SVN"

This website contains links to software which is either no longer maintained or will be supported only until the end of 2019 (CKFinder 2). For the latest documentation about current CKSource projects, including software like CKEditor 4/CKEditor 5, CKFinder 3, Cloud Services, Letters, Accessibility Checker, please visit the new documentation website.

If you look for an information about very old versions of CKEditor, FCKeditor and CKFinder check also the CKEditor forum, which was closed in 2015. If not, please head to StackOverflow for support.

 
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== Repository Structure ==
 
== Repository Structure ==
 
+
<pre>FCKeditor -----------+ Every subproject will have a directory in the root.
<pre>
+
trunk -----------+ This is the development place.
FCKeditor -----------+ Every subproject will have a directory in the root.
+
branches
    trunk -----------+ This is the development place.
+
developers --+
    branches
+
features | Isolated development spaces.
        developers --+
+
versions ----+
        features     | Isolated development spaces.
+
tags
        versions ----+
+
2.3.2 -------+
    tags
+
2.3.1 | A tag will be available for each version release.  
        2.3.2 -------+
+
2.3 | It contains the development version (trunk) at release time.
        2.3.1       | A tag will be available for each version release.  
+
1.6.1 -------+
        2.3         | It contains the development version (trunk) at release time.
+
</pre>  
        1.6.1 -------+
 
</pre>
 
 
All subprojects in the repository will present a structure similar to the above.
 
All subprojects in the repository will present a structure similar to the above.
  
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If you are insecure, don't be afraid of asking others to execute this task for you.
 
If you are insecure, don't be afraid of asking others to execute this task for you.
  
TortoiseSVN offers a nice tool to track the creation an life-cicle of branches. It is called "Revision graph". The SVN log can also be used for it.
+
TortoiseSVN offers a nice tool to track the creation an life-cicle of branches. It is called "Revision graph". The SVN log can also be used for it.<br>
 
 
 
 
  
 
== Links ==
 
== Links ==

Latest revision as of 12:13, 23 January 2008

Development SVN

The SVN repository used for the development can be found at (browsable):

http://svn.fckeditor.net

The SVN contains the "development version" of FCKeditor. It doesn't reflect the contents of public distributions. Actually, some files are not present in the public downloads (like the "_dev" folder or the compressed "js" files, for example).

We don't recommend using this version on production. There are also security implications on doing so. To make the SVN version "production safe", it must be processed with FCKreleaser (available inside _dev). A safer and easier option is to simply use the Nightly Build, which is already processed.

Nightly Build

Every night, at 0:30 PST, a "Nightly Build" is generated, from the SVN version. You may download it from one of the following links:

You may also test it online here.

The nightly is processed for public distribution. As the fixes and features available on nightlies are still under testing and development, it may be used on production systems at your own risk.

Working with SVN

Some basic SVN usage information can be found at the SVN Basics page.

Testing Old Revisions

There are occasions during the development, when bugs are introduced by recent changes in the code. To precisely understand and find when things changed, we have created a dedicated web site with a list of all revisions available for the trunk:

http://rev.fckeditor.net/

The list in the above site is quite similar to the trunk log page, with the exception that it contains and additional column called "Test". A link can be found there to open the sample pages of FCKeditor, generated for each precise revision.

Repository Structure

FCKeditor -----------+ Every subproject will have a directory in the root.
trunk -----------+ This is the development place.
branches
developers --+
features | Isolated development spaces.
versions ----+
tags
2.3.2 -------+
2.3.1 | A tag will be available for each version release. 
2.3 | It contains the development version (trunk) at release time.
1.6.1 -------+

All subprojects in the repository will present a structure similar to the above.

The "trunk"

The trunk is the effective place we'll be working everyday. Usually we'll have local working copies of the trunk only (and possibly any branch).

Starting from version 2.4, the trunk will always have stable code which we can publish to the public SVN, and eventually release officially. So, only important bugs and small changes will be committed here, while more delicate and extensive developments will be done in a "branch".

Branches

Branches give us isolated environments for development, and once tested and confirmed a new work is ready, it can be simply merged in the trunk.

For code that doesn't bring instability, like trivial fixes or small features, there is no need to work on a separated branch. It can be committed directly to the trunk if you feel the code is ok and it is well tested. It makes the management easier.

The branches could be created in the following spaces:

  • branches/developers: each developer may have a private branch under this directory. The directory name is the developer name (fredck, for example). The developer himself can decide to use it or not, and have complete freedom for it.
  • branches/features: if a feature is too big and complex, a developer could decide to create a dedicated branch for it.
  • branches/versions: there could be branches for future versions, waiting while previous ones are being tested and released.

Merging Branches

A common task during a branch development, is to merge changes made in the trunk to the branch, leaving it always up to date with the trunk. Remember that merges must be done from the last revision merged, starting from the revision from which the branch has been created.

When merging branches to the trunk, first merge the trunk to the branch and check that everything is ok. Make the necessary changes and commit the branch. Then switch to the trunk and merge the differences between the branch HEAD and the last trunk revision you have just merged to the branch (usually HEAD). Then, if the branch is not anymore needed, just delete it (SVN delete I mean).

If you are insecure, don't be afraid of asking others to execute this task for you.

TortoiseSVN offers a nice tool to track the creation an life-cicle of branches. It is called "Revision graph". The SVN log can also be used for it.

Links

This page was last edited on 23 January 2008, at 12:13.