In article <461C0CBC.14985.1174FC8@twegner.swbell.net>, "Tim Wegner" <twegner@swbell.net> writes:
Agreed, I was not talking about using CVS and SVN together, but was referring to the fact that SVN can be used in file mode (usually when the repository is on the same file system as the the user), or as a server. I *believe* Tortoise uses the file mode.
I think its all irrelevant to the clients. That's all an implementation detail on the server side (Berkeley DB or file). I think the one I did was Berkeley DB and the manual I printed out indicated that it was the more stable version.
I am going to try to duplicate your results with cvs2svn and experiment before we do this for real.
Yep. I was thinking that as long as we have no outstanding commits we could change to subversion at any time. If the next release is going to be a while coming, then I would rather do that. -- "The Direct3D Graphics Pipeline" -- DirectX 9 draft available for download <http://www.xmission.com/~legalize/book/download/index.html> Legalize Adulthood! <http://blogs.xmission.com/legalize/>