of his willingness to figure it out on his own. Hmmm, I get the feeling that folks here ignore the question and seek out something fun to debate instead. Not that there's anything wrong with that, this being a lounge and all. Thanks anyway. At least one person had an answer to my question.

              I've heard more said about less.

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              • E Ed Poore

                VisualSVN Server[^].  I suppose if the box you're running is Linux you can set up a mapped drive on a Windows machine to administer it.  Integrates with Active Directory as well so nice and simple to use in a networked environment.

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                shiftedbitmonkey
                wrote on last edited by
                #14

                Thanks! Looks interesting, I'll give it a once over. We don't need to install SVN though, just looking for a thin client to attach to our existing system, but maybe this does that as well though.

                I've heard more said about less.

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                • S shiftedbitmonkey

                  Hello y'all, My first post, I hope this is the correct forum.. oh well, I'm sure you'll let me know if it isn't. Our network admin is suggesting we need to convert to a commercial scm for the admin capabilities and doesn't think SVN is up to the task. We the dev team, would like to stay on svn. So, I'm looking for suggestions for a decent gui admin client that can handle replication and repository restoration from backups in an intuitive manner. It can be either for Linux or Windows, the server is linux and we have Mac, Linux, and Windows client machines. Any and all suggestions are welcome, even if its just to flame me for being new. :) Thanks, bitshiftedmonkey

                  I've heard more said about less.

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                  Stuart Dootson
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #15

                  svnadmin (the CLI admin program) is incredibly easy to use. In addition, you've got good scripting language bindings (Python, Perl, Ruby) that are dead simple to use. At work, we recently set up SVN on our development LAN. I developed an SVN admin web-app in 50-60 lines of Python, running under Apache+mod_python on the SVN server (the same Apache instance that gives http access to the SVN repositories). At present, it only does repository creation and deletion - the main driver was to reduce the need for developers to login to the server. However, extra functionality would be very, very easy to add. It took 2 or 3 days to develop - most of the time was taken learning Apache, Python and the libraries - it was my first web-app. Setting up backups took an hour or so? We replicate with an svnadmin hotcopy, 7zip the replicated repository and rsync it to a backup, all in a scheduled task. One question - how often do you anticipate having to restore a repository from a backup? I would suggest 'once in a blue moon' :-), in which case logging into the server and typing one or two command lines really isn't an unbearable load, so long as your sys-admin documents the procedures adequately - as they ought to do whtever the procedure is... Oh - here are the svnadmin GUI's I found on Google:

                  • wxsvnadmin[^] - looks quite immature.
                  • svnadminforfh[^] - web-based interface. This is the best approach - remember that SVN admin tasks generally require direct access to the filesystem hosting the SVN repository, so a web-app is a good way of remoting SVN admin tasks.

                  Personally, I wouldn't bother with them. SVN admin activities just aren't needed that often, so it's just as easy to remote desktop into the server and use svnadmin from a terminal window. Overall, I would say that we've spent maybe a day or two (i.e. less than 20 man-hours) administering our SVN repositories. This admin load is so small that I don't see how it should sway the SCM tool selection process.

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                  • S Stuart Dootson

                    svnadmin (the CLI admin program) is incredibly easy to use. In addition, you've got good scripting language bindings (Python, Perl, Ruby) that are dead simple to use. At work, we recently set up SVN on our development LAN. I developed an SVN admin web-app in 50-60 lines of Python, running under Apache+mod_python on the SVN server (the same Apache instance that gives http access to the SVN repositories). At present, it only does repository creation and deletion - the main driver was to reduce the need for developers to login to the server. However, extra functionality would be very, very easy to add. It took 2 or 3 days to develop - most of the time was taken learning Apache, Python and the libraries - it was my first web-app. Setting up backups took an hour or so? We replicate with an svnadmin hotcopy, 7zip the replicated repository and rsync it to a backup, all in a scheduled task. One question - how often do you anticipate having to restore a repository from a backup? I would suggest 'once in a blue moon' :-), in which case logging into the server and typing one or two command lines really isn't an unbearable load, so long as your sys-admin documents the procedures adequately - as they ought to do whtever the procedure is... Oh - here are the svnadmin GUI's I found on Google:

                    • wxsvnadmin[^] - looks quite immature.
                    • svnadminforfh[^] - web-based interface. This is the best approach - remember that SVN admin tasks generally require direct access to the filesystem hosting the SVN repository, so a web-app is a good way of remoting SVN admin tasks.

                    Personally, I wouldn't bother with them. SVN admin activities just aren't needed that often, so it's just as easy to remote desktop into the server and use svnadmin from a terminal window. Overall, I would say that we've spent maybe a day or two (i.e. less than 20 man-hours) administering our SVN repositories. This admin load is so small that I don't see how it should sway the SCM tool selection process.

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                    S Offline
                    shiftedbitmonkey
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #16

                    Thanks! Sounds like what you did would be the best route for us. I'll look into that. Then we could grow it into something really useful and tailored to our needs. I didn't google as I was hoping to harvest people's experience and mine from that a best course. I like the path you took. Thanks for taking the time, shiftedbitmonkey

                    I've heard more said about less.

