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For a long term university project involving a small team (2/5 people),
using Matlab and Java, we are trying to set up an SVN.
The problem is that the computers used in this project run different OS.
The main computer where the code should be compiled and tested in the laboratory runs Linux Ubuntu 16.04 LTS,
our supervisor, which would have admin rights uses MacOS, while the other computers would have either Windows or MacOS.
As we are not familiar with SVN, I believe it would be better chose a programme with a comprehensive GUI such as
smartSVN. The difficulty lies in finding an opensource that works across all platforms or at least Mac and Linux.
Is there any other free software, with GUI, that you'd suggest?
Thank you!
You can work with multiple SVN clients on the same remote repository. The GUI of a client is just a visual layer of the svn protocol.
You can use tortoiseSVN on Windows, smartSVN on Mac, an integrated client inside your IDE on Linux, or whatever you want.
In your case, you should have only the source code in your repository and a different configuration on the computers.
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Apple release swift as open source so,any IDE available to Implement on Linux?
As another user correctly stated, Xcode is an IDE, and Swift is a language. This is like asking: can we use Microsoft Visual Studio on Linux, since C and C++ can be used on Linux? Maybe in the future - yes, but not any time soon.
As for the limitations of Swift on Linux, I think the most important ones to note are:
1) The port of Swift to Linux is brand new. There are bugs. In fact, some people can't even use it on Linux as advertised. I could, but this is probably dependent on the specific installation of Linux. Mine is Ubuntu 14.04, but for others it failed on the same OS, Ubuntu 14.04. Not good.
2) For now we cannot use Swift on Linux to write apps for iOS and other Apple platforms.
3) A lot of frameworks/software libraries that can be used to program in Swift on Mac OS X using Xcode won't be available on Linux.
Swift on Linux is, as I understand it, intended for people to learn this new high-level cool language, so they can eventually start programming on Mac OS X or write Linux applications faster, taking advantage of the Swift language features.
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I was just wondering if you can recommend me a Linux OS for my Samsung 900x laptop. I just want to familiarize myself with the Linux OS and I know companies like people who uses Linux. Thanks!
you should ask this kind of questions in linux forums.
depending on your hardware and knowledge level you can choose a distro to use.
for example if you want to just use your OS out of the box, you can use distributions like Linux Mint and Ubuntu.
I recommend you to try a live linux disk like Knoppix which has some Desktop environments installed.
then you can choose what Desktop you like (Gnome shell, KDE, xfce,...)
and if you ever wanted to install linux on hard disk, you at least know what you want.
good luck and welcome to GNU/Linux world!
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From my searches online, I've found dozens of web-based MongoDB GUIs, as well as a native desktop application for MacOS, and one for Windows. But I'm having trouble finding any desktop GUIs for Linux. I'm looking for something akin to mysql-query-browser, but for MongoDB. Anybody know of anything?
(If it matters, I'm using Kubuntu 11.04)
What about UMongo (formerly JMongoBrowser)? I found it on Admin UIs page.
Personally I am using web based (PHP) Rock Mongo - acceptable.
Robomongo, Shell-centric cross-platform MongoDB management tool. Work on most linux systems, have deb and rpm packages.
If you're using (or willing to use) Eclipse, the MonjaDB plugin seems pretty nice. I prefer it over Rockmongo or UMongo on Linux.
qMongoFront is a QT based MongoDB GUI client on linux.It is totally free and opensouce.
Get the full list of app over at:
http://mongodb-tools.com/
And so far my favorite is:
http://www.litixsoft.de/english/mms/
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i need to create a program that downloads the source code for all versions of
webkit. and i need to do it in linux.
the problem is that i cant find an ftp address where i can download it.
when looking in the page - The WebKit Open Source Project
there is only an option for windows and mac OS.
or for browsing the code online.
i want to be able to create a directory in my local computer inside that directory i will have a directory for each version source code.
thanks.
Those are specific procedures for OS X and Windows; Linux users don't need to follow them, just the other parts.
Taking a look at it, it's got a publicly available Subversion repository. Install Subversion if you don't already have it, and use the command-line instructions.
If you're going to use Open Source on the Internet, you really should be familiar enough with Subversion, Git, Mercurial, and possibly other VCSs to get code checked out from them.
Also, I found what looks like nightly build tarballs on the site. They may be more useful.
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I'm looking for a tool that's able to create "setup" packages for Linux, just like the Windows install creators do (NSIS, InstallShield, etc.). I want it to be able to present a graphical interface to the user (or ncurses based), where he can select some options and install the package.
Any ideas of such a tool? I'm aware of autopackage, but it's not exactly what I want. It focuses mostly on correctly installing the software, I want something that focuses on creating an installer that's able to copy files, edit, run scripts, etc.
One option could be loki setup. It supports curses and gtk based setup programs. A few installer generators are cross-platform, relying on the presence of a JVM, like VAInstall. Commercial offerings include InstallAnywhere.
There isn't one.
Installing software on linux/bsd is, usually, done by the package management system. What this package management system is depends on the linux distribution or bsd variant.
Making a package for a distribution is usually done by the distribution themselves. Mostly because they are teo many to for developers to support.
So you don't package it, let them do it.
Unless the source isn't freely distributed, then pick the distribution(s) your (potential) users are using.
Use InstallBuilder 9. It seems awesome.