Airpaper

From AIRWiki
Revision as of 22:59, 24 June 2009 by BernardoDalSeno (Talk | contribs) (Crash Course)

Jump to: navigation, search

Airpaper (authentication needed) is the repository of papers written at Airlab.

It is based on Subversion; you can find some help in configuring Subversion in the Configuring Subversion page, but you don't need the key and Ssh part as Airpaper uses Http authentication. https://svn.ws.dei.polimi.it/airpaper/ is the repository Url when you checkout your working copy.

You have to be added as a user to the project by one of the administrators, even if you already are a user of Dei's Savane. Administrators/authors currently are: Rossella Blatt, Bernardo Dal Seno, Giulio Fontana, Matteo Matteucci, Simone Tognetti. (New administrators, please add your names here)

Structure

This is a partial structure of the repository:

  • bci: BCI-related stuff
  • benchmarking: papers related to benchmarking in robotics
  • common: common stuff
    • bib: bibliography (Bibtex files, databases and styles)
    • images: obvious
  • slam: simultaneous localization ans mapping
  • wheelchair: Lurch-related stuff

All files related to a paper should be contained in one directory; please use a name that is clear and begins with a year, e.g., 2009_Science, 2010_Nature_Higgs.

Crash Course

For a more detailed discussion see Using Subversion.

Being a subversion repository you need a subversion client to use it (rather obvious). The simplest one is a terminal client, and the following are first command you can use to start using airpaper immediately:

$ svn co https://svn.ws.dei.polimi.it/airpaper

or for a subdirectory just

$ svn co https://svn.ws.dei.polimi.it/airpaper/bci

to add a new file or directory (directories are imported recursively) to the repository just execute

$ svn add <filename/dirname>

this code does not actually update the svn repository to do this you need to check-in the change with

$ svn ci <filename/dirname>

and you can use this command to check-in any change to your local file not just to import new ones.

If you just want to check if something is changed locally or remotely, you can use

$ svn stat

while to update your local version with the last changes in the repository you just need to update with

$ svn update

this command might generate conflicts you need to settle ... but this is another story and you should read it by you own from

$ svn help

Rules

TODO

For administrators

Instruction for managing users are on the page DEI Subversion Administration