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I've used both SVN and CVS a little bit, but will need to choose one for a new project I will be starting.

Can anyone who has used both extensively please offer some pros and cons and which they think is better? Best learning resources would be appreciated too.

This will be for a small project, just one or two developers to start.

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  • there is a similar question stackoverflow.com/questions/1261/…
    – hayalci
    Oct 29, 2008 at 0:02
  • @hayalci: Why not make your comment an Answer to this question? :)
    – Pistos
    Oct 29, 2008 at 0:14
  • 1
    @Pistos: added it to my answer.
    – hayalci
    Oct 29, 2008 at 18:24
  • there are already lots of others questions with vauluable answers here on SO. You may take a look at them.
    – Decio Lira
    Mar 3, 2009 at 0:06

8 Answers 8

69

I've used both. There is no comparison; you want svn. The only reason to use CVS is because you are entering or taking over a legacy system with management that does not want to change the status quo. If you are starting on a new project, it is virtually a logical impossibility to argue that CVS is better than Subversion.

If you google around, you should find plenty of comparisons, and rationales for using Subversion over CVS. Some of the advantages of Subversion over CVS:

  • can move or rename files or directories cleanly
  • atomic commits
  • "cheap" copying and branching
  • commits are changesets on the whole tree (not just histories on individual files)

Having said all this, I recommend you also explore some of the distributed VCSs like Bazaar, Mercurial and git. I personally use git on all my projects.

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22

Subversion has some substantial wins over CVS:

  1. good remote options http/https/svn vs pserver
  2. atomic commits
  3. ubiquitous tool support
  4. rename
  5. directory versioning

However it has serious shortcomings. The biggest by far is that Branches and Tags are not first class citizens in svn, they are just directories that adhere to a convention. In addition to losing some of the benefits of real branching and tagging (mentioned in other comments) the biggest problem it creates is that if makes it very easy to screw up.

Subversion's use of convention rather than configuration means that you need to think about your repositories structure in advance and ensure that everyone adheres to it. Else you create a world of hurt for future generations, let alone any tools that need to grok your repo.

Merging and mirroring were almost non-existent (well assistance for) pre 1.5. 1.5 has taken steps to address both of these, but there is still room for improvement. Merging in subversion is still way harder than it needs to be.

SVN over CVS is almost a no-brainer. However, you would be remiss not to at least consider what DVCS's have to offer (Git, Hg, Bzr) or if your budget allows there are commercial tools with excellent reputations (Accurev, Perforce).

Subversion is probably the right choice, but you must do your homework to get the best results. Start with the Red Book http://svnbook.red-bean.com/

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  • 2
    pte: You seem to be implying that CVS has some advantages over SVN, which is blatantly false.
    – Arafangion
    Mar 3, 2009 at 0:39
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    arafangion: If you believe that SVN is better is superiour in every way to CVS you must not have used CVS very much and/or you don't do a lot of tagging or merging in SVN. Just one example - CVS's ability to "move" a tag is substantially better than SVN's copy to a directory pita.
    – pte
    Apr 7, 2009 at 0:02
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    @Arafangion: CVS repository files are rcs-format files that you can easily understand and manipulate with a text editor. SVN repository files appear to me to be opaque blobs. If the file system gets partially corrupted, you may well be better off with CVS. Jul 22, 2010 at 18:27
  • Yes! SVN is technically superior, but branching/merging/tagging are horrible compared to cvs. In my personal experience, where there is cvs, there is eclipse, and eclipse's cvs client is superb (and comes by default) compared to the different svn plugins. Not only that, but cvs+ssh+pam is a snap to setup compared to svn.
    – Jubal
    Jan 26, 2011 at 20:18
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    Cherry-picking, an important part of SVN to only merge certain commits/revisions, is impossible to do with CVS.
    – Mot
    Nov 28, 2011 at 10:38
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Although I would choose Subversion over CVS in most cases, you should know what you're missing with Subversion:

  • CVS sees tags and branches as different things; Subversion doesn't. This means that third-party tools built on top of Subversion (e.g. IDEs with source control integration) have a harder job knowing the difference. You usually have to do some special configuration to tell it where your tags and branches are, and you have to make sure that your users stick to a certain filesystem layout.

