I'm working on an ASP.NET MVC website. Each time I do important modifications, I copy/paste the entire folder of my solution and rename it something like MySolution v1.1, next time MySolution v1.2, ... In that way, I can always step back easily and keep versions. But I always have problems with the database.
Example:
I work on MySolution v1.1 with the database in the App_Data named MyDB1.mdf
I copy/paste previous version in MySolution v1.2 folder
I cannot run successfully this newly created solution because Visual Studio will try to recreate the database named MyDB1.mdf but this one already exist (in the previous folder).
I had to change database name in the connectionstring of the web.config file and clean the App_Data folder.
This is not a good way of doing things. Furthermore, I lost my data in my DB because I delete it each time.
Does someone can give me advices for versioning my different solutions?
I hope I was clear.
Thanks in advance.
I'd suggest using a revision control system, such as Subversion or Mercurial (using TortoiseHG). This way, you can just revert to a previous version of your code if you don't like the changes you made.
I encourage you to get familar with source control. This is really important and every developer should know about it.
Here some source control systems:
Subversion
GIT
Mercurial
There are other version control systems as well. Personally I prefer Mercurial.
Hope this helps!
Use version control.
If you are working in VS you can use TFS. It has good integration into it and easy to learn (free TFS for open source projects can be found on www.codeplex.com).
Also you can use GIT (www.github.com), TortoiseSVN, etc.
Also you can do versioning for Database. In this case you can store database schema in Database project or create change scripts for database.
Related
A co-worker of mine overwrote some my changes by mistake in good number of files in a folder (basically he had no changes in those files, just pushed older version of the files from his machine). I'm new on the project that uses TFVC. What will be the easiest way for me to overwrite those files. Some of these files have some new changes that are still on my machine and some have no new changes.
Please advise.
Thank you!
I think the best approach would be to ask your colleague to revert his changeset.
I'm building a tool to integrate with TFS and it needs to properly parse TFS logs (from the tf.exe history command) and checkout different revisions (again using tf.exe). It works great on the test TFS server I have, but I want to test it on a broad range of large repositories to make sure my parsing works properly.
I'd hoped to use Codeplex to get access to TFS repositories, but it seems you only get TFS access to Codeplex projects if you're a project member.
Are there any collections of open source code hosted on public TFS servers? Are there any other publicly available servers I could use for testing?
I would suggest using svn2tfs and choose any relatively active project on SourceForge. There are plenty of projects on SF to choose from that use SVN and not CVS. You might even get a bonus out of it and help the svn2tfs project work out any kinks.
Since you mention tf history command, I assume you want to collect/parse logs on the project's (and its files) history of checkins.
So in addition to large repository, you also need a good amount of history, am I right? If yes, then here's your set of problems:
Most projects on codeplex use Mercurial, not TFS. So even if you get access, you cannot use TFS with them.
As you mentioned, they require you to a be a member for you to access the source.
Even if you get access or find a public server (unlikely), you still would need good amount of history.
If I'm correct in my assumptions so far, here's the easiest (bit tedious though) way out:
Go to any large projects's such as Nuget or Wix
revisions
Download any old revision (go back as far as you want the history for). You can download zipped src files without being a member.
In your test server, checkin the code (src) to create the baseline.
Download the next revision.
Checkout files in your server and overwrite them with the newer revision's files.
While checkin, use the history.txt (sample) to create checkin comments
Repeat this process few times.
Voila!! You now have a large repository with lot of history!
Hope this helps.
Have you tried some of the larger projects on Codeplex?
http://www.codeplex.com
If you only need read access you should be able to play around with the various repositories.
I don't have a huge amount of tfs experience, but I would assume there are migration tools that let you ingest code repositories from other products (e.g svn or hit).
If so, you might want to find a svn/git repo for a sizable foss project, and try importing that.
"I'd hoped to use Codeplex to get access to TFS repositories, but it seems you only get TFS access to Codeplex projects if you're a project member."
This solution appears to be the general consensus amoung SO'rs. I've read some of the Codeplex TFS connection problem threads (you linked to below) and I hope the comments in this thread resolves the issue:
Connecting to Codeplex TFS as a Coordinator or Developer.
I'm wondering if you can use git-tfs project to import an existing Git project into TFS.
Download and install git-tfs
Create a new TFS project
Clone the TFS project to a Git project using git-tfs ("git tfs clone http://tfs:8080/tfs/DefaultCollection $/some_project")
Import a existing Git project of your choice into your fresh new Git project (I don't know the command but I think it's possible).
Use git-tfs to checkin to TFS Server ("git tfs checkintool")
=> Do it makes sense ? And works ?
For more information:
http://lostechies.com/jimmybogard/2011/09/20/git-workflows-with-git-tfs/
I started work a lone developer last year and I found VSS is no longer a good option for source control so I decided to use TFS 2010 instead.
I have had to learn everything from a book - of which there are few.
I am currently creating a new build and in my workspaces I see a have 4. I want to delete one of them and rename another.
However I do not know what the consequences of doing this are. If I delete a workspace, will that remove the associated files under source control? How do I check which files these are? What happens if I change a status from active to cloaked?
As you can see, I am a beginner in all this.
Workspaces are only a mapping from SourceSontrol folders onto your local file system. Also workspace contains information about versions of the files you have locally, so when you hit 'Get Latest Version' only recent changes are sent from server to you, not the whole files. Information on what files are checked out is stored in workspace too, so if you have pending changes in the workspace and delete it then there'll be a bit of a challenge to check these changes in. Renaming of the workspace will not break anything as far as I know.
