Applying RCS and SCCS
From Source Control to Project Control
By Don Bolinger, Tan Bronson
March 1995
Pages: 520
ISBN 10: 1-56592-117-8 |
ISBN 13: 9781565921177




(Average of 1 Customer Reviews)


Book description
Applying RCS and SCCS thoroughly introduces these two systems as tools for project management. It takes you through basic source control of a single file, working with multiple releases of a software project, and coordinating multiple developers. It also presents TCCS, a representative "front-end" that addresses problems RCS and SCCS can't handle alone, such as managing groups of files, developing for multiple platforms, and linking public and private development areas.
Full Description
Applying RCS and SCCS tells you how to manage a complex software development project using RCS and SCCS. The book tells you much more than how to use each command; it's organized in terms of increasingly complex management problems, from simple source management, to managing multiple releases, to coordinating teams of developers on a project involving many files and more than one target platform.
Few developers use RCS or SCCS alone; most groups have written their own extensions for working with multiperson, multiplatform, multifile, multirelease projects. Part of this book, therefore, discusses how to design your own tools on top of RCS or SCCS, both covering issues related to "front-ending" in general, and by describing TCCS, one such set of tools (available via FTP). This book also provides an overview of CVS, SPMS, and other project management environments.
Browse within this book
Cover
| Table of Contents
| Index
| Sample Chapters
| Colophon
Featured customer reviews

Applying RCS and SCCS Review,
February 29 2004
Submitted by .
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Fully agree with Ralph,It needs a better index, it suffers from the confusion. They should be in seperate sections!
Kate L.
Applying RCS and SCCS Review,
March 22 2000
Submitted by Ralph J. Jones
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I always by O'Reily when I'm buying a reference book.
This is well written as all O'Reilly books are.
BUT: It's almost usless. I'm using RCS the book
is very confusing mixing RCS & SCCS in the same
chapters. It also needs a better index, it suffers from the confusion.
It's OK to have the two systems in the same book
BUT they should be in seperate sections.
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