Controle de Versão com Subversion

Para Subversion 1.2

(livro compilado de Revision 2991)

Ben Collins-Sussman

Brian W. Fitzpatrick

C. Michael Pilato

Este trabalho está licenciado sob a licença Creative Commons Attribution License. Para ver uma cópia da licença, visite http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/ ou envie uma carta para Creative Commons, 559 Nathan Abbott Way, Stanford, California 94305, USA.

(TBA)


Índice

Palavras Iniciais
Prefácio
Audiência
Como Ler Este Livro
Convenções Usadas Neste Livro
Convenções Tipográficas
Ícones
Organização Deste Livro
Este Livro é Gratuito
Reconhecimentos
De Ben Collins-Sussman
De Brian W. Fitzpatrick
De C. Michael Pilato
1. Introdução
O que é Subversion?
História do Subversion
Características do Subversion
Arquitetura do Subversion
Instalando Subversion
Componentes do Subversion
Uma Introdução Rápida
2. Conceitos Básicos
O Repositório
Modelos de Controle de Versão
O Problema de Compartilhar Arquivos
A Solução Travar-Modificar-Destravar
A Solução Copiar-Modificar-Fundir
Subversion in Action
Working Copies
Revisions
How Working Copies Track the Repository
Mixed Revision Working Copies
Updates and Commits are Separate
Mixed revisions are normal
Mixed revisions are useful
Mixed revisions have limitations
Summary
3. Guided Tour
Help!
Import
Revisions: Numbers, Keywords, and Dates, Oh My!
Revision Numbers
Revision Keywords
Revision Dates
Initial Checkout
Basic Work Cycle
Update Your Working Copy
Make Changes to Your Working Copy
Examine Your Changes
svn status
svn diff
svn revert
Resolve Conflicts (Merging Others' Changes)
Merging Conflicts by Hand
Copying a File Onto Your Working File
Punting: Using svn revert
Commit Your Changes
Examining History
svn log
svn diff
Examining Local Changes
Comparing Working Copy to Repository
Comparing Repository to Repository
svn cat
svn list
A Final Word on History
Other Useful Commands
svn cleanup
svn import
Summary
4. Ramificação e fusão
O Que é um Ramo?
Using Branches
Creating a Branch
Working with Your Branch
The Key Concepts Behind Branches
Copying Changes Between Branches
Copying Specific Changes
The Key Concept Behind Merging
Best Practices for Merging
Tracking Merges Manually
Previewing Merges
Merge Conflicts
Noticing or Ignoring Ancestry
Common Use-Cases
Merging a Whole Branch to Another
Undoing Changes
Resurrecting Deleted Items
Common Branching Patterns
Release Branches
Feature Branches
Switching a Working Copy
Tags
Creating a Simple Tag
Creating a Complex Tag
Branch Maintenance
Repository Layout
Data Lifetimes
Summary
5. Repository Administration
Repository Basics
Understanding Transactions and Revisions
Unversioned Properties
Repository Data Stores
Berkeley DB
FSFS
Repository Creation and Configuration
Hook Scripts
Berkeley DB Configuration
Repository Maintenance
An Administrator's Toolkit
svnlook
svnadmin
svndumpfilter
Berkeley DB Utilities
Repository Cleanup
Managing Disk Space
Repository Recovery
Migrating a Repository
Repository Backup
Adding Projects
Choosing a Repository Layout
Creating the Layout, and Importing Initial Data
Summary
6. Server Configuration
Visão Geral
Network Model
Requests and Responses
Client Credentials Caching
svnserve, a custom server
Invoking the Server
Built-in authentication and authorization
Create a 'users' file and realm
Set access controls
SSH authentication and authorization
SSH configuration tricks
Initial setup
Controlling the invoked command
httpd, the Apache HTTP server
Prerequisites
Basic Apache Configuration
Authentication Options
Basic HTTP Authentication
SSL Certificate Management
Authorization Options
Blanket Access Control
Per-Directory Access Control
Disabling Path-based Checks
Extra Goodies
Repository Browsing
Other Features
Supporting Multiple Repository Access Methods
7. Advanced Topics
Runtime Configuration Area
Configuration Area Layout
Configuration and the Windows Registry
Configuration Options
Servers
Config
Properties
Por que propriedades?
Manipulating Properties
Special Properties
svn:executable
svn:mime-type
svn:ignore
svn:keywords
svn:eol-style
svn:externals
svn:special
svn:needs-lock
Automatic Property Setting
Locking
Creating locks
Discovering locks
Breaking and stealing locks
Lock Communication
Peg and Operative Revisions
Externals Definitions
Vendor branches
General Vendor Branch Management Procedure
svn_load_dirs.pl
Localization
Understanding locales
Subversion's use of locales
Using External Differencing Tools
External diff
External diff3
Subversion Repository URLs
8. Developer Information
Layered Library Design
Repository Layer
Repository Access Layer
RA-DAV (Repository Access Using HTTP/DAV)
RA-SVN (Custom Protocol Repository Access)
RA-Local (Direct Repository Access)
Your RA Library Here
Client Layer
Using the APIs
The Apache Portable Runtime Library
URL and Path Requirements
Using Languages Other than C and C++
Inside the Working Copy Administration Area
The Entries File
Pristine Copies and Property Files
WebDAV
Programming with Memory Pools
Contributing to Subversion
Join the Community
Get the Source Code
Become Familiar with Community Policies
Make and Test Your Changes
Donate Your Changes
9. Subversion Complete Reference
The Subversion Command Line Client: svn
svn Switches
svn Subcommands
svn add
svn blame
svn cat
svn checkout
svn cleanup
svn commit
svn copy
svn delete
svn diff
svn export
svn help
svn import
svn info
svn list
svn lock
svn log
svn merge
svn mkdir
svn move
svn propdel
svn propedit
svn propget
svn proplist
svn propset
svn resolved
svn revert
svn status
svn switch
svn unlock
svn update
svnadmin
svnadmin Switches
svnadmin Subcommands
svnadmin create
svnadmin deltify
svnadmin dump
svnadmin help
svnadmin hotcopy
svnadmin list-dblogs
svnadmin list-unused-dblogs
svnadmin load
svnadmin lslocks
svnadmin lstxns
svnadmin recover
svnadmin rmlocks
svnadmin rmtxns
svnadmin setlog
svnadmin verify
svnlook
svnlook Switches
svnlook
svnlook author
svnlook cat
svnlook changed
svnlook date
svnlook diff
svnlook dirs-changed
svnlook help
svnlook history
svnlook info
svnlook lock
svnlook log
svnlook propget
svnlook proplist
svnlook tree
svnlook uuid
svnlook youngest
svnserve
svnserve Switches
svnversion
svnversion
mod_dav_svn
mod_dav_svn Configuration Directives
Subversion properties
Subversion-defined properties
A. Subversion for CVS Users
Revision Numbers Are Different Now
Directory Versions
More Disconnected Operations
Distinction Between Status and Update
Status
Update
Branches and Tags
Metadata Properties
Conflict Resolution
Binary Files and Translation
Versioned Modules
Authentication
Converting a Repository from CVS to Subversion
B. WebDAV and Autoversioning
Basic WebDAV Concepts
Original WebDAV
DeltaV Extensions
Subversion and DeltaV
Autoversioning
Client Interoperability
Standalone WebDAV applications
Microsoft Office, Dreamweaver, Photoshop
Cadaver, DAV Explorer
File-explorer WebDAV extensions
Microsoft Web Folders
Nautilus, Konqueror
WebDAV filesystem implementation
WebDrive, NetDrive
Mac OS X
Linux davfs2
C. Third Party Tools
D. Copyright

