b73620c976
regarding the source syncing section (sss!).
69 lines
3.3 KiB
Plaintext
69 lines
3.3 KiB
Plaintext
<!-- $Id: synching.sgml,v 1.1 1996/02/11 00:16:20 jkh Exp $ -->
|
|
<!-- The FreeBSD Documentation Project -->
|
|
|
|
<chapt><heading>Synchronizing source trees over the Internet<label id="synching"></heading>
|
|
|
|
<p><em>Contributed by &a.jkh;.</em>
|
|
|
|
<!--
|
|
|
|
Last updated: $Date: 1996/02/11 00:16:20 $
|
|
|
|
This document tries to describe the various ways in which a user may
|
|
use the internet to keep development sources in synch.
|
|
-->
|
|
|
|
<p>There are various ways of using an Internet (or email) connection
|
|
to stay up-to-date with any given area of the FreeBSD project sources,
|
|
or all areas, depending on what interests you. The primary
|
|
services we offer are CTM, SUP and CVSup (<bf>new</bf>).
|
|
|
|
<p>It's been suggested by some that CTM obsoletes SUP. This isn't quite
|
|
true, in fact, because each tool was originally designed to serve a
|
|
different constituency and, although they have both undergone significant
|
|
improvement since first going into service, they take fundamentally
|
|
different approaches in trying to solve the source syncronization problem.
|
|
SUP was originally designed to support those who had dedicated (or at
|
|
least fast) Internet connections whereas CTM was originally aimed at
|
|
supporting those who's access was limited to email only.
|
|
|
|
<p><bf>SUP</bf> (Software Update Protocol) is a system that tracks a local
|
|
copy of the FreeBSD sources on your local disk and, using configuration files
|
|
the user sets up, makes requests over the network to fetch and update any
|
|
files which have changed on the FreeBSD master archive.
|
|
|
|
<p><bf>CTM</bf>, on the other hand, does not interactively compare
|
|
the sources you have with those on the master archive.
|
|
Instead, a script which identifies changes in files since its previous run
|
|
is executed several times a day on the master archive, any detected changes
|
|
being compressed, stamped with a sequence-number and encoded for transmission
|
|
over email (printable ASCII only). Once received, these "CTM deltas" can then
|
|
be handed to the ctm_rmail(1) utility which will automatically decode, verify
|
|
and apply the changes to the user's copy of the sources. This process is
|
|
far more efficient than SUP, and places less strain on our server resources
|
|
since it's a <em>push</em> rather than a <em>pull</em> model.
|
|
|
|
<p>There are other trade-offs, of course. With SUP, you can also
|
|
inadvertantly wipe out portions of your archive and SUP will detect
|
|
and rebuild the damaged portions for you. CTM won't do this, and if
|
|
you wipe some portion of your source tree out (and don't have it backed
|
|
up) then you will have to start from scratch (from the most recent CVS
|
|
"base delta") and rebuild it all.
|
|
|
|
<p>More recently, the waters have been muddied even more by
|
|
the introduction of the <bf>CVSup</bf> utility, a highly efficient
|
|
replacement for SUP which also offers access to any branch of FreeBSD
|
|
development from a single CVS repository (which, in turn, can also be
|
|
transferred non-destructively with CVSup - any local developer work on
|
|
independant branches is preserved). It overcomes many of SUP's shortcomings
|
|
and may be <htmlurl url="ftp://freefall.freebsd.org/pub/CVSup/"
|
|
name="downloaded"> from our development server, where additonal documentation
|
|
is also provided. Both the CVSup client and server are compatible with
|
|
the sup and supfilesrv distribution file formats.
|
|
|
|
For more information on SUP and CTM, please see one of the following
|
|
sections:
|
|
|
|
⊃
|
|
&ctm;
|