Hi,
The Windows and Macintosh distributions of CVS are generally limited
in functionality. They can all act as clients, meaning that they can
contact
a repository server to obtain a working copy, commit, update, and so
on. But
they can't serve repositories themselves. If you set it up right, the
Windows port can use a local-disk repository, but it still can't serve
projects from that repository to other machines. In general, if you
want to
have a network-accessible CVS repository, you must run the CVS server
on a
Unix box.
regards,
Amit Sharma
-----Original Message-----
From: Mazza, Glen R., ,CPMS [mailto:address@hidden
Sent: Thursday, January 02, 2003 4:28 PM
To: 'address@hidden'
Subject: (newbie) WinCVS also a server?
Hello,
Is WinCVS only a client for accessing a CVS server or can it also
function
as a server (repository) itself? I'm currently using it as a client to
access a server remotely but am unsure if it has more capabilities. I
think
that, in general, when we refer to CVS server software we referring
just to
the software that is downloaded from http://www.cvshome.org/. Correct?
Thanks,
Glen
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