6. Type svn ci -m "Merged changes from mybranch" and press Enter.
Finally, if we no longer require our branch, we can clean up by deleting our branch.
Don't worry though??”we can always get it back later. This is a good habit to get into,
as we will see in the next chapter.
7. Type:
svn delete http://servername/svn/sandbox/branches/mybranch -m
"Removing obsolete branch" and press Enter.
Summary
This brings us to the end of our introduction to the various tools. In the next
chapter we will see how they can be used together to manage various stages in a
project's life cycle.
Putting It All Together
In the last few chapters we looked at various Trac features and learned the basics of
Subversion. We will now put all this together and see how using our solution can
help us manage software development.
We will look at the two specific activities that are repeated most often during the
software development process??”implementing a new feature and fixing a bug??”and
follow the work flow through each of them.
Our Feature Presentation
One popular way to view an application is as a collection of features. What are
features? Features allow our application to be useful, or may even be its reason for
existing. Consider the ubiquitous text editor??”a pretty simple application at first
glance.
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