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One thing I didn't see anyone mention that is specific to your case:
You'll need to be careful with choosing a cloud-based provider. Unity projects can get enormous because the UI will expect to check in your asset files as well. Asset files are very large, and (can be) binary, which means they won't play well with most source code control systems.
Using raw Git will have a learning curve, but you could use your desktop as your "server". Git does not have a built-in concept of a central server. Every machine that has Git installed is both a server and a client. A central server in a Git organization is simply one that all the developers of that organization agree upon ahead of time.
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Cool. Thank you.
There are only 10 types of people in the world, those who understand binary and those who don't.
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As you work in NET and Unity, I believe that your winner free combination is using GIT with Visual Studio Community Edition. Visual Studio assists you in many GIT functions, and allows you to work in the cloud with Visual Studio Team Services, GitHub and any server that supports GIT Clone, Fetch, Pull, etc. You don't have to settle definitely on one cloud repository, because you can use a different one for each project.
Visual Studio Team Services is great for large software projects because it offers project control tools (Agile, Scrum, etc), and it is the only one that allows you to have some private projects for free. GitHub is the best for open source projects, etc.
Sorry for my bad English
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I strongly recommend TFS[^] (hosted by Microsoft). It integrates seamlessly with Visual Studio and the cost is hard to beat for indie devs and teams under 5 persons.
/ravi
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Visualsvn If you on windows. Easy to setup repository server. Ankhsvn plugin for Visual Studio. Work well for my home projects.
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I also use git, a free Bitbucket account, and SourceTree as the client. I'm very happy with all three.
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Perforce is free for up to 20 users. I have used it religiously for about 10 years. I like it's atomic check in feature.
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I second the Git and BitBucket recommendation. I use it for all of my personal projects. You can access it from any computer, and you can also make code changes directly from your browser (I do this while I'm at work and need to make a quick bug fix).
I know there's a bit of a learning curve with Git command line, so look for some GUI options like GitExtensions, or something like that.
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Thanks.
There are only 10 types of people in the world, those who understand binary and those who don't.
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I personally love Plastic SCM. Their interface is well thought-out and intuitive, setup is easy.
Love it
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I have been using GIT, but I have had problems branching then not branching, and wound up going back to my basic source control - zip the whole project, putting yyyy-mm-dda_c (where 'a' is a letter that increments through the day, and 'c' is a short comment) at the end of the filename. The only time I have had trouble with zip is in zipping code for OSX on Windows, then trying to go back to it by unzipping on OSX.
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Brute force. Nice.
There are only 10 types of people in the world, those who understand binary and those who don't.
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I'm going to say something strange...
I'd suggest using git without a central server - although you could easily use a central server - I suppose your desktop would kind of fill the role of a central server.
Since git is completely file based it doesn't care about where the files are, they can be somewhere over HTTP, HTTPS, or even a local file-system. Since a local file-system is a possibility it means you can use a UNC path to access a file-share on a remote system.
What this allows you to do is that you could set up your projects directory on your desktop as a file share on your desktop, and then pull/push between your laptop and desktop. So you get all the benefits of version control - without needing to set up a server to host it all.
Of course you also lose the benefits of having an off-site backup, but you could always periodically push to some free source control server like Bitbucket or Github periodically.
Also since everyone it suggesting clients - I'd throw Git Extensions into the mix. It's not that polished, but it doesn't try to hide how git is working from you. It's just a GUI layer that maps (more or less) 1:1 to git commands.
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"Oh man! Not good! Any backups?"
cheers
Chris Maunder
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IT Support? Screw that! Those are words we never want to hear from YOU!
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Quote:
1. When we ask how long will it take to fix the issue? they reply, "We don't know, sir". (Any rough estimate at least would help us to plan better.) We don't know means we don't know. What if I say 3 hours, then discover Hell broke loose and we need 5? We're done when we're done - also reapiring things in a hurry may very well end up in the OP case. Been there...
Anurag Gandhi wrote: 3. Oh we couldn't replicate that issue. Please provide more detail if it will occur again. Even the IT support hates that but it happens all the times. If we can't repro we can't debug or solve.
GCS d--- s-/++ a- C++++ U+++ P- L- E-- W++ N++ o+ K- w+++ O? M-- V? PS+ PE- Y+ PGP t++ 5? X R++ tv-- b+ DI+++ D++ G e++>+++ h--- ++>+++ y+++* Weapons extension: ma- k++ F+2 X
If you think 'goto' is evil, try writing an Assembly program without JMP. -- TNCaver
When I was six, there were no ones and zeroes - only zeroes. And not all of them worked. -- Ravi Bhavnani
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I understand the other side.
I have also worked on support project for quite some time and have faced such issues personally.
Grass is always green at the other bank of the river.
Life is a computer program and everyone is the programmer of his own life.
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"We're having a bunch of issues with the printer services, can you take a look at the server?"
A week of my life gets eaten every time I hear that.
"There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies and statistics."
- Benjamin Disraeli
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Azure East US SQL Services was down for over 25 minutes today, unfortunately for me it was during a busy time for one of our apps using a database on the affected server(s). My customer reported it to me first, I verified and checked the Azure portal for problems...hmmm all resources are healthy...wait, oh yeah, there is a notification that one or more of my resources 'may be affected' by an unexpected outage. Thankfully, it's back up now, but so far, almost an hour later, I have not received an email from them regarding the outage that 'definitely affected' my resources.
It sucks when the client naturally assumes that it's your problem and you should be able to fix it right away...they've even sent screenshots with 'handled database connection error messages' to the higher ups in the organization to put you on the spot! Thanks MS!
Before I get hammered for not having a real-time backup system in place, there was talk of such a feature, but that talk was silenced when I gave them the estimate for it. This outage makes for a total of around 1.5 down hours over the course of a little over a year. It really hasn't been a big problem. Oh well, that's enough excitement for the day, besides, now I have to do an outage report for the client having no real explanation for what happened. Time for some creative technobabble that they won't understand anyway!
"Go forth into the source" - Neal Morse
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At work, we have SDEs and LSDEs - significant disruption events and limited significant disruption events. If it is internal only, it may be limited. If it affects outside entities, it is automatically a full blown incident.
Regardless of the type, the direction is the same: find out what happened and why, but focus on the WHAT, not the WHO.
When you provide the outage report, emphasis that the issue was caused by a process at Microsoft; they is much the same as a power outage or a network line being cut. Try to get the reason from Microsoft. Assuming you are paying for the service, get a reply from them that you can send to the client.
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Yep, I found the incident reporting/tracking section in the portal...'still under investigation', but enough to send to client for the moment.
"Go forth into the source" - Neal Morse
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FYI -- That outage shows at the Azure site. Interesting (and terrible).
Azure Status[^]
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Azure status history | Microsoft Azure[^]Quote: 9/12
Impacted Services with a dependency on SQL Database in East US 2
Summary of impact: Between 16:50 and 19:10 UTC on 12 Sep 2016, a subset of customers using SQL Database, HDInsights, App Service \ Web Apps, Service Bus and in East US 2 and Data Factory in East US may have experienced intermittent connectivity to their services. Furthermore, customers would have been unable to perform any service management operations during this time.
Preliminary root cause: The underlying root cause is still unknown.
Mitigation: Engineers failed over to other healthy infrastructure resources. Customers with security restrictions may need to update their firewall rules and were communicated through the management portal.
Next steps: Any customers experiencing residual impact will be contacted in their management portal. We will continue our analysis of the root cause and work to prevent reoccurrences. This post will be updated once our full investigation is complete.
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Thanks!
"Go forth into the source" - Neal Morse
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