You will need a local copy of CVS
(Concurrent Version Control System), which you can get from
http://www.nongnu.org/cvs/ (the official
site with the latest version) or any GNU software archive site
(often somewhat outdated). Many systems have a recent version of
cvs installed by default.
Do an initial login to the CVS server:
cvs -d :pserver:anoncvs@anoncvs.postgresql.org:/projects/cvsroot login
You will be prompted for a password; you can enter anything except
an empty string.
You should only need to do this once, since the password will be
saved in .cvspass in your home directory.
Fetch the PostgreSQL sources:
cvs -z3 -d :pserver:anoncvs@anoncvs.postgresql.org:/projects/cvsroot co -P pgsql
This installs the PostgreSQL sources into a
subdirectory pgsql
of the directory you are currently in.
Note: If you have a fast link to the Internet, you may not need
-z3, which instructs
CVS to use gzip compression for transferred data. But
on a modem-speed link, it's a very substantial win.
This initial checkout is a little slower than simply downloading
a tar.gz file; expect it to take 40 minutes or so if you
have a 28.8K modem. The advantage of
CVS
doesn't show up until you want to update the file set later on.
Whenever you want to update to the latest CVS sources,
cd into
the pgsql subdirectory, and issue
cvs -z3 update -d -P
This will fetch only the changes since the last time you updated.
You can update in just a couple of minutes, typically, even over
a modem-speed line.
You can save yourself some typing by making a file .cvsrc
in your home directory that contains
cvs -z3
update -d -P
This supplies the -z3 option to all cvs commands, and the
-d and -P options to cvs update. Then you just have
to say
cvs update
to update your files.