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CVS for the developer or amateur

Getting sources from CVS, and modifying files on CVS

Daniel Robbins, Chief architect, Gentoo Linux, Microsoft
Daniel Robbins lives in Albuquerque, New Mexico. He was the founder and chief architect of the Gentoo Linux project. Daniel now works with Microsoft and describes his position as "helping Microsoft to understand Open Source and community-based projects."

Summary:  This tutorial introduces you to CVS, the Concurrent Versions System, used by developers around the world to develop software in a flexible and collaborative manner. Intended for those new to CVS, this tutorial will get both general users and new developers up to speed quickly. Whether you'd like to use CVS to check out the latest sources of a particular software package, or whether you'd like to begin using CVS as a full-fledged developer, this tutorial is for you.

Date:  13 Mar 2001
Level:  Intermediate PDF:  A4 and Letter (48 KB | 14 pages)Get Adobe® Reader®

Activity:  7484 views
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Before you start

About this tutorial

The first part of this tutorial shows you how to use CVS as a non-developer; that is, how to get sources from CVS and keep them updated. The second part introduces you to using CVS as a developer, showing you how to modify, add, and remove files on CVS and perform other developer-related tasks.

If have some basic CVS experience but are going to be using CVS as a full-fledged developer for the first time, you should find everything you need in the second section, CVS for developers, but you may want to go through the first section, CVS for general users, as a review.


Prerequisites

This tutorial has no prerequisites.

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