Article An introduction to TFS Workspaces may be interesting to you.
Like the others have said, the workspace only says what local files you have checked out, and the status, etc. Workspaces are pretty granulal (i.e. per user and per machine) so you could have mutliple workspaces with the same username in the same project. E.g. if you have a copy of Visual Studio at work and one at home, you could have different files checked out and you wouldn't run into any conflicts like you would have in VSS or something based on VSS Like like VSSConnect.
We've had a couple of people leave out project and have had to go in and remove their workspaces after the fact. This hasn't been a big deal in terms of any code losses but if you don't have access to the machine anymore you will have to use the TFS tools.
Try TFS Sidekicks, it provides a nice GUI to manage all the nitty-gritty back-end stuff in TFS
Let's say I have my TFS team project setup the way I want it, and all the code between my machine and the team project is in sync (i.e. if I do a get latest it says everything is up to date).
What I would like to do is test whether or not I can pull the project back down to my local machine from TFS source control have everything work properly. By work properly, I mean I'm able to build all the projects, run the web sites, etc.
I thought what I could do is just blow away the code on my local machine and then do a get latest. But TFS seems to think that my local machine and TFS are still in sync (this is a bit different from the way Visual Source Safe worked).
In a nutshell, I'm just trying to test whether or not if another developer were to pull this team project down to their machine, that I know the project is setup correctly with all the necessary dependencies, etc. such that the other developer could build and run the project. But since I only have one machine to test this with currently, I need to do this test on the same machine.
The only way I've found to do it is to use "Get specific version" and force it to overwrite existing files, but it seems like if I delete the stuff off my hard drive, it should know when I do a get latest that "hey, the files aren't there anymore, I need to pull them down".
Any ideas on how I can do this? Thanks.
Not withstanding the answer above highlighting the merits of having an automated build process and continuous integration...
The easiest way to validate what you've checked-in is to create a new workspace with the same folder mappings, albeit to a different location on your hard-drive. You can then 'Get Latest' into this new workspace and confirm that everything builds locally, this should prove that:
The correct versions of existing files are in source control
All the required files have actually been added to source control
Alternatively if you'd rather not check-in your changes until you've validated your pending changes, then your best bet is to 'Shelve' all your changes (ticking the box to undo your pending changes), and then 'Unshelve' that shelveset into a new Workspace and do your testing against that instance of the codebase... or even ask a colleague to pull down your shelveset and do the validation (typically this called a 'Buddy Build').
TFS is a little different that VSS in that local workspaces are maintained so that every file doesn't have to be compared with every GET. In addition to removing the code from your development machine, you should also delete your local workspace. Check out "Working with Version Control Workspaces" on MSDN:
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms181383.aspx
Really, though, the best way to make sure that your code can be pulled down and built easily is to create an automated build in TFS for continuous integration. That way you know immediately if you have done something that would make the solution un-buildable.
Check out the overviews of Team Foundation Build on MSDN:
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms181710.aspx
The answers above are good. Except it will not completely test you entire scenario. If you have references outside of your solution (such as dll in the GAC, or dll from an SDK installed on your machine), creating a new workspace or deleting and getting latest code won't found those problems.
The only way to make sure is to pull down the code on another computer. If you don't have another computer handy, you can use a Virtual machine.
Do Get Specific Version and specify the latest. This will force TFS to download everything, ignoring the current synchronisation status.
TFS uses your workspace to know what is synched between the server and local.
I don't think there is an option to make Get Latest to behave like you want (Get Specific Version and specifying Latest Version and Overwrite).
I have a Project on CodePlex which is using TFS and I am using the TFS Plugin for Visual Studio. Now I have copied this project and worked on another PC without TFS and done some refactoring. Foolishly, I have then just used copy/paste and manual text editing to merge my changes, expecting that TFS just picks up the changes.
Apparantly, that is not the case.
Here is a screenshot of my local directory:
My Local TFS http://img259.imageshack.us/img259/2897/tfslocal.jpg
Notice how some files are missing the lock symbol - those are missing. If you look at the current TFS Tree on Codeplex, there are some files which do not exist locally anymore, i.e. WikiPlexExtensions.cs in the main folder.
Is there any way to easily tell TFS to compare my local to the remote repository and pick up the changes? I could re-add the local files using "Exclude from local project" and re-adding them, and I could create the "deleted" files as empty files just to delete them, but if I can avoid the manual messing around that would be good as well :)
The easiest way is to exploit VS 2008's "online" feature. Basically you want to set your solution offline, then bring it online while connected to the proper Codeplex server. TFS should figure out the rest.
Feature overview: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/teamsystem/bb898913.aspx
Tweaking the settings by hand: http://blogs.msdn.com/benryan/archive/2008/07/09/using-tfs-2008-power-tools-to-modify-server-s-offline-state.aspx
To compare local and server folders, you can check out TFS Power Tool. After installing it, you can bring up the source control explorer, right click on the server folder and then select 'Compare'. Folder difference window will display the differences. You can also right click on the differences to see available commands such as 'Get Latest' to update your local folder for example. Check out Bryan Harry's blog post on the power tool
I don't think there is an easy fix... What I've done in the past is back up those files that I have edited, then do a "Get Latest Version..." for the files I edited. This should change the files back to being read-only etc... Now, check out the files the regular way and paste the backups you had into the checked out files. Obviously this really only works when there are a couple of files you have edited.
TFS (in Visual Studio) has a "Reconcile" command for this, see Microsoft documentation, or this answer with steps.
BTW: This command may not haven been existing at time of original question, but this question came first when I was searching.