On Mon, Aug 16, 2010 at 11:53 AM, Erik Mitchell <erik.mitchell at gmail.com>wrote:

> The specific reason I want to do this is for a git repository in /etc
> (/etc/.git). I'd like me and the main system administrator to be able
> to make commits to that repo, so we can keep track of changes on the
> server.
>
> I realized after getting Yaron's response that when using sudo to make
> commits, my user.name and user.email properties are used for the
> commit log (and not root's). That's a good thing -- what I want. We
> want to be able to keep track of who's making what changes.
>
> If anyone has any suggestions on a better way to do this, I'm all
> ears. This is my first time doing version control on /etc. I'd be
> interested in hearing what others' thoughts are.


Here's a link that might be of interest to you:
http://svk.bestpractical.com/view/HomePage

Further searching may lead you to git-specific solutions
or other product suites...

-Rob
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://mailman.mn-linux.org/pipermail/tclug-list/attachments/20100816/0b6d11be/attachment.htm