by Prentice Hall PTR
| Average Rating: |
|
| Sales Rank: | 303744 (lower is better) |
| Price Used: | $20.73 |
| Shipping: | Free Shipping on most orders over $25* |
| Availability: | Usually ships in 24 hours |
| Label: | Prentice Hall PTR |
| Pages: | 368 |
| Binding: | Paperback |
| Publication Date: | 2005-05-26 |
| Published By: | Prentice Hall PTR |
| ASIN: | 0131855182 |
| Category: | Book |
Authors
Customer Reviews
Excellent introduction to Subversion - Reviewed on 2005-11-27
13 customers found this review helpful.
This book covers all aspects of using Subversion: from setting up repositories, to daily usage, to administering the repositories that you created. There is also a section that explains how to configure the Apache web server to serve repositories. After reading the book, I truly had a good understanding of Subversion and how to use it effectively.
There is a minor precaution, however. This book only covers up to Subversion 1.1. Subversion 1.4 was recently released, so some newer functionality is not detailed. Although the book trails the current release of Subversion by a few releases, most of the enhancements are "behind the scenes", and don't affect how users interact with the repositories. (One feature that many people feel is important, the ability to lock files, was added in Subversion 1.2 and is therefore not covered.)
This book is an excellent introduction to almost all facets of Subversion, and I highly recommend it to Subversion novices. However, since it is slightly out of date in its feature coverage, I subtracted a star from the overall rating.
Subvert your development process! - Reviewed on 2005-07-14
14 customers found this review helpful.
This is a straightforward book on a straightforward topic. Subversion is an open-source version control (VC) system conceived as a replacement for CVS. While improving on CVS in a number of ways, it nonetheless feels comfortable and familiar to CVS users. Furthermore, because it avoids some of CVS's worst "gotchas", it's easier for VC novices to learn. Nagel writes this book for both of these audiences in a plain, easy to read style.
As expected, the book covers the basic concepts of VC software, offers comparisons between Subversion and several other VC systems, and discusses Subversion's command set in detail. But the most valuable part of the book are the numerous discussions throughout of practical approaches to working in a VC environment and to managing a Subversion repository. There's some great material on how VC practices and development methodologies affect each other, and there are some detailed case studies of individual companies and how they use Subversion -- right down to the details of the client software, repository layout, and automation scripts that they use. There's always a danger that a book documenting a specific software package will simply duplicate material that's already in the manual; that really doesn't happen here.
Prospective Subversion users -- whether they're coming from a CVS or SourceSafe environment, or if they're new to VC all together -- won't go wrong with this book.
* - See Amazon
Product Page for shipping and pricing details.
Book Subjects
- Programming languages
- Software engineering
- Software Development
- Computers
- Computers - Languages / Programming
- Computer Books: Languages
- Programming Languages - General
- Computers / Programming Languages / General
- Programming - Software Development
- Computer software
- Development
- Open source software