SVN

About Subversion

SVN (Subversion) is a tool used by many software developers to manage changes within their source code tree. SVN provides the means to store not only the current version of a piece of source code, but a record of all changes (and who made those changes) that have occurred to that source code. Use of SVN is particularly common on projects with multiple developers, since SVN ensures changes made by one developer are not accidentally removed when another developer posts their changes to the source tree.
In order to access a Subversion repository, you must install a special piece of software called a Subversion client. Subversion clients are available for most any operating system.

Subversion Access

This project's SourceForge.net Subversion repository can be checked out through SVN with the following instruction set:

Stable version:

svn co https://gore.svn.sourceforge.net/svnroot/gore/tags/gore-0.1.0/ gore

Everything (for developers):

svn co https://gore.svn.sourceforge.net/svnroot/gore gore

Updates from within the module's directory do not need the URL string.
NOTE: UNIX file and directory names are case sensitive.
[SVN Browse] [Version Control with Subversion]