freebsd-skq/share/examples/cvsup/secure-cvs-supfile
markm 2766d201c3 fix up the secure-* files for cvsup.internat.freebsd.org, and add one for
the crypto CVS tree.

(Does this mean...? Yes! Yes! The International Crypto Site is serving
CVSUP! Yay! Give the man a Nobel Prize!)
1996-09-29 11:26:32 +00:00

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# $Id: cvs-supfile,v 1.2 1996/08/21 00:26:24 jkh Exp $
#
# This file contains all of the "CVSUP collections" that comprise the FreeBSD
# cvs development tree. CVSup (CVS Update Protocol) allows you to download
# the latest cvs tree (or any branch of development therefrom) to your
# system easily and efficiently (far more so than with sup, which CVSup
# is aimed at replacing). If you're running CVSup interactively, and are
# currently using an X display server, you should run CVSup as follows to
# keep your CVS tree up-to-date:
#
# cvsup secure-cvs-supfile
#
# If not running X, or invoking cvsup from a non-interactive script, then
# run it as follows:
#
# cvsup -g -L 2 secure-cvs-supfile
#
# You may wish to change some of the settings in this file to better
# suit your system:
#
# base=/usr
# base specifies the root where SUP will store information
# about the collections you have transferred to your system.
# A setting of "/usr" will generate this information in
# /usr/sup. Even if you are SUPing a large number of
# collections, you will be hard pressed to generate more than
# ~1MB of data in this directory.
#
# prefix=/home/cvs.crypt
# prefix specifies where to place the requested files. A
# setting of "/home/cvs.crypt" will place all of the files
# requested in /home/cvs.crypt (ie /home/cvs.crypt/src/secure,
# /home/cvs.crypt/eBones). The directory that is the prefix
# must exist in order for SUP to transfer files successfully.
src-eBones release=cvs host=cvsup.FreeBSD.org hostbase=/home base=/usr prefix=/home/cvs.crypt delete old use-rel-suffix compress
src-secure release=cvs host=cvsup.FreeBSD.org hostbase=/home base=/usr prefix=/home/cvs.crypt delete old use-rel-suffix compress