I'll be home in a few days, so no hassle, but i've kept a note of all the tips and tricks. It may be a good idea to do a bootable usb stick, and take that instead. Seems to be a solution for not only updates, but emergency boot as well.
Thanks for all the info and advice fellas.
Alex.
On Sun, Feb 22, 2009 at 7:56 PM, Gabriel M. Beddingfield <gabriel@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
alex stone wrote:A USB Ethernet adapter is, what... US$30? In the past, I've been known to spend
> My problem is i have no net access for the laptop, so i'm reinstalling
> everything with a constant transfer process with an install disk, and a usb
> stick. (And i should say here i've installed Debian Lenny ppc, which worked
HOURS trying to invent a Rube Goldberg scheme
(serial-to-morse-code-to-serial-to-ethernet chain) to avoid spending $30. I
usually regret it (and my family *always* regrets it).
Just a suggestion... now on to what you asked....
YMMV on installing CVS, SVN, or Git on a USB stick... but it seems plausible to
> Is it possible to simply download (Save as..., for instance) from an up to
> date cvs or svn build, to an isolated download file, then transfer the files
> to my usb stick, without using CVS or SVN to do so?
do. I often have PuTTy installed on a USB stick so that I can SSH from any
Windows computer without having to install software.
1. Subversion
=============
SVN has an export feature that you could use to download the latest copy.
C:\> E:\bin\svn export http://path-to-repo/project/trunk E:\data\project
To grab a specific revision, I think the syntax is:
C:\> E:\bin\svn export -r 666 http://path-to-repo/project/trunk E:\data\project
Alternatively, you could have a working copy on the stick:
C:\> E:
E:\> cd data\project
E:\> E:\bin\svn up
I've never tried to install Subversion on a USB drive. Last time I downloaded
the Windows version of Subversion, Collab.net appears to be doing stuff like
asking for registration information, and offering a limited set of packages and
install methods.
2. Git
======
Git has a great deal of support for offline usage. There's also a git-svn
connect that provides a bidirectional connection to a Subversion repository.
Also, if the server supports it, you can export any revision to a tarball using
'git archive --remote'. There's also a command called 'git bundle' that is
designed for exactly this sort of incremental and off-line updates.
However, getting Git installed on Windows is a chore... especially if you're
trying to install it to a USB stick.
Using Git with Mingw on Windows, watch out for repositories that (when
compressed) approach 2GB. (Not typical for a coding project, though.)
3. CVS
======
Messs hatessses CcccceeeVeeeeSssssss.
4. PuTTy
========
If you have shell access to some other computer (a university account, a
friend's server, whatever)... you could much more easily set this stuff up.
When you want to update things and download them, you can do it via SSH using
PuTTY and PSFTP -- which I have installed on a USB drive very successfully.
HTH,
Gabriel
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