Re: git guidance

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Andreas Ericsson wrote:
> Al Boldi wrote:
> > Phillip Susi wrote:
> >> Al Boldi wrote:
> >>> IOW, git currently only implements the server-side use-case, but fails
> >>> to deliver on the client-side.  By introducing a git-client manager
> >>> that handles the transparency needs of a single user, it should be
> >>> possible to clearly isolate update semantics for both the client and
> >>> the server, each handling their specific use-case.
> >>
> >> Any talk of client or server makes no sense since git does not use a
> >> client/server model.
> >
> > Whether git uses the client/server model or not does not matter; what
> > matters is that there are two distinct use-cases at work here:  one on
> > the server/repository, and the other on the client.
>
> Git is distributed. The repository is everywhere. No server is actually
> needed. Many use one anyway since it can be convenient. It's not, however,
> necessary.

When you read server, don't read it as localized; a server can be 
distributed.  What distinguishes a server from an engine is that it has to 
handle a multi-user use-case.  How that is implemented, locally or remotely 
or distributed, is another issue.

> >> If you wish to use a centralized repository, then
> >> git can be set up to transparently push/pull to/from said repository if
> >> you wish via hooks or cron jobs.
> >
> > Again, this only handles the interface to/from the server/repository,
> > but once you pulled the sources, it leaves you without Version Control
> > on the client.
>
> No, that's CVS, SVN and other centralized scm's. With git you have perfect
> version control on each peer. That's the entire idea behind "fully
> distributed".

As explained before in this thread, replicating the git tree on the client 
still doesn't provide the required transparency.

> > By pulling the sources into a git-client manager mounted on some dir, it
> > should be possible to let the developer work naturally/transparently in
> > a readable/writeable manner, and only require his input when reverting
> > locally or committing to the server/repository.
>
> How is that different from what every SCM, including git, is doing today?
> The user needs to tell the scm when it's time to take a snapshot of the
> current state. Git is distributed though, so committing is usually not the
> same as publishing. Is that lack of a single command to commit and publish
> what's nagging you? If it's not, I completely fail to see what you're
> getting at, unless you've only ever looked at repositories without a
> worktree attached, or you think that git should work like an editor's
> "undo" functionality, which would be quite insane.

You need to re-read the thread.


Thanks!

--
Al

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