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I have a computer cafe. Updating and maintaining files (particularly games) has been a hassle for me and my employees. In addition, I am not willing to pay for something like G-Cafe Management Program. I am familiar with programming languages like C, PHP, JAVA, but I am neither aware of what logic and algorithm I would use for my objective nor familiar with networking

My friend suggested I use a local repository, so I researched topics regarding the same matter. But it turns out that I have a question that was not answered by discussions I've read.

This is how I view how my update was going to work:

I plan on updating games through this flow: [(Internet -> Server) -> (Server -> Client]. If there are game updates, the local server will download it through the internet; then, the client will copy or download these files from the local server.

Seeing that games have autoupdaters, I plan on placing all of the games inside the repository (in the server) and the client stations will connect to that repository. But then again, SVN works with revisions, am I right?

Are there any suggestions or ideas whether how will I be able to update client games through SVN / Git (of course from the server)? Or if there are any other ways?

I was playing too dumb.. :(

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2 Answers 2

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One solution that comes to mind is the use of disk images.

Assuming your machines are all exactly the same, you could easily keep one in the back that is a master image with all games installed and updated (nightly, weekly, monthly, up to you) and then push the image on a regular basis (probably weekly, on days you are closed) to all the client machines.

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  • (I'm sorry if this is a stupid question) Manually push the image or through the use of some software?
    – srph
    Aug 20, 2013 at 13:20
  • I've been hearing updating through MD5 Hash.. is a possible method, too?
    – srph
    Aug 20, 2013 at 13:21
  • @KierBorromeo It depends on the disk image software in use. Some can be pushed through a network, others have to be pushed manually via sneaker-net and a flash drive. It's my understanding that MD5 Hashing is just a way to verify the integrity of a file, it wouldn't help much in this case.
    – Casey
    Aug 20, 2013 at 16:10
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Version Control Systems work with revisions, yes, that counts for either SVN and git. In case of new program versions it naturally makes sense to put them into revisions, as they are usually only a snapshot of XYZ in a certain point in time. XYZ being whatever want it to be, binary programs, images, files, etc.

But to make it really part of a revision you would also need to commit the newly fetched changes. That in the end makes a new revision of your (let's say) games tree.

Those revisions then can be fetched from the client computers. That can happen either by scripts that automatically check the server every couple of minutes (cronjobs?) for changes or manually.

The benefit of that workflow is quite obvious, in case your new versions are not what you want (e.g. later you notice they are broken) you can roll back your changes to the last known working revision.

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  • So you're proposing to use SCM for multi-gigabyte binary files distribution?
    – zerkms
    Aug 20, 2013 at 2:13
  • The question was based on a SCM, so this answer is based on that as well Aug 20, 2013 at 2:32
  • have you ever tried to create and checkout an svn/git repository with say 20 Gb of binary data? (which will easily grow to 100 after couple game refreshes). SCMs are mostly designed to keep track of textual changes, not for distribution
    – zerkms
    Aug 20, 2013 at 2:33
  • That is simply wrong. I have seen a lot of repositories which have binary data, yes (thinking of e.g. images only, unlikely textual). Of course they grow in size, and one SCM system more than the other. That doesn't make it wrong per se. It depends on the available resources and of course the environment, which was not stated in the original question. Aug 20, 2013 at 2:37
  • well, just try to checkout 20Gb binaries one day. And keep in mind that it will be at least doubled on the client machine. Also keep in mind that the size will constantly grow on server. Apart of that, I agree that you can nail the nail with microscope, point taken.
    – zerkms
    Aug 20, 2013 at 2:39

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