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Visual SourceSafe (Discontinued)

Visual SourceSafe (Discontinued)

Overview

What is Visual SourceSafe (Discontinued)?

Visual SourceSafe is a discontinued source control software offering, from Microsoft.

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Recent Reviews

Legacy source control

1 out of 10
August 21, 2019
Visual SourceSafe was a great tool for its time, but it has fallen to the wayside in recent years. Our organization still has code that is …
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Pricing

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What is Visual SourceSafe (Discontinued)?

Visual SourceSafe is a discontinued source control software offering, from Microsoft.

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Product Details

What is Visual SourceSafe (Discontinued)?

Visual SourceSafe (Discontinued) Technical Details

Operating SystemsUnspecified
Mobile ApplicationNo
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Reviews and Ratings

(8)

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Reviews

(1-2 of 2)
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August 21, 2019

Legacy source control

Score 1 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
Visual SourceSafe was a great tool for its time, but it has fallen to the wayside in recent years. Our organization still has code that is still stored in it from a legacy perspective, so we still have to use it from time to time. We hope every day that it does not corrupt when we open it up.
  • It has outlived most of the competition out there.
  • It's good at maintaining exclusive locks.
  • It's good at being kept on a network share.
  • Becoming corrupt and having to be rebuild from a previous version.
  • It can be extremely slow to check in & out of.
  • Lost support several years ago from Microsoft.
I would not recommend Visual SourceSafe to anyone out there as there are so many better, more modern solutions that do what it does and much more. Visual SourceSafe should be retired in most cases.
  • We've lost a lot of hours rebuilding our solution based on lost work/corrupted files.
  • Only having a single person work on a single file has killed performance
  • No CI/CI capabilities and had to find other ways to do the process.
The current status of Visual SourceSafe is not usable. There are many things that are just so out of the date that it should be retired and not looked at any longer. If you have an existing application that is stored in it, I'd consider migrating it to a modern tool.
There is no longer support for Visual SourceSafe as I believe it's been retired. There are, however, users that still use the tool and they do help if there are questions or complaints.
Azure DevOps is a much better, more modern tool that Visual SourceSafe and everyone should be moving to it. Most if not all the integration that is there can be done or emulated in it.
August 19, 2019

VSS for enterprise

Kyle Kochtan | TrustRadius Reviewer
Score 1 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
Incentivized
Visual SourceSafe (VSS) is still used across the organization. We are in the process of trying to migrate off this platform as well as off of Microsoft Team Foundation Server. We are migrating towards Azure DevOps. Visual SourceSafe has reached its end of life and we have experienced many issues.
  • At this point in its lifecycle there are not many things VSS does well
  • Its main strength would be its ability to be self contained on a local drive
  • It is a basic Code repository
  • VSS is prone to corruption causing the DB to have to be rebuilt
  • It does not perform well if you have a lot of code in it it will be very slow
  • No searching basic tree structure
The only time I could recommend Microsoft Visual SourceSafe would be for a beginner who has a small amount of code that they would like to keep track of. This solution would not be recommended for an enterprise or any shop where you have multiple developers working on the same solution.
  • There were many benefits years ago when this product first came out
  • Now there is only risk for an enterprise
  • The corrupted DB issues have cost hundreds of man hours to correct
Overall Microsoft Visual Source Safe is very easy to use. It is a simple application that does only one thing. It has the basic windows tree structure for listing projects and solutions. There is no way to search for a particular file, project or solution. There is also no way to search the code in the files.
It's a Microsoft product so the customer support is great. The program has been around a long time so there are plenty of places on line to get assistance. Also almost any development shop you go to will have at least one developer who has used this product extensively in their career.
We selected Microsoft Visual SourceSafe because at the time none of these other products were out there. Now we are trying to migrate all our legacy code from Visual SourceSafe to Azure DevOps. Unfortunately we don't have a value proposition for some of the older products so we are forced to leave them in place.
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