Cameron Simpson escribió:
Not really. Anyone can use a VCS. Why should they need to be in a particular group? That is a policy decision for your particular system. Example: at my workplace there are SVN and CVS repositories with _different_ groups to constrain access to particular project groups.
You mean that all the other groups that a normal Fedora Server/Workstation has are always needed?
What group should /var/cvs or /var/lib/cvs have?
For your system you may well have a single group who uses the VCS, and then you need only one group. But you don't really need a group at all (for example, I have a few mercurial repositories at home wholly for me - no group is involved at all).
Well, actually I was trying to build a centralized mercurial repository to share with hgweb, and I stumbled when looking for a group to use.
BTW, a /var/lib/hg directory wouldn't hurt to have after installing mercurial. If you want to have a centralized copy to share, you know where to put it (in a standardized mode), else, it's just an empty directory laying there.
So a VCS shouldn't impose a group on the system. Make the group yourself, and set your own policy as you see fit.
Why not have a standard group for this? -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list