last day (15 days later) » 

12:42
> We're trying to avoid installing GIT on each Windows PC. Also, we're not allowed to store project code on local PCs. As we are only working with a remote repository, it's quite slow over a VPN connection to transfer project files to local PC, process in GIT and copy them back to the server (slow in SmartGIT anyway). Intuitively, doing it all server-side would seem sensible
0
Q: GIT GUI client on Windows for Unix GIT installation

ramblesOur company programs and runs data analysis on a Linux server. The programming is done in Windows clients (SAS, generally). Each project is only programmed by one person and is reviewed by another. We would like to put our projects under version control but leave the code on the server (ie no...

There are three things in your comment I'd like to find out more about:

1. You're already looking for a client to install on (every? nearly every?) Windows machine. What's different about installing Git?
2. *"not allowed to store project code on local PCs."* - So do the Windows machines have to access everything over network drives, including during development?
3. Performance - local clones and editing on the Windows machines will probably be *much* better for performance than having to do all development across the network. But I suspect there's more to your development practices that mi
room topic changed to Room for question stackoverflow.com/q/16538520/351301: Clarifying solution requirements (no tags)
13:38
Hi
Oops .. I've not used this before.

1. What's different. Nothing I guess. Let's assume it's possible. However, one install of GIT on server is easier to maintain.
2. Yes, we have to access code through network drives - no offline access. TBH, this works fine for us.
3. All of our source code is on the server. Surely having GIT run on the server is quickest?
OK, fair enough - having the development over network drives confirmed clears it up a bit in my head. The scenario I had in mind before was editing/committing to a local clone, then pushing or pulling to the central repository. With a setup like this, you wouldn't be editing over the network and the only performance hit would be when changesets were transferred to or from the central server.
If the VPN is that painful, doesn't it affect development quite heavily, having to access files over the network all the time?
Not that that question is particularly relevant; I'm just curious how doing all edits/commits locally and then pushing to central when you're ready would be perceived as slower than transmitting file changes across the network every time a file is saved.
The changesets time *is* the issue - it just seems to take a while but only minutes so it's liveable. Just loading a file to program on is quick enough.
The question just came from intuition; if GIT and the source code is on the server, is there a way to get a Windows GUI (to nicely view branching and commits) to leave the work to be done on the server.
As for doing edits/commits locally as an alternative, that would leave source code on the PC which is a security risk. Saving a file over VPN only take a few seconds.
Nevermind, clearly it's not possible or it's a weird way to use GIT. I'm really grateful for your help - it's saved me some time faffing around with various clients.
Any idea how I can summarise this chat & move it to the question?
13:55
The best I can suggest off the top of my head is to use GitWeb or a similar web-based viewer running on the server, which clients can use to view the repository in a browser. I'm more familiar with Mercurial than with Git, but setting up a web server (whether standalone or the minimal one contained in Git/hg itself) seems to be the commonly accepted way to visualise remote repositories - the tools' commands usually only operate on local clones.
Then for write access, and to ensure that Git is only ever run on the server, set up SSH access to the Linux machine if you don't already have it.
@rambles Not sure if it's necessary to summarise the chat; the link from my comment should stick around if people want to see what was said. I'd be interested to see if anyone who knows Git better than I do has any clever ideas.
OK, I've not heard of GitWeb - viewing remote repositories is really what I'm asking for. Running Git through Putty to do the main work is no big deal. Mind, convincing our IT dept to consider GitWeb might well be beyond all human power - we've only got Git because it came as standard on the server upgrade!
Again, thanks a lot for your help.
Oh, it's part of the Git installation. Lovely!
@rambles :D no worries! Good luck with the persuasion :)
'tis indeed. You only have to convince them to open a port to serve up some HTTP :)

last day (15 days later) »