Lista de Figuras

1.1. Arquitetura do Subversion
2.1. Um sistema cliente/servidor típico
2.2. O problema a se evitar
2.3. A Solução travar-modificar-destravar
2.4. A solução copiar-modificar-fundir
2.5. A solução copiar-modificar-fundir (continuação)
2.6. The repository's filesystem
2.7. The repository
4.1. Ramos de desenvolvimento
4.2. Starting repository layout
4.3. Repository with new copy
4.4. The branching of one file's history
8.1. Files and directories in two dimensions
8.2. Versioning time—the third dimension!

Lista de Tabelas

2.1. Repository Access URLs
5.1. Repository Data Store Comparison
6.1. Comparação dos Servidores de Rede
8.1. A Brief Inventory of the Subversion Libraries
B.1. Common WebDAV Clients

Lista de Exemplos

5.1. txn-info.sh (Reporting Outstanding Transactions)
6.1. A sample configuration for anonymous access.
6.2. A sample configuration for authenticated access.
6.3. A sample configuration for mixed authenticated/anonymous access.
6.4. Disabling path checks altogether
7.1. Sample Registration Entries (.reg) File.
7.2. diffwrap.sh
7.3. diffwrap.bat
7.4. diff3wrap.sh
7.5. diff3wrap.bat
8.1. Using the Repository Layer
8.2. Using the Repository Layer with Python
8.3. A Python Status Crawler
8.4. Contents of a Typical .svn/entries File
8.5. Effective Pool Usage