Open Source Development with CVS is a book published by Coriolis
Inc. as part of the Coriolis OpenPress series. Chapters 2, 4, 6, 8, 9,
and 10 -- comprising a complete introduction, tutorial and reference
to CVS -- are being released free under the terms of the GNU General
Public License.
This port installs HTML, GNU Info, PDF, and Postscript formats.
cvschangelogbuilder is an Perl utility to generate ChangeLogs or CVS reports
for a project hosted on a CVS server.
Features include the ability to work with a remote cvs repository, detailed
reporting, graphical HTML reports and building changelogs.
cvschk is a Perl program which allows you to see the status of your own CVS
directories, without access to the CVS repository. It shows which files you
changed, made locally, and which ones were deleted.
cvsd is a wrapper program for cvs in pserver mode. It will run 'cvs pserver'
under a special uid/gid in a chroot jail.
cvsd is run as a daemon and is controlled through a configuration file. It
is relatively easy to configure and tools are provided for easily setting up
a rootjail.
This server can be useful if you want to run a public cvs pserver. You should
however be aware of the security limitations of running a cvs pserver. If you
want any kind of authentication you should really consider using secure shell
as a secure authentication mechanism and transport. Passwords used in cvs
pserver are transmitted in plaintext and this wrapper won't change that.
This server adds a layer of security to cvs. cvs is a very powerful tool and
is capable of running scripts and other things. By running cvs in a rootjail
it is possible to limit the amount of "damage" cvs can do if it is exploited.
It is generally a good idea to run cvsd without any write permissions to any
directory on the system.
cvsdadm is a tool to assist CVSd administrators in the user admin
of the CVSROOT/passwd, CVSROOT/readers, CVSROOT/writers files when
pserver authentication is being used for the repository. cvsdadm
is a fork of cvspadm.
cvsdelta summarizes the difference between a CVS project and its local
version. It detects files that have been added and removed, and of
existing files it counts the number of lines that have been added,
deleted, and changed. It filters project changes by using .cvsignore
files, both system-wide and locally.
Requires ruby.
cvslines extends the capability of the cvs commit command, to provide
extra support in managing multiple concurrent lines of development.
cvslines is a "wrapper" facility that helps out with merging changes
between various cvs branches, where the branches represent different
lines of development.
CVS Monitor is an CVS repository browser. It provides visibility of
activity in CVS to developers, management, and the general public.
Features:
* Look at any repository anywhere - CVS Monitor can act on any repository
that has at least a public read-only account, even if you don't own the
repository
* Aggressive Caching - all statistics, and most pages, are generated purely
from the cached information
* ChangeSet Visibility - present changes to the repository in ChangeSets,
a single change involves new revisions on multiple files
* Tracker Integration - CVS Monitor can be easily integrated with your Bug
tracking or Request tracking systems
Cvsplot is used for collecting statistics from CVS controlled files. Simple
statistics such as how the total number of files and lines of code change
against time.