|
|
| <prev next> |
Choosing A Webhost: |
Re: VCP allocation problems: msg#00007version-control.revml
On Thu, Jul 29, 2004 at 03:10:09PM -0700, Sammy Shreibati wrote: > Hi, > So, I found out that what went wrong with that file. The file seems > to be 500Mb or so and it chokes up the server. I have a lot of these > errors and all of them coming from CVS/.../Attic. Is there a way for VCP > to skip over Attic folders? Hmmm, not at present, though I think it would be a reasonably easy add-in. However, it's deceptively attractive in that it seems to be a handy fix, but does destroy a little or a lot of history (deleted files are often required to build the previous version :). Are you *sure* you don't want them? If not, you might try mv(1)ing your Attic directories out of the CVSROOT tree (be sure nobody's using CVS though :). At some point, we'd like to extend VCP's ability to read CVSROOTs directoy (right now it'll scan local CVSROOTs directly but then use the cvs binary to check files out. I think it's a relatively easy job to extract files directly, but I worry about doing it efficiently and without consuming all memory in situations like yours. - Barrie
|
|
| <Prev in Thread] | Current Thread | [Next in Thread> |
|---|---|---|
| Previous by Date: | RE: VCP allocation problems, Sammy Shreibati |
|---|---|
| Previous by Thread: | RE: VCP allocation problems, Sammy Shreibati |
| Indexes: | [Date] [Thread] [Top] [All Lists] |
Free MagazinesCisco NewsReceive a free quarterly e-newsletter with exclusive articles on how Cisco IT uses its own products and solutions to enable the business. subscribe Systems Management News, the newspaper for IT systems administration and data center managers! Each issue of Systems Management News is chock-full of news and analysis to help you understand what's happening in your field. subscribe The Enterprise Newsweekly eWeek is the essential technology information source for builders of e-business. subscribe Oracle Magazine Oracle Magazine contains technology strategy articles, sample code, tips, Oracle and partner news, how to articles for developers and DBAs, and more. Oracle (NASDAQ: ORCL) is the world's largest enterprise software company. subscribe Total Telecom Total Telecom is "The Economist of the communications industry". subscribe |