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Sunil Guzman wrote: > Are builds that you “rejected to send to commercial support customers” routinely foisted on non-paying customers? What is the intent of this process? To destabilize installations at non-paying customer sites and “encourage” them to become “commercial support customers”? Not "foisted" but rather offered to those who would like to see the latest new features. There are points when all the newest features are stabilized, those are marked "Stable". I think currently the "stable" release is the same one that the commercial customers are using from what Tony had said earlier. The stable release will get some patches if issues are found while the main development line continues on adding new features. Stick to the stable versions in your production environment and testing. Apparently this stress test done was against an unstable version. The open source project shares *all* the builds, including the less than perfect (or downright buggy). If you want stability, stick to the versions marked "stable" (or purchase a support agreement, which will have you stick to the stable version anyway). If you need immediate professional support, or just need to know it is available when you might need it, then a support contract with March-Hare would be appropriate. The CVS group does an excellent at keeping their 'stable' version stable you certainly won't go wrong if you choose them for stability. I think Subversion is immature feature-wise relative to both CVS and CVSNT, so I wouldn't necessarily recommend them but I haven't directly used it. However, everything I hear about Subversion says it's a good product overall. Note that there is professional support options for CVS as well. I don't believe Subversion currently has professional support. Regardless of which product you choose, I'd encourage you to look into getting professional support on the product if your business depends on having your SCM product available. Downtime of your developers gets expensive very quickly. IMHO, the CVSNT stable versions are the best choice for an organization regardless of which OS you're using because of some of the features built into the server: ACLs, authentication methods, mergepoints, et. al. Regards, -- Glen Starrett