Visual InterDev
Once you've installed and setup Microsoft® Visual SourceSafe™, you can enable source control for a Web application using any Web project that references that application. Only one developer needs to enable source control for the application.
Visual SourceSafe provides two ways to control source files.
After a developer has enabled source control for a Web application, other developers with open projects that reference the Web application must either refresh or reopen their Web projects for source control to take effect on those projects.
To enable source control for a Web application
Note If any file in the project has a semi-colon (;) in its filename, rename the file before enabling source control. Otherwise source control can't be enabled.
You can enter a different name for the Visual SourceSafe project if you want. If you use a different name, it must be preceded by the dollar sign ($) and forward slash (/). For example: $/MyWebApplication.
If you want to enable multiple checkouts, you need administrator privileges to the Visual SourceSafe Administrator on your master Web server.
To enable multiple check outs for a Visual SourceSafe project
If you do not know whether a Web application has source control enabled, you can check the property sheet for your project that references that Web application.
To determine whether source control has been enabled for a Web application
If the project is under source control, the lock icon will appear next to the project name. If the project is not under source control, there will be no lock icon.
You can also disable source control for a Web application from any Web project that references that Web application.
To disable source control for a Web application
When you disable source control for a Web application, the Visual SourceSafe project created when you first enabled source control for that Web application remains on the Visual SourceSafe server. This means you can re-enable source control and choose that Visual SourceSafe project for your Web application.
Re-enabling source control after disabling it may cause some unexpected results. For example, if you disable source control, then delete files from the Web application, then re-enable source control, the files that you deleted will show up in your Web project again. This happens because the files were deleted outside of source control and so the original Visual SourceSafe project still shows them as part of the project. You can remove the Visual SourceSafe project by deleting it from within Visual SourceSafe Explorer.