Monday, January 28, 2008
I have a nice subversion server at work, but I don't have one for use at home. I could use Google's thing or roll my own at home, but I found Beanstalk and I am giving it a try. So far its pretty sweet, here are some screens showing how it looks.

Above is a shot of my local directory subversion files and how the thing looks the beanstalk browser. You can see the bread crumbing, and revision number.

When you navigate down to an actual item, you'll see who last checked the item in, the revision number, that nice bread crumb, and you're able to download the file outright, preview, and other stuff.

An activity viewer... more friendly in my opinion... nothing really special here, but its quite useful.

Here is the other side of Activity page, showing storage. This system is seriously cool, I don't have to worry about firewalls or local servers when I'm on the outside trying to look in, its really user-friendly, and its pretty cheap... free if you're only working with one repository. Give it a go, I think its sweet.
3 Comments:
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Nathan said...
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“If you'd like integrated trac/svn, give assembla.com a shot. I've been using it for a while, and haven't had any problems.”
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Marcel Lüthi said...
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“Origo is another great hosting platform for your projects:
http://www.origo.ethz.ch/
From their web site:
* Origo provides all the basic mechanisms that your project needs:
- An SVN repository (with web interface)
- A template project wiki page
- An issue tracker with tag support
- A place to put your releases (ftp upload, API based upload)
* Origo is not just a web site but an API: Your developments can take direct advantage of all the Origo mechanisms through a programming interface.
* Origo is available for both your open-source and closed-source projects.
* Origo is a scalable platform based on a peer-to-peer architecture.
Have a look there as well!”









