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root/i-scream/projects/cms/documentation/papers/cvs-2.txt
Revision: 1.3
Committed: Wed Nov 15 20:03:48 2000 UTC (23 years, 5 months ago) by tdb
Content type: text/plain
Branch: MAIN
Changes since 1.2: +76 -0 lines
Log Message:
Added a section on using WinCVS/SSH at home.

File Contents

# User Rev Content
1 tdb 1.1 Using CVS (part 2)
2     ==================
3    
4 tdb 1.2 Contents
5     --------
6     - Errata to "Using CVS (part 1)"
7     - Setting up CVS on a Public PC (with WinCVS/SSH)
8 tdb 1.3 - Setting up CVS off campus/SSB (with WinCVS/SSH)
9 tdb 1.2
10     - How CVS handles binary files
11     - Tagging the Repository
12     - Branching in CVS
13     - Keyword Expansion
14     - Online CVS Resources
15    
16     - See "Using CVS (part 1)" for basic information on setting
17     up and using CVS at UKC.
18    
19     tdb1, 29/10/00.
20 tdb 1.1
21     Errata to "Using CVS (part 1)"
22     ------------------------------
23     Setting up CVS on a Public PC (with WinCVS/SSH)
24     -----------------------------------------------
25     Assuming you already have WinCVS working we just need to
26     make a few modifications to get the same thing working with
27     SSH. This will only work on a public PC, although with some
28     careful copying of files you might be able to get it to work
29     on a normal SSB machine.
30    
31     Firstly we need to get SSH working. As it is SSH does work,
32     but it will keep prompting for a password, which is a pain
33     when it's hidden in a cmd window somewhere. We'll start by
34     tweaking the SSH setup, and then we'll setup a key pair to
35     remove the need for a password.
36    
37     [adapted from instructions given by jc]
38    
39     First thing is to setup a few environment variables. This is
40     done in the System part of Control Panel. Under the User
41     Variables section add the following;
42    
43     HOME =
44     z:\username
45     CVS_RSH =
46     ssh
47     CVSROOT =
48     :ext:user@raptor.ukc.ac.uk:/usr/local/proj/co600_10/cvs
49    
50     Next we need to go about setting up the key pair. This is
51     done by two batch files called getkey.bat and copy-key.bat
52     which are already on the public PC's. Unfortunately you need
53     to modify getkey.bat to make it work with raptor, so copy it
54     from the C: drive (c:\winnt\system32 I believe) to your
55     desktop (or anywhere else). Edit it so that the third line
56     reads;
57    
58     set HOST=raptor
59    
60     Then run it. You'll be prompted for your raptor password
61     three times, and then the key is setup. Next you need to run
62     copy-key.bat. Just go to "Start -> Run -> copy-key raptor"
63     to make it do it's stuff.
64    
65     Now, we're pretty much all set. You should be able to type
66     "ssh raptor" into a command window and log straight in
67     without the need for a password. If not, something has gone
68     wrong !
69    
70     Finally, a quick alteration to WinCVS and we're done. In the
71     preferences set the CVS Root to be;
72    
73     :ext:user@raptor.ukc.ac.uk:/usr/local/proj/co600_10/cvs
74    
75     Then set the Authentication type to "SSH server". Assuming
76     you've already done the rest of the setup from the last
77     document you should be able to do a checkout as normal, but
78     this time without the need for a mapped drive - which is a
79     much neater way of doing things.
80 tdb 1.3
81     Setting up CVS off campus/SSB (with WinCVS/SSH)
82     -----------------------------------------------
83     To do this you'll need two packages. Firstly, and most
84     obviously WinCVS. The latest version of WinCVS (1.1b16) can
85     be downloaded from the "WinCvs 1.1 *BETA* / Client + Local /
86     Binaries" on the following page;
87    
88     http://www.wincvs.org/download.html
89    
90     Secondly you'll require SSH. I'm not sure where this package
91     orginated, but there is a current version on raptor at;
92    
93     /usr/local/proj/co600_10/sshwin32/ssh-1.2.14-win32bin.zip
94    
95     Armed with those two files you're ready to go. To get
96     started we need to get ssh installed, and a key setup with
97     raptor.
98    
99     Installing ssh is easy. Simply extract the contents of the
100     zip file in to your windows\system32 directory (on
101     winnt/win2k - windows\system on win9x). This will put the
102     DLL's in place and the binary ssh files.
103    
104     Next, setting up a key. This requires a few straightforward
105     steps.
106    
107     - setup a directory to be considered your "home folder" and
108     then ensure that the environment variable HOME is pointed
109     at this directory. Then make a directory called .ssh
110     within this.
111    
112     - telnet into raptor and run this command;
113     ssh-keygen -f ssh-newkey -q -P '' -C '<user> on NT'"
114    
115     make sure you change <user> for your userid, and that you
116     notice the difference between the single quote ' and the
117     double quotes ".
