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Re: cvs init: CVSROOT "helloworld.cvsroot" must be an absolute path name
From: |
Rob Helmer |
Subject: |
Re: cvs init: CVSROOT "helloworld.cvsroot" must be an absolute path name |
Date: |
Thu, 9 Aug 2001 11:57:28 -0700 |
User-agent: |
Mutt/1.2.5i |
On Thu, Aug 09, 2001 at 02:38:18PM -0400, Kevin Fonner wrote:
> I am new to programming on linux and I was experimenting with cvs off of
> instructions out of a book.
>
> It told me to type "cvs -d helloworld.cvsroot init" after creating the
> directory ofcourse.
>
> I then got the error....
> cvs init: CVSROOT "helloworld.cvsroot" must be an absolute path name
>
> how can I correct this?
> I assume this has something to do with path since this worked when I
> created the directory directly in my home directory.
> But I would like to organize my files within my home directory like...
> /dev/java/helloworld/helloword.cvsroot
>
> Is this ok to do?
This is ok, you just need to specify the absolute (aka full ) path to
the repository.
If your repository was in /var/cvs/helloworld.cvsroot, the absolute
path would be /var/cvs/helloworld.cvsroot and you would do this :
"cvs -d /var/cvs/helloworld.cvsroot init"
I am assuming you want to check out to your home directory, not keep
the repository there. Your work directory and the repository directory
need to be two seperate places.
HTH,
Rob Helmer
Namodn