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From: | Max Horn |
Subject: | Re: [freesci-develop] Web page handling changes |
Date: | Mon, 27 Aug 2007 22:16:11 +0200 |
Am 27.08.2007 um 19:48 schrieb Lars Skovlund:
On Mon, Aug 27, 2007 at 11:14:05AM -0600, Christoph Reichenbach wrote:) Max, On Mon, Aug 27, 2007 at 10:30:16AM +0200, Max Horn wrote:FYI, I can't completly check it out (and couldn't before your changeseither):[...]IWFH, so I'm afraid that I have no idea where that might be coming from :-/I can checkpoint it; that might address the problem...?Please don't. That error message is the same one I was seeing until you reverted glutton to the uncheckpointed version. I haven't used the web repository apart from an initial checkout, so I'm afraid I have no other solutions to offer.
So, what would the solution be? It seems to me the repos is broken, as it seems impossible to make a fresh new checkout (or can any of you do that?). In the worst case, you might have to start it over from scratch (loosing the history), but that wouldn't be so bad, given that there are only 13 patches in it right now, would it?
Am 27.08.2007 um 19:14 schrieb Christoph Reichenbach:Max, On Mon, Aug 27, 2007 at 10:30:16AM +0200, Max Horn wrote:
[...]
Announcements/news are handled by a separate mechanism; all project members have (or should have) logins/passwords that allow them to directly post on theweb page.
Excellent, and sounds more comfortable than what we have for ScummVM.
For the page itself I do have a manual update script, but it's not set up in such a way that it would be easy to make it world-executable. I'd prefer an auto-upload after each commit, but the ftp web page upload takes too long forthis to be pleasant.
OK, sure.Oh, and please note that my intention was *not* to suggest you guys shouldn't use a cron script! It certainly would never occur to me to even attempt to "dictate" what you guys should do :-). I merely wanted to offset your original statement which sounded a bit as if using a cron job for this was the obvious "better" solution. Rather, it has advantages and drawbacks, and what's best depends on the needs of the given project. But you probably were aware of that anyway :).
Cheers, Max
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