2014-03-07 18:32 GMT+01:00 Chris Murphy <lists(a)colorremedies.com>:
On Mar 7, 2014, at 6:51 AM, Miloslav Trmač <mitr(a)volny.cz>
wrote:
- For configuration: What we really want is a VCS, dealing with
changesets, documenting who has changed what, when and why. Snapshots are
a really poor VCS.
Obviously we don't have all that technology that we "really want", or at
least not in a way that is ready to deploy, but we kind of have snapshots.
Let's just not think that snapshots are "right".
To do VCS correctly requires application opt-in, and an API to manage it.
Yes, ideally; but actually it would still be useful for every
fedora-server-role-manage subcommand to:
1) check if /etc has changed at all since the last committed state; if so,
(git commit -m 'Unknown unmanaged changes between $timestamp and
$timestamp'), and optionally alert an admin
2) perform the primarily role of the subcommand as intended
3) (git commit -m 'performed $command for $user'), unless the admin has
explicitly disabled autocommit. (Asking for a rationale in the change log
should be an option but probably not default.)
We could then expand this from fedora-server-role-manage to other tools.
How do I get revision control with file formats that don't
support it like
RTF, txt, PNG, TIFF, etc?
The way we already do this with git: git gives you full revision control,
and we lack the tools show the differences in a nice UI or to do a
reasonable three-way merge. But note that revision control is still quite
useful in this scenario: it gives you the ability to go back in time, to
track responsibility and rationale for changes, and if you really need to,
you can compare the content manually.
Mirek