  • Subversion can't look at a file and tell you at what point someone created a branch or tag from it. Tools like CVSGraph can use this information to draw a tree of a file's history. To do that with Subversion, you'd need to search all the branch/tags directories, and I haven't seen any tools that do this well.

  • CVS has been around longer, and the third-party tools are more stable, in my experience.

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  • You can view pretty graph with subversion too using TortoiseSVN which unfortunately is available only in Windows. May 9, 2009 at 19:17
  • About the stability of third party tool in my personal limited experience I didn't find that CVS third party tool are more stable. May 9, 2009 at 19:19
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    At this point they're probably about equal. I was thinking specifically about the Eclipse CVS integration, which is rock solid. The Eclipse Subversion tools are good, but still kind of buggy. They do have a branch graph, like TortioiseSVN, but since SVN doesn't track the branch points, it takes a lot longer to calculate than a CVS graph.
    – JW.
    May 10, 2009 at 8:10
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Call me old fashioned, but I much preferred the branching/tagging model under CVS.

In CVS, branches and tags are different things. A tag is a label for a revision. They are super-useful for things like marking a PRODUCTION tag for files to sync to your webserver. You don't have to merge to update the PRODUCTION files -- you just move the tag.

Branches live in the same 'namespace' as the main file -- it's easy to track down all the mods of a particular file.

In SVN there is no such things as a tag. There's only branches. If you want tags, you need to create a branch and pretend it's a tag. Branches are basically copies of files. Last time I used SVN for branches/merges, you had to record the revision of the pre-branched file if you ever hoped to merge it back together (note, I'm not an SVN expert, so this may have changed).

That being said, I think SVN is better in every other respect and you probably shouldn't start a new project with CVS.

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You're going to get a lot of answers to this, I suspect. They might even all agree.

Between those two choices, I believe there is no question that you should use Subversion. Subversion was built as a "better CVS" and as a result, nobody actively maintains CVS any longer. Subversion has the ability to rename and move files without losing history, supports atomic commits, has a more robust repository format, has more modern access methods, has better third party tool support, and the list goes on.

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Subversion is like `a better CVS'. It handles moving files AND directories well. It has branching support, although that is inferior to Distributed VCSs.

You may also consider using a distributed VCS one like git, bazaar or mercurial.

Edit: Here is a link to a similar question

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Generally Subversion .. However you should watch out for resource issues.

When I was working for a game company we had a few directories containing hundreds of tiny files, and other directories that contained a few hundred meg files. When we swapped from CVS to Subversion, the speed of checking out the repo decreased from one hour to four or five hours. Updating was also substantially slowr.

This is almost certainly due to using either http or ssh to transmit file data, compared to the native csv pserver, however since it is so easy to setup svn over ssh or webdav people tend not to think about the protocol overhead. You can however use a native svn protocol and this should alleviate the issue, we did not test this at my old company.

Another issue that is often ignored is storage space, we found that subversion did use several times as much storage locally as CVS. I seem to recall that it stores a local copy of the repo data to speed up diffing, this won't be a huge issue unless you store several gigabytes in your repository.

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  • try git, it would probably perform a lot better.
    – DGM
    Apr 1, 2009 at 21:01
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I have used subversion for 3.5 years, now I moved to other company who uses CVS for source control. At first, there are not many differences between the two, but coming to merge operation (which is the top most of my concerns) I could say that CVS did a better job. The concepts of branches/tags in SVN are confusing while very clear in CVS. also merging (in my case, integrating a branch) is much easier in CVS than in SVN. The weakness of CVS is so far in my idea only the atomic commit. otherwise, it would be good choice.

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