Scandinavian Network of Excellence
in
Software Configuration Management
Software Configuration Management, on the other hand, is much less understood and unfortunately there is very little literature that treats this speciality. Wayne Babich's classic book is one - and we digged into that at last year's tutorial. For this year's tutorial we will visit another classic:
Brad Appleton, Stephen P. Berczuk, Ralph Cabrera, Robert Orenstein: Streamed Lines - Branching Patterns for Parallel Software Development, http://www.enteract.com/~bradapp/acme/branching/, 1998.
The word "software" in Software Configuration Management means that we open up for new ways that people can work in parallel since we are not working on physical pieces of hardware but copies of digital information.
Wayne Babich identified the "Double Maintenance" problem, advicing people to avoid it by eliminating copies or synchronizing them as soon as possible. However, he did not give much practical advice since there was very little understanding of the problem at that time - and even less tool support.
Modern version control tools all support branching to allow for parallel streams of development. They also have - internally or externally - merge support for "pulling things together" when the different pieces of work have to be co-ordinated and synchronized.
Appleton and friends tried to make sense of the cowboy-style bonanza of branching and merging that this new-found freedom gave. They establish a terminology for problems and solutions related to branching and merging so we can talk about it without misunderstandings. They give general guidelines for what to look out for when applying branching and merging. They distinguish a great number of different situations (tasks/problems) that call for a branching and merging solution - and for each of these branching and merging patterns they discuss in which specific context they should be used and in which context they should be avoided.
Through a number of interactive sessions we will work our way through most of this little gem that Appleton and friends crafted more than 15 years ago - and also give a brief look at what has happened since.
Place: Department of Computer Science, Lund, Sweden
Number of participants: min. 6 - max. 16 (first-come-first-served) - 3 people registered.
Registration deadline: Wednesday, May 30, 2013
Price: 2.000 SEK + vat (includes morning refreshments, coffee breaks and lunch)
cancellation is not possible after registration deadline
Payment: by invoice after the tutorial
To register contact: Lars Bendix at bendix@cs.lth.se