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Concurrent Versions System (CVS, or Concurrent Versioning System) is a version control system originally developed by Dick Grune in July 1986. [4] Design.
The Distributed Concurrent Versions System (DCVS) was a distributed revision control system that enables software developers working on locally distributed sites to efficiently collaborate on a software project. DCVS was based on the well known version control system Concurrent Versions System. The code was freely distributable under the GNU ...
Concurrent Versions System (CVS) [open, client-server] – originally built on RCS, licensed under the GPL. CVSNT – cross-platform port of CVS that allows case insensitive file names among other changes; OpenCVS – unreleased CVS clone under a BSD license, emphasizing security and source code correctness
CVSNT is a version control system compatible with and originally based on Concurrent Versions System (CVS), but whereas that was popular in the open-source world, CVSNT included features designed for developers working on commercial software including support for Windows, Active Directory authentication, reserved branches/locking, per-file access control lists and Unicode filenames.
File renames: describes whether a system allows files to be renamed while retaining their version history. Merge file renames: describes whether a system can merge changes made to a file on one branch into the same file that has been renamed on another branch (or vice versa). If the same file has been renamed on both branches then there is a ...
Specifically, CVS (Concurrent Versions System) was developed on top of RCS structure, improving scalability of the tool for larger groups, and later PRCS, [8] a simpler CVS-like tool which also uses RCS-like files, but improves upon the delta compression by using Xdelta instead.
CVS Health Corporation has emerged as a pioneer in the pharmaceutical industry in the 21st century.With roughly 85% of Americans living within five miles of a CVS pharmacy, the company is the most ...
Dick Grune is a Dutch computer scientist and university lecturer best known for inventing and developing the first version of the Concurrent Versions System (CVS). Grune was involved in the construction of Algol 68 compilers in the 1970s and the Amsterdam Compiler Kit in the 1980s.