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Hi Jenny,
This page does only offer installer builds up to version 1.3 Stable. The current version of SVN is 1.4.3. It is advisable to use it because of this [quote from the release Page]:
- --- Working Copy and Repository Format Changes
Due to certain improvements and bugfixes made to the working copy library, the version number of the working copy format has been incremented. This means that Subversion clients earlier than 1.4 will not be able to work with working copies produced by Subversion 1.4. Similarly, the repository format has changed as well, meaning that pre-1.4 Subversion tools that normally access a repository directly (e.g. svnserve, mod_dav_svn, svnadmin) won't be able to read a repository originally created by Subversion 1.4.
WARNING: if a Subversion 1.4 client encounters a pre-1.4 working copy, it will automatically upgrade the working copy format as soon as it touches it, making it unreadable by older Subversion clients. If you are using several versions of Subversion on your machine, you need to be careful about which version you use in which working copy, to avoid accidentally upgrading the working copy format. This "auto upgrade" feature, however, does not occur with the new repository format. - ---
To avoid any problems with this behaviour, new Users should always use at least 1.4.
Greetings Florian
Jenny Harrison wrote:
There is an OS X installation of Subversion from a .dmg here:
http://metissian.com/projects/macosx/subversion/
Jenny
Jenny Harrison University of California, Berkeley 851 Evans Hall Berkeley CA 94720-3270 Tele: 510-642-9666 Fax: 510-642-5270 Email: harrison@math.berkeley.edu mailto:harrison@math.berkeley.edu Web: http://math.berkeley.edu/~harrison/
On Mar 29, 2007, at 7:44 AM, Steve Lianoglou wrote:
Apple has a handy page on it.
http://developer.apple.com/tools/subversionxcode.html
Although there's a bit of realestate on that page devoted to installing apache/webdav/svn from source, I'd recommend installing the trio via macports.
The rest of the article is till handy though.
There is always, of course, the online book: http://svnbook.red-bean.com/
It's big, but it most assuredly will have all that you need.
-steve
On Mar 29, 2007, at 10:19 AM, Ethan H. Darling wrote:
Everyone/Anyone,
I'm new to Textmate (and just about everything else), and I just finished reading the Textmate book (some sections got a thorough once-twice-thrice-over). Very good book, now I'm hooked on Textmate.
I'm just an amateur web developer looking to increase my skill and knowledge. Textmate has been a great companion as It allows me to get out of Dreamweaver and into the code, but I find that I have lost some of the "project management" features of Dreamweaver. ie, being able to transparently upload completed development files from within the application. (Sure I can still get it done with Transmit, but it is clunky.) I searched the textmate discussions and wiki and came away with the conclusion that SVN is the answer. Problem is I know nothing about SVN... or where to start.
So, my question is... "What is SVN, can I really use it to manage a production website, and what is the best place, resource, book to get information on how to install, configure, and use it?" Sounds dumb right. Well we all have to start somewhere.
(I googled it and found more information than I can shake-a-stick at. So I thought that I would ask a smaller community that may better understand my situation and give a little more intelligent mac-oriented feedback.)
Thanks,
Ethan
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