Re: Xcode and Subversion
Re: Xcode and Subversion
- Subject: Re: Xcode and Subversion
- From: Eric Morand <email@hidden>
- Date: Tue, 3 Jan 2006 11:08:24 +0100
Subversion (or cvs, for that matter) are NOT "version systems" in
the way that they will automatically generate a "User Readable"
version number, let alone for an Xcode project. Some people use the
agv - Apple Generic Version - tool in conjunction with cvs or
subversion for that.
Others (like me) have written custom scripts and helper tools to do
this. You see, this is entirely a different beats, if related to
tools like subversion or cvs.
OK, thanks for the input. I thought that Xcode Subversion support was
able to do this automatically. I'll give a try to AGV.
Eric.
Le 3 janv. 06 à 10:31, Alexander von Below a écrit :
On 03.01.2006, at 10:16, Eric Morand wrote:
I've read a couple of tutorials but they all deal with setting up
a full subversion server for sharing works with some
colaborators ! I don't want it to be so complex : I'm the only
person dealing with my code,
You will have to set up a subversion "server" nonetheless. If I am
not mistaken, for your scenario this can be as simple as creating
a directory on your local disk and initializing it as a subversion
repository.
The next two steps are things that the Xcode UI can not do, and you
will have to do them manually
- Import a project into the repository
- Checkout a working copy
Once you have a working copy of your project, Xcode will find all
the info it needs in THAT directory (not your original project).
This works the same with cvs. The SCM menu should be available.
You find an excellent tutorial about doing this with cvs at http://
developer.apple.com/internet/opensource/cvsoverview.html. Even if
you plan to use subversion you should read to learn what this is
all about. And when you read another subversion tutorial, things
will seem familiar and make more sense.
I just want a simple versioning system in Xcode that can
automatically increment my version numbers and keep trace of the
changes.
Subversion keeps track of your changes - provided you commit your
source on a regular bases. If you do not commit your code at
certain points, all you have for tracking changes is "Undo".
Subversion (or cvs, for that matter) are NOT "version systems" in
the way that they will automatically generate a "User Readable"
version number, let alone for an Xcode project. Some people use the
agv - Apple Generic Version - tool in conjunction with cvs or
subversion for that.
Others (like me) have written custom scripts and helper tools to do
this. You see, this is entirely a different beats, if related to
tools like subversion or cvs.
HTH
Alex
Is Subversion what I need ? And how to use it with Xcode ?
Thanks,
Eric.
=============================================
Automator Ketchup : http://automatorketchup.blogspot.com
_______________________________________________
Do not post admin requests to the list. They will be ignored.
Xcode-users mailing list (email@hidden)
Help/Unsubscribe/Update your Subscription:
This email sent to email@hidden
=============================================
Automator Ketchup : http://automatorketchup.blogspot.com
_______________________________________________
Do not post admin requests to the list. They will be ignored.
Xcode-users mailing list (email@hidden)
Help/Unsubscribe/Update your Subscription:
This email sent to email@hidden