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Bazaar is reasonably fast (very fast for trees with shallow history, but presently scales poorly with history length), and is easy-to-learn to those familiar with the command-line interfaces of traditional SCMs (CVS, SVN, etc). Win32 is considered a first-class target by its development team. It has a pluggable architecture for different components, and replaces its storage format frequently; this allows them to introduce new features (such as better support for integration with revision control systems based on different concepts) and improve performance. The Bazaar team considers directory tracking and rename support first-class functionality. While globally unique revision-id identifiers are available for all revisions, tree-local revnos (standard revision numbers, more akin to those used by svn or other more conventional SCMs) are used in place of content hashes for identifying revisions. Bazaar has support for "lightweight checkouts", in which history is kept on a remote server instead of copied down to the local system and is automatically referred to over the network when needed; at present, this is unique among DSCMs.

I have not used Mercurial extensively, and so cannot comment on it in detail -- except to note that it, like Git, has content-hash addressing for revisions; also like Git, it does not treat directories as first-class objects (and cannot store an empty directory). It is, however, faster than any other DSCM except for Git, and has far better IDE integration (especially for Eclipse) than any of its competitors. Given its performance characteristics (which lag only slightly behind those of Git) and its superior cross-platform and IDE support, Mercurial may be compelling for teams with significant number of win32-centric or IDE-bound members.

One concern in migrating from SVN is that SVN's GUI frontends and IDE integration is more mature than that of any of the distributed SCMs. Also, if today you make heavy use of precommit script automation with SVN (ie. requiring unit tests to pass before a commit can proceed), you'll probably want to use a tool similar to PQM for automating merge requests to your shared branches.

SVK is a DSCM which uses Subversion as its backing store, and has quite good integration with SVN-centric tools. However, it has dramatically worse performance and scalability characteristics than any other major DSCM (even Darcs), and should be avoided for projects which are liable to grow large in terms of either amount of history or number of files.

[About the author: I use Git and Perforce for work, and Bazaar for my personal projects and as an embedded library; other parts of my employer's organization use Mercurial heavily. In a previous life I built a great deal of automation around SVN; before that I have experience with GNU Arch, BitKeeper, CVS and others. Git was quite off-putting at first -- it felt like GNU Arch inasmuch as being a concept-heavy environment, as opposed to toolkits built to conform to the user's choice of workflows -- but I've since come to be quite comfortable with it].

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Git is very fast, scales very well, and has is very transparent about its concepts. The down side of this is that it has a relatively steep learning curve. A win32 port is available, but not quite a first-class citizen. Git exposes hashes as version numbers to users; this provides guarantees (in that a single hash always refers to the exact same content; an attacker cannot modify history without being detected), but can be cumbersome to the user. Git has a unique concept of tracking file contents, even as those contents move between files, and views files as first-level objects, but does not track directories. Another issue with git is that has many operations (such as rebase) which make it easy to modify history (in a sense -- the content referred to by a hash will never change, but references to that hash may be lost); some purists (myself included) don't like that very much.

Bazaar is reasonably fast (very fast for trees with shallow history, but presently scales poorly with history length), and is easy-to-learn to those familiar with the command-line interfaces of traditional SCMs (CVS, SVN, etc). Win32 is considered a first-class target by its development team. It has a pluggable architecture for different components, and replaces its storage format frequently; this allows them to introduce new features (such as better support for integration with revision control systems based on different concepts) and improve performance. The Bazaar team considers directory tracking and rename support first-class functionality. While globally unique revision-id identifiers are available for all revisions, content hashes tree-local revnos (standard revision numbers, more akin to those used by svn or other more conventional SCMs) are not used in place of content hashes for identifying revisions; to provide provability similar to Git's, optional functionality needs to be used.

One concern in migrating from SVN is that SVN's GUI frontends and IDE integration is more mature than that of any of the distributed SCMs. Also, if today you make heavy use of precommit script automation with SVN (ie. requiring unit tests to pass before a commit can proceed), you'll probably want to use a tool similar to PQM for automating merge requests to your shared branches.

[About the author: I use Git and Perforce for work, and Bazaar for my personal projects. In a previous life I built a great deal of automation around SVN; before that I have experience with GNU Arch, BitKeeper, CVS and others. Git was quite off-putting at first -- it felt like GNU Arch inasmuch as being a concept-heavy environment, as opposed to toolkits built to conform to the user's choice of workflows -- but I've since come to be quite comfortable with it].

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Git is very fast, scales very well, and has very transparent about its concepts. The down side of this is that it has a relatively steep learning curve. A win32 port is available, but not quite a first-class citizen. Git exposes hashes as version numbers to users; this provides guarantees (in that a single hash always refers to the exact same content; an attacker cannot modify history without being detected), but can be cumbersome to the user. Git has a unique concept of tracking file contents, even as those contents move between files, and views files as first-level objects, but does not track directories.

Bazaar is reasonably fast (very fast for trees with shallow history, but presently scales poorly with history length), and is easy-to-learn to those familiar with the command-line interfaces of traditional SCMs (CVS, SVN, etc). Win32 is considered a first-class target by its development team. It has a pluggable architecture for different components, and replaces its storage format frequently; this allows them to introduce new features (such as better support for integration with revision control systems based on different concepts) and improve performance. The Bazaar team considers directory tracking and rename support first-class functionality. While revision-id identifiers are available for all revisions, content hashes are not used for identifying revisions; to provide provability similar to Git's, optional functionality needs to be used.

Both have some form of SVN integration available; however, bzr-svn is considerably more capable than git-svn, largely due to backend format revisions introduced for that purpose.

I have not used Mercurial extensively, and so cannot comment on it in detail -- except to note that it, like Git, has content-hash addressing for revisions.

One concern in migrating from SVN is that SVN's GUI frontends and IDE integration is more mature than that of any of the distributed SCMs. Also, if today you make heavy use of precommit script automation with SVN (ie. requiring unit tests to pass before a commit can proceed), you'll probably want to use a tool similar to PQM for automating merge requests to your shared branches.

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