Alvaro Herrera wrote:
> Bruce Momjian wrote:
>
> > My typical cycle is to take the patch, apply it to my tree, then cvs
> > diff and look at the diff, adjust the source, and rerun until I like the
> > diff and apply. How do I do that with this setup?
>
> The same, except that you don't need to take the patch out of an email
> and into the repository -- the new code is already in the repository,
> sitting in someone's own branch. You can commit into that branch all
> the adjustments you want; and when you consider it ready, the only thing
> you have to do is "propagate" the change to the main development branch.
>
> Yes, it's nice. Consider this: Andrew develops some changes to PL/perl
> in his branch. Neil doesn't like something in those changes, so he
> commits a fix there. In the meantime, Tom has been busy with his own
> stuff and committing to the main branch; Andrew can track those changes
> by propagating from the main branch to his branch -- he doesn't need to
> fall behind and update his modified tree once a month and deal with
> umpteen conflicts.
>
> Of course, you can _also_ do the patch by email and correct stuff if you
> want. It's just not the best way to do it.
How to people get a branch? Do they have their own logins?
-- Bruce Momjian <bruce@momjian.us> http://momjian.us EnterpriseDB
http://www.enterprisedb.com
+ If your life is a hard drive, Christ can be your backup. +