118    
119     - using ftp (or by any other means) copy the files named
120     ssh-newkey and ssh-newkey.pub to the .ssh folder you made
121     on your machine. Now rename them to identity and
122     identity.pub respectively.
123    
124     - Finally we need to get the contents of the identity.pub
125     file above into the file ~/.ssh/authorized_keys on
126     raptor. The easiest way to do this is to type the
127     following;
128     cat ssh-newkey.pub >> .ssh/authorized_keys
129    
130     This assumes you didn't delete the ssh-newkey files, and
131     that you are in your home folder. Finally, you can delete
132     the ssh-newkey and ssh-newkey.pub files from raptor.
133    
134     Now, to test this setup you should try the following from a
135     command prompt;
136    
137     ssh -l <userid> raptor.ukc.ac.uk
138    
139     If everything has completed successfully you should now be
140     looking at a raptor prompt. If not... then work out why not!
141    
142     Right, now on to WinCVS. This is now a doddle. In the
143     preferences set the CVSROOT to;
144    
145     :ext:<user>@raptor.ukc.ac.uk:/usr/local/proj/co600_10/cvs
146    
147     Set Authentication to SSH server, and set the RSA identity
148     to your identity file (not the .pub one). Finally set the
149     browser directory to a suitable location and try checking
150     something out. If all has worked an SSH window should pop up
151     at the bottom of the screen and the files should appear.
152    
153     As a final note, turning TCP/IP compression on may make it
154     quicker over a modem.
155 tdb 1.1
156     How CVS handles binary files
157     ----------------------------
158     Basically CVS can't do version management of binary files,
159     and quite obviously this is because it's not possible to
160     make version comparisons between two revisions in a logical
161     way. But, CVS will let you store binary files and will let
162     you add new versions. However, it will not store "changes"
163     between them, or allow you to view diffs between them.
164    
165     IMPORTANT: You must make sure you tell CVS that a file is
166     binary, otherwise it will not store it correctly
167     and the file will be corrupted.
168    
169     In WinCVS it's really easy to add a binary file, simply
170     select "Add selection binary" instead of the usual "Add
171     selection". WinCVS will display a "binary" icon instead, and
172     add "-kb" into the Option column. This -kb tells the CVS
173     command that the file is binary.
174    
175     This leads nicely into how to do it from the command line.
176     You simply type the following in place of the usual "cvs
177     add" command.
178    
179     cvs add -kb <filename>
180    
181     Again, the -kb is present. Now, a quick explanation of what
182     this "-kb" means. Basically it is telling CVS not to do
183     keyword expansion (turning $Revision$ into $Revision: 1.3 $)
184     and tell is not to attempt to convert between unix/windows
185     text formats.
186    
187     Tagging the Repository
188     ----------------------
189     Tagging the repository is a way of "marking" all the files
190     at a particular point in time. For example, when "release 1"
191     is finished you might want to mark this in the history of
192     all the files, so you can easily come back to it in the
193     future. As every file the makes up "release 1" may be on a
194     different individual revision, it would be tedious to do
195     without the aid of tagging.
196    
197     This is the best example I've seen that clearly shows how a
198     tag is implemented. Imagine the dotted line signfies the
199     point at which you declared the files were "release 1". As
200     you can see, work as continued on the files, but you could
201     easily pull out each file at "release 1".
202    
203     File A File B File C File D File E
204     ------ ------ ------ ------ ------
205     1.1 1.1 1.1 1.1 1.1
206     ---1.2-. 1.2 1.2 1.2 1.2
207     1.3 | 1.3 1.3 1.3 1.3
208     \ 1.4 .-1.4-. 1.4 1.4
209     \ 1.5 / 1.5 \ 1.5 1.5
210     \ 1.6 / 1.6 | 1.6 1.6
211     \ 1.7 / | 1.7 1.7
212     \ 1.8 / | 1.8 .-1.8----->
213     \ 1.9 / | 1.9 / 1.9
214     `1.10' | 1.10 / 1.10
215     1.11 | 1.11 |
216     | 1.12 |
217     | 1.13 |
218     \ 1.14 |
219     \ 1.15 /
220     \ 1.16 /
221     `-1.17-'
222    
223     In fact, if you imagine pulling this line straight, you'd
224     get the following effect which even more clearly shows where
225     "release 1" is.
226    
227     File A File B File C File D File E
228     ------ ------ ------ ------ ------
229     1.1
230     1.2
231     1.3
232     1.4
233     1.5
234     1.6
235     1.7
236     1.1 1.8
237     1.2 1.9
238     1.3 1.10 1.1
239     1.4 1.11 1.2
240     1.5 1.12 1.3
241     1.6 1.13 1.4
242     1.7 1.1 1.14 1.5
243     1.8 1.2 1.15 1.6
244     1.1 1.9 1.3 1.16 1.7
245     ---1.2---------1.10--------1.4---------1.17--------1.8----->
246     1.3 1.11 1.5 1.17 1.9
247     1.6 1.17 1.10
248    
249     Tagging is actually remarkably easy to do. All you do is
250     issue a single command to tag the files at the current point
251     in time. You should make sure all development stops whilst
252     you do it, otherwise a bit of new code could sneak in.
