Best Version Control Systems for Linux of 2024

Find and compare the best Version Control systems for Linux in 2024

Use the comparison tool below to compare the top Version Control systems for Linux on the market. You can filter results by user reviews, pricing, features, platform, region, support options, integrations, and more.

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    Fossil Reviews
    Fossil is a distributed software configuration management system that is simple, reliable, and easy to use. It also has these advanced features: Project Management. Fossil can do distributed version control like Git or Mercurial. Fossil also supports bug track, wiki, forum and chat. Fossil's built-in web interface is themeable, extensible and intuitive. It offers a rich variety information pages (examples), to promote situational awareness. All-in-one Fossil is an executable that can be used as a standalone executable. You can download a precompiled binary file for Windows, Mac, and Linux and place it on your $PATH. Self-hosting is possible - You can set up a website for your project in minutes using a variety if techniques. Fossil is both CPU and memory efficient. A Raspberry Pi or VPS hosting can comfortably host most projects for $5 per month. You can also set up an automated GitHub mirror. Simple Networking – Fossil uses HTTPS (or SSH, if you prefer), for network communications.
  • 2
    DBmaestro Reviews
    DBmaestro's DevOps Platform allows for safe implementation of CI/CD in Oracle, MS-SQL databases, DB2, PostgreSQL databases, My-SQL databases, and MS-SQL databases. DBmaestro applies DevOps best practices directly to the database, resulting in a new level for speed, efficiency and security as well as process integration. DBmaestro's solutions allow organizations to safely and methodically deploy databases. This increases development team productivity and accelerates time-to-market. Unplanned database downtime is eliminated. The platform includes several key features that make it more valuable than its parts: repeatable release automation and database version control. Governance and security modules can also be added. A business activity monitor is another example of how the platform can combine these key features. It gives you complete database oversight from one source, which is a significant advantage over the competition. DBmaestro's platform with zero friction seamlessly complements all major databases without the need for database engineering teams To change their core processes.
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    Perforce Helix Core Reviews
    Perforce version control -- Helix Core - tracks and manages any changes to your source code and digital assets. It does much more than this. Helix Core allows development teams to move faster while creating more complex products. It also provides a single source for truth across all development. Contributors can use the tools they already have to sync their work into Helix Core. Helix Core can handle all things. There are tens of thousands of users. There are 10s of millions of transactions per day, and 100s of Terabytes of data. There are also 10,000+ concurrent commits. It can even quickly deliver files to remote users without waiting for the WAN. It can be used on-premises as well as in the cloud. Reduce the time spent navigating tools and processes and spend more time delivering value. Helix Core ensures everyone is efficient. You will get quick feedback, flexibility, automation, and faster builds. Don't waste your developers time with manual workflows. Let them get back to coding.
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    Bazaar Reviews

    Bazaar

    Canonical

    Bazaar is a version management system that allows you to track your project history over time and collaborate easily with others. Bazaar can be used by one developer, a team of developers, or a group of developers spread across the globe. It scales and adapts to your needs. Canonical sponsors Bazaar, which is part of the GNU Project. Bazaar's core value is ease of use. There are many areas where our focus on usability shines. We identify revisions using sequential numbers per repository, not per repository (like Subversion or Mercurial), or hash strings like Git. The GUI log dialog looks very similar to Subversion and CVS users. As you can see, bugs can be associated to changes. Our storage format supports this: you don't need to put important metadata in specially formatted commit messages. You can also expand multiple revisions to see the local commits that were made to deliver larger changes.
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