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                    • S shiftedbitmonkey

                      Generally I agree with you. Its not his lack of ability, he has plenty of experience and skills, he's just wearing alot of hats. And, I'd probably have your same feedback if I wasn't staring him in the face and listening to his reasoning. :^)

                      I've heard more said about less.

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                      M Offline
                      Member 96
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #17

                      I am a bit mystified about all this. In our shop which is a very small one *I* am the network administrator and we run a subversion server with mirrored server a thousand miles away and the amount of administration I've ever had to do on it post installation can be counted in minutes not hours over the last year. It's about the most care free server software we run. There's really nothing to do once it's set up except upgrade it periodically and because I'm paranoid check the revision numbers locally and remotely to ensure the changes are mirroring out as they are comitted.


                      "It's so simple to be wise. Just think of something stupid to say and then don't say it." -Sam Levenson

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                      • S shiftedbitmonkey

                        Thanks! Sounds like what you did would be the best route for us. I'll look into that. Then we could grow it into something really useful and tailored to our needs. I didn't google as I was hoping to harvest people's experience and mine from that a best course. I like the path you took. Thanks for taking the time, shiftedbitmonkey

                        I've heard more said about less.

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                        S Offline
                        Stuart Dootson
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #18

                        To get you started - here's the Python code I use for creating a repository at a file-system path specified by the reposPath parameter. It creates a repository with trunk, tags and branches folders off the root folder of the repository. By doing this directly on the filesystem, the folders are present at revision 1 of the repository.

                        from svn import fs, repos
                        
                        def createNewRepository(reposPath):
                            newRepository = repos.svn_repos_create(reposPath, None, None, None, None)
                            fileSystemPtr = repos.fs(newRepository)
                            transaction = fs.begin_txn(fileSystemPtr, 0)
                            fs.make_dir(fs.txn_root(transaction), "trunk")
                            fs.make_dir(fs.txn_root(transaction), "tags")
                            fs.make_dir(fs.txn_root(transaction), "branches")
                            fs.commit_txn(transaction)
                            return newRepository
                        
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                        • M Member 96

                          I am a bit mystified about all this. In our shop which is a very small one *I* am the network administrator and we run a subversion server with mirrored server a thousand miles away and the amount of administration I've ever had to do on it post installation can be counted in minutes not hours over the last year. It's about the most care free server software we run. There's really nothing to do once it's set up except upgrade it periodically and because I'm paranoid check the revision numbers locally and remotely to ensure the changes are mirroring out as they are comitted.


                          "It's so simple to be wise. Just think of something stupid to say and then don't say it." -Sam Levenson

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                          S Offline
                          shiftedbitmonkey
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #19

                          Small shop as in 50 employees with 18 engineers. 15 different products including an underlying custom OS, across three code bases. Some customized branches for specialized releases. Yeah, I don't know what to make of it either. I smell a strawman.

                          I've heard more said about less.

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                          0
                          • S Stuart Dootson

                            To get you started - here's the Python code I use for creating a repository at a file-system path specified by the reposPath parameter. It creates a repository with trunk, tags and branches folders off the root folder of the repository. By doing this directly on the filesystem, the folders are present at revision 1 of the repository.

                            from svn import fs, repos
                            
                            def createNewRepository(reposPath):
                                newRepository = repos.svn_repos_create(reposPath, None, None, None, None)
                                fileSystemPtr = repos.fs(newRepository)
                                transaction = fs.begin_txn(fileSystemPtr, 0)
                                fs.make_dir(fs.txn_root(transaction), "trunk")
                                fs.make_dir(fs.txn_root(transaction), "tags")
                                fs.make_dir(fs.txn_root(transaction), "branches")
                                fs.commit_txn(transaction)
                                return newRepository
                            
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                            shiftedbitmonkey
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #20

                            Thanks!

                            I've heard more said about less.

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                            • S shiftedbitmonkey

                              Hello y'all, My first post, I hope this is the correct forum.. oh well, I'm sure you'll let me know if it isn't. Our network admin is suggesting we need to convert to a commercial scm for the admin capabilities and doesn't think SVN is up to the task. We the dev team, would like to stay on svn. So, I'm looking for suggestions for a decent gui admin client that can handle replication and repository restoration from backups in an intuitive manner. It can be either for Linux or Windows, the server is linux and we have Mac, Linux, and Windows client machines. Any and all suggestions are welcome, even if its just to flame me for being new. :) Thanks, bitshiftedmonkey

                              I've heard more said about less.

                              S Offline
                              S Offline
                              Stuart Dootson
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #21

                              PS - I've just head about SVNControl[^], which may be just what you wanted (if you've not already implemented something). I'm certainly going to have a closer look at it when I return from the conference I'm at (which is where I heard about it).

                              S 1 Reply Last reply
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                              • S Stuart Dootson

                                PS - I've just head about SVNControl[^], which may be just what you wanted (if you've not already implemented something). I'm certainly going to have a closer look at it when I return from the conference I'm at (which is where I heard about it).

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                                shiftedbitmonkey
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #22

                                Thanks! I'll take a look. Enjoy your conference. :)

                                I've heard more said about less.

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