Git does many things that are quite useful. P4Sandbox does as well. Sometimes you just want something really light and fast. So here's a way to run your own Perforce instance without any fuss or mess.
Once you've installed myp4 based on the instructions in the README
You create a new instance of myp4/p4 using 'p4 init myproject'. This will create a subdirectory called 'myproject'. Go into that directory and start coding. You can run 'p4 help' to see what else this will do for you.
See the README file in the project.
https://swarm.workshop.perforce.com/files/guest/alan_h_teague/myp4
<Category:Perforce> <Category:Server>
My P4 - Local Server with Branching Support =========================================== Background and Overview ----------------------- Git does many things that are quite useful. P4Sandbox does as well. Sometimes you just want something really light and fast. So here's a way to run your own Perforce instance without any fuss or mess. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Features -------- Once you've installed myp4 based on the instructions in the README You create a new instance of myp4/p4 using 'p4 init myproject'. This will create a subdirectory called 'myproject'. Go into that directory and start coding. You can run 'p4 help' to see what else this will do for you. See the README file in the project. Source ------ <https://swarm.workshop.perforce.com/files/guest/alan_h_teague/myp4> <Category:Perforce> <Category:Server>
# | Change | User | Description | Committed | |
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#1 | 13792 | Lester Cheung | Archive of wiki.workshop.perforce.com in raw (mediawiki) and markdown formats. |