Public CVS Access

Checkout V4L-DVB

Starting from 2005-11-26, both V4L and DVB kernel trees were merged.

To get the latest sources from CVS you need to issue the following commands:

cvs -d :pserver:anonymous@cvs.linuxtv.org:/cvs/video4linux login
(use an empty password)

cvs -z3 -d :pserver:anonymous@cvs.linuxtv.org:/cvs/video4linux co -P v4l-dvb

Checkout old DVB tree or other DVB modules

As CVS is mostly used by developers it tracks the latest -rc kernel and may not compile with older kernels, not even with the last stable release. We provide a patchset for the latest stable kernel in the download area.

To get the latest sources from CVS you need to issue the following commands:

cvs -d :pserver:anonymous@cvs.linuxtv.org:/cvs/linuxtv login
(use an empty password)

cvs -z3 -d :pserver:anonymous@cvs.linuxtv.org:/cvs/linuxtv co -P dvb-kernel
(use any other module you are interested in instead of dvb-kernel, you can check with viewcvs which modules exist)

If you want to check out the current drivers for the 2.4 kernel, please use: cvs -z3 -d :pserver:anonymous@cvs.linuxtv.org:/cvs/linuxtv co -P -rlinux_2_4 dvb-kernel
(use any other module you are interested in instead of dvb-kernel)

Checkout old video4linux tree

This is similar to DVB but uses a different CVSROOT:

cvs -d :pserver:anonymous@cvs.linuxtv.org:/cvs/video4linux login

cvs -d :pserver:anonymous@cvs.linuxtv.org:/cvs/video4linux co -P v4l-kernel

Update

You can later update your sources by running:

cvs -z3 up -dP

Browse the CVS Repository Online

You can browse the files in the CVS repository with viewcvs. You can also download on-the-fly generated tarballs, but please use this feature sparingly as it puts a high load on the machine. If you find yourself downloading the newest sources regularly you should consider using anon-cvs access, as described above.

To browse the video4linux CVS select the "v4l" tree in the upper right of the viewcvs page, or use the link below.

viewcvs DVB

viewcvs video4linux