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  2. Concurrent Versions System - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Concurrent_Versions_System

    In the world of open source software, the Concurrent Version System (CVS) has long been the tool of choice for version control. And rightly so. CVS itself is free software, and its non-restrictive modus operandi and support for networked operation—which allow dozens of geographically dispersed programmers to share their work—fits the ...

  3. List of version-control software - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_version-control...

    Source Code Control System (SCCS) [open, shared] – part of UNIX; based on interleaved deltas, can construct versions as arbitrary sets of revisions; extracting an arbitrary version takes essentially the same time and is thus more useful in environments that rely heavily on branching and merging with multiple "current" and identical versions

  4. CVSNT - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CVSNT

    CVSNT is a version control system compatible with and originally based on Concurrent Versions System (CVS), but whereas that was popular in the open-source world, CVSNT included features designed for developers working on commercial software including support for Windows, Active Directory authentication, reserved branches/locking, per-file access control lists and Unicode filenames.

  5. Apache Subversion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apache_Subversion

    CollabNet founded the Subversion project in 2000 as an effort to write an open-source version-control system which operated much like CVS but which fixed the bugs and supplied some features missing in CVS. [3] By 2001, Subversion had advanced sufficiently to host its own source code, [3] and in February 2004, version 1.0 was released. [4]

  6. Comparison of version-control software - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_version...

    The following table contains relatively general attributes of version-control software systems, including: Repository model, the relationship between copies of the source code repository Client–server , users access a master repository via a client ; typically, their local machines hold only a working copy of a project tree.

  7. Distributed Concurrent Versions System - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distributed_Concurrent...

    The Distributed Concurrent Versions System (DCVS) was a distributed revision control system that enables software developers working on locally distributed sites to efficiently collaborate on a software project. DCVS was based on the well known version control system Concurrent Versions System. The code was freely distributable under the GNU ...

  8. Fossil (software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fossil_(software)

    Fossil is used for version control by the SQLite project, which is itself a component of Fossil. SQLite transitioned to using Fossil for version control over CVS on 2009-08-12. [5] [6] Some examples of other projects using Fossil are: Tcl/Tk Project; Pikchr; MySQL++, a C++ wrapper for the MySQL and MariaDB C APIs; LuaSQLite3; libfossil

  9. TortoiseCVS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TortoiseCVS

    TortoiseCVS is a CVS client for Microsoft Windows released under the GNU General Public License.Unlike most CVS tools, it includes itself in Windows' shell by adding entries in the contextual menu of the file explorer, therefore it does not run in its own window.