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Subversion
subversion.tigris.org.
Software :
CLI : Subversion :
Übersicht
08-Dec-2002/09-Jan-07
Übersicht
Aus der Selbstdarstellung:
»The goal of the Subversion project is to build a version
control system that is a compelling replacement for CVS in the open
source community« (Quelle:
subversion.tigris.org;
Zugriff: 08-Dec-2002).
Lizenz: Apache/BSD-style open source license.
Aktuelle Version: 0.16 (Tuesday, 3 December 2002)
Logo(s):


Features
Features planned for Subversion 1.0:
- Most current CVS features.
Subversion is meant to be a better CVS, so it will have most of
CVS's features, with as many as possible in the 1.0 release. The
main exception is "svn blame" (i.e., "cvs annotate"), which has been
put off until after 1.0 for scheduling reasons. Generally,
Subversion's interface to a particular feature is similar to CVS's,
except where there's a compelling reason to do otherwise.
- Directories, renames, and file meta-data are versioned.
Lack of these features is one of the most common complaints
against CVS. Subversion versions not only file contents and file
existence, but also directories, copies, and renames. It also allows
arbitrary metadata ("properties") to be versioned along with any
file or directory, and provides a mechanism for versioning the
`execute' permission flag on files.
- Commits are truly atomic.
No part of a commit takes effect until the entire commit has
succeeded. Revision numbers are per-commit, not per-file; log
messages are attached to the revision, not stored redundantly as in
CVS.
- Apache as network server, WebDAV/DeltaV for protocol.
Subversion uses the HTTP-based WebDAV/DeltaV protocol for network
communications, and uses the Apache web server to provide
repository-side network service. This gives Subversion a big
advantage in stability and interoperability, and provides various
key features for free: authentication, basic authorization, wire
compression, and repository browsing, for example.
- Branching and tagging are cheap (constant time)
operations
There is no reason for these operations to be expensive, so they
aren't. Branches and tags are both implemented in terms of an
underlying "copy" operation. An copy takes up a small, constant
amount of space. Any copy is a tag; and if you start committing on a
copy, then it's a branch as well. (This does away with CVS's
"branch-point tagging", by removing the distinction that made
branch-point tags necessary in the first place.)
- Natively client/server, layered library design.
Subversion is designed to be client/server from the beginning; thus
avoiding some of the maintenance problems which have plagued CVS.
The code is structured as a set of modules with well-defined
interfaces, designed to be called by other applications.
- Client/server protocol sends diffs in both directions.
The network protocol uses bandwidth efficiently by transmitting
diffs in both directions whenever possible (CVS sends diffs from
server to client, but not client to server).
- Costs are proportional to change size, not data size.
In general, the time required for an Subversion operation is
proportional to the size of the changes resulting from that
operation, not to the absolute size of the project in which the
changes are taking place. This is a property of the Subversion
repository model.
- Efficient handling of binary files.
Subversion is equally efficient on binary as on text files, because
it uses a binary diffing algorithm to transmit and store successive
revisions.
- Parseable output.
All output of the Subversion command-line client is carefully
designed to be both human readable and automatically parseable;
scriptability is a high priority.
Features planned for after 1.0:
- Support for symbolic links.
Subversion will handle symbolic links ("shortcuts"). It may also
support multiple hard links and other special file types, as long as
this can be done portably and with semantics that are compatible
with version control.
- "svn blame" (cvs annotate).
Subversion will have a counterpart to CVS's "annotate" feature, but
it will most likely happen after the 1.0 release, due to
prioritization and scheduling.
- Graceful handling of repeated merges.
Subversion will use its generic metadata mechanism as a way of
remembering what has been merged, so that repeated merges from the
same source do not require careful human calculation to avoid
spurious conflicts (anyone who's done repeated CVS merges knows what
we're talking about).
(There are some theoretical problems with remembering merge sources
-- knowing where the merged data came from implies some sort of
universal repository registry. However, our first goal is to make
sure that multiple merges from branches made in the same
repository as the original project compound gracefully.
Remembering merges from remote sources is more difficult, due to the
difficulty of distinguishing remote sources, but there are good
"90%" solutions that will work in practice).
- Broader WebDAV compatibility.
Currently, the Subversion server only responds to a subset of WebDAV
requests -- the subset necessary to support Subversion's own
functionality. Increased support for WebDAV is a high priority after
the 1.0 release, however.
- Support for plug-in client side diff programs.
Subversion knows how to show diffs for text files, and later will
also give the user the option to plug in external diff programs for
any kind of file. The external program need merely conform to some
simple invocation interface (i.e., "diffprog file1 file2
[file3...]", where the various files might be different
revisions of the same file).
- Internationalization.
Subversion will have I18N support -- commands, user messages, and
errors can be customized to the appropriate human language at
build-time. Also, there will be I18N support for the names as
well as the contents of versioned entities.
- Progressive multi-lingual support.
In order to support keyword expansion and platform-dependent
line-ending conversion, CVS makes a distinction between text and
binary files, and treats the text files specially.
Subversion makes the same distinction, but will offer a more
generous notion of what constitutes a text file: not only ASCII, but
UTF-* encodings of Unicode too. UTF-8 is the first priority, with
other encodings following if needed.
Quelle: subversion.tigris.org;
Zugriff: 08-Dec-2002.
Funktionsweise

Quelle:
subversion.tigris.org/servlets/ProjectDocumentList; Zugriff:
08-Dec-2002.
Dokumentation
FAQ:
subversion.tigris.org/project_faq.html.
Mailinglisten
subversion.tigris.org/servlets/ProjectMailingListList.
Download
subversion.tigris.org/servlets/ProjectDocumentList.
subversion.tigris.org/project_source.html.
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