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Code Indexer

980 bytes added, 19:23, 3 October 2006
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==Project Name==
Source Code Indexing Service Analysis
==Project Description==
Mozilla’s source code is enormous—millions of lines of C, C++, JavaScript, Perl, Python, Java, C#, etc. Developers currently use the lxr system to quickly search and browse it on-line: http://lxr.mozilla.org. Mozilla is planning a move from CVS to Subversion for revision control, and at the same time wants to evaluate other source indexing services. Two BSD students are working to setup, document, and test other potential services (e.g., fisheye, opengrok, mxr) on one of the Seneca-Mozilla servers (see below). In each case this requires configuration changes and some scripting to get the services to properly integrate with Mozilla’s other on-line tools. When the test services are installed and synched with the live source tree, Mozilla will point its developers to them and get feedback—the students will help collect and synthesize this feedback.
==Project LeadersLeader(s)==
[[User:John64 | John Ford (John64)]]
 
==Project Contributor(s)==
==Project News and Details==
* [http://developer.mozilla.org/en/docs/Mozilla_Source_Code_Via_CVS CVS Checkout]
==Notes on Accessing my Test Server==If you want to access my the test server through anything other than port 80, you are going to have to type in my the following address then into a browser and note the IP address you get in your address bar. This is because I have dynamic DNS, and this is just easiest for me. Everything, including the source itself, will be in the http root for easy access to the files. This is not optimal, and will not stay this way once things advance a little.
[http://superfind.bounceme.net Superfind] - Will resolve as www.no-ip.com computer, which is why you have to use a browser to get the IP
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