Distributed version control: Difference between revisions

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'''Distributed version control''' systems such as Git and Mercurial have emerged in the last few years as a viable replacement for older centralized [[Version control|version control]] systems such as Subversion and Centralized Version Control (CVS). Git in particular has swept the open source community, becoming the revision control systems of some of the most important open source projects (e.g., the Linux kernel, Qt, Ruby on Rails).
'''Distributed version control''' systems such as Git and Mercurial have emerged in the last few years as a viable replacement for older centralized [[Version control|version control]] systems such as Subversion and Centralized Version Control (CVS). Git in particular has swept the open source community, becoming the revision control systems of some of the most important open source projects (e.g., the Linux kernel, Qt, Ruby on Rails).

Revision as of 22:40, 10 July 2010

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Distributed version control systems such as Git and Mercurial have emerged in the last few years as a viable replacement for older centralized version control systems such as Subversion and Centralized Version Control (CVS). Git in particular has swept the open source community, becoming the revision control systems of some of the most important open source projects (e.g., the Linux kernel, Qt, Ruby on Rails).