Friday, February 18, 2005

CVS to SubVersions?

I have been using CVS (Concurrent Versions System) for several months, since i joined the Indonesian OOo Documentation Project and my role in the OOo was upgraded to Developer so i can manage the Indonesian page by myself via CVS. I also use CVS to manage the Indonesian Mandrakelinux translation project. But now, i was curious about Subversion, the compelling replacement for CVS that was recommended by many developer or sites in the Internet.

Well.. here is the Subversion's description :
The goal of the Subversion project is to build a version control system that is a compelling replacement for CVS in the open source community. The software is released under an Apache/BSD-style open source license.

Subversion's Features

Most current CVS features.
Subversion is meant to be a better CVS, so it has most of CVS's features. Generally, Subversion's interface to a particular feature is similar to CVS's, except where there's a compelling reason to do otherwise.

Directories, renames, and file meta-data are versioned.

Lack of these features is one of the most common complaints against CVS. Subversion versions not only file contents and file existence, but also directories, copies, and renames. It also allows arbitrary metadata ("properties") to be versioned along with any file or directory, and provides a mechanism for versioning the `execute' permission flag on files.

Commits are truly atomic.

No part of a commit takes effect until the entire commit has succeeded. Revision numbers are per-commit, not per-file; log messages are attached to the revision, not stored redundantly as in CVS.

Apache network server option, with WebDAV/DeltaV protocol.

Subversion can use the HTTP-based WebDAV/DeltaV protocol for network communications, and the Apache web server to provide repository-side network service. This gives Subversion an advantage over CVS in interoperability, and provides various key features for free: authentication, path-based authorization, wire compression, and basic repository browsing.

Standalone server option.

Subversion also offers a standalone server option using a custom protocol (not everyone wants to run Apache 2.x). The standalone server can run as an inetd service, or in daemon mode, and offers basic authentication and authorization. It can also be tunnelled over ssh.

Branching and tagging are cheap (constant time) operations
There is no reason for these operations to be expensive, so they aren't. Branches and tags are both implemented in terms of an underlying "copy" operation. A copy takes up a small, constant amount of space. Any copy is a tag; and if you start committing on a copy, then it's a branch as well. (This does away with CVS's "branch-point tagging", by removing the distinction that made branch-point tags necessary in the first place.)

Natively client/server, layered library design

Subversion is designed to be client/server from the beginning; thus avoiding some of the maintenance problems which have plagued CVS. The code is structured as a set of modules with well-defined interfaces, designed to be called by other applications.

Client/server protocol sends diffs in both directions

The network protocol uses bandwidth efficiently by transmitting diffs in both directions whenever possible (CVS sends diffs from server to client, but not client to server).

Costs are proportional to change size, not data size

In general, the time required for a Subversion operation is proportional to the size of the changes resulting from that operation, not to the absolute size of the project in which the changes are taking place. This is a property of the Subversion repository model.

Choice of database or plain-file repository implementations
Repositories can be created with either an embedded database back-end (BerkeleyDB) or with normal flat-file back-end, which uses a custom format.

Versioning of symbolic links
Unix users can place symbolic links under version control. The links are recreated in Unix working copies, but not in win32 working copies.

Efficient handling of binary files

Subversion is equally efficient on binary as on text files, because it uses a binary diffing algorithm to transmit and store successive revisions.

Parseable output
All output of the Subversion command-line client is carefully designed to be both human readable and automatically parseable; scriptability is a high priority.

Localized messages

Subversion uses gettext() to display translated error, informational, and help messages, based on current locale settings.

After reading Subversion's version, what is you opinion? Which one is better? Please write down you answer on the comments page. In my opinion, Subversion will be a good replacement for CVS, but unfortunately, the migration is not that simple for those who has conducted CVS for a long time. It will be suited for new big project who is looking for a versioning system.

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