253     Here's how to do it;
254    
255     cvs tag public-release_1
256    
257     This would mark the files with the tag "public-release_1".
258     You can then continue with developement, knowing that all
259     those files can easily be retrieved. It's again suprisingly
260     easy to do. Instead of typing "cvs checkout source" you
261     would type;
262    
263     cvs checkout -r public-release_1 source
264    
265     Which would checkout the source module at the point which
266     you tagged. Alternatively the following would update (or
267     downdate ?) your working copy to the tagged point;
268    
269     cvs update -r public-release_1
270    
271     Finally, a quick mention of why this would be useful.
272     Imagine the development team was split into two groups, one
273     working on coding, another working on testing. When the
274     coding group have finished "release 1" they can tag it and
275     carry on developing for "release 2". At the same time, the
276     testing team can checkout "release 1" and test it, reporting
277     bugs back to the coding team for fixing in "release 2". It
278     could also mean the a customer could still get hold of the
279     first release whilst you're busy coding for the second.
280    
281     Branching in CVS
282     ----------------
283     So far I've only talked about a single CVS branch, the
284     trunk. There is only ever one "current" revision of each
285     file, and everyone is working on the same files. However, it
286     is possible to branch this out into more than one copy of
287     the same files. A good example of why this is useful is
288     continuing the idea at the end of the last section.
289    
290     Imagine the coding team are now busy working on "release 2"
291     and the testing team come up with a major flaw in
292     the older "release 1". Customers have already got this
293     version installed, so it needs fixing straight away. The
294     trick is to make a branch at the point where "release 1" was
295     tagged, and then fix the bugs on this branch. This branch
296     need not carry on, it could just have the few bugs fixed,
297     whilst the main branch (the trunk) has development of
298     "release 2" carrying on. This diagram shows this;
299    
300     |
301     | -- tag "release_1"
302     |\
303     | \
304     | |
305     | |
306     | - -- tag "release_1-fixed"
307     |
308     |
309     | -- tag "release_2"
310    
311     As you can see the customer could then get a copy of
312     "release_1-fixed" and not worry about the unstable code in
313     "release_2".
314    
315     Branches can get much more complicated than this, but it's
316     beyond the scope of our requirements. Further info can be
317     found on the web.
318    
319     Keyword Expansion
320     -----------------
321     CVS allows you to put certain keywords into a file which CVS
322     will expand when you check files in and out of the
323     repository. There are quite a few, and they're all pretty
324     useful in places. Here's a quick summary;
325    
326     $Author$
327     The author of the latest change.
328     eg. $Author: tdb1 $
329    
330     $Date$
331     The date/time of the latest change.
332     eg. $Date: 2000/10/30 13:10:04 $
333    
334     $Header$
335     Various useful bits of information.
336     eg. $Header: /usr/local/proj/co600_10/cvs/file.txt,v \
337     1.1 2000/10/30 13:00:00 tdb1 Exp tdb1 $
338    
339     $Id$
340     Simliar to $Header$, but without that wieldy path.
341     eg.
342     $Id: cvs-2.txt,v 1.3 2000/10/30 13:10:04 tdb1 Exp $
343    
344     $Log$
345     Puts the latest log message in.
346    
347     $Locker$
348     Name of the person who has a lock (usually no-one).
349     eg. $Locker: tdb1 $
350    
351     $Name$
352     Name of the tag.
353     eg. $Name: release_1 $
354    
355     $RCSfile$
356     Name of the RCS file.
357     eg. $RCSfile: cvs-2.txt,v $
358    
359     $Revision$
360     Revision number of the file.
361     eg. $Revision: 1.3 $
362    
363     $Source$
364     Full path to the file in the repository.
365     eg. $Source: /usr/local/proj/co600_10/cvs/file.txt,v $
366    
367     $State$
368     State of the file (?).
369     eg. $State: Exp $
370    
371     The keywords are automatically replaced by CVS, even if it's
372     already been expanded. You just put it in and leave it be!
373    
374     Online CVS Resources
375     --------------------
376     That about concludes my guide on the basics of CVS for the
377     development work in the project. However, further resources
378     can be found on the following webpage. I've learnt an awful
379     lot from this "online book", and I'd recommend it to anyone
380     wanting to get to grips with CVS.
381    
382     http://cvsbook.red-bean.com
383    
384     Also, the "home" of CVS, if there is such a thing.
385    
386     http://www.cvshome.org
387    
388     About
389     -----
390     This document was written by Tim Bishop [tdb1@ukc.ac.uk] for
391     use by the team working on a 3rd year Computer Science
392     project called "i-scream". More details can be found on the
393     project website;
394    
395     http://www.i-scream.org.uk