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Saved by uncleflo on June 6th, 2011.
As I’ve mentioned in other posts, the Subversion project is on the verge of releasing version 1.5, a culmination of nearly two years of work. The release is jam-packed with some huge new features, but the one everyone’s excited about is “merge tracking”. Merge-tracking is when your version control system keeps track of how lines of development (branches) diverge and re-form together. Historically, open source tools such as CVS and Subversion haven’t done this at all; they’ve relied on “advanced” users carefully examining history and typing arcane commands with just the right arguments. Branching and merging is possible, but it sure ain’t easy. Of course, distributed version control systems have now started to remove the fear and paranoia around branching and merging—they’re actually designed around merging as a core competency. Subversion is now beginning to match features in larger, commercial tools such as Clearcase and Perforce.
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