Thank you for the info.
We may update our dependencies to accept newer subversion clients as well.
On 10/15/19 10:10 AM, Mark Eggers wrote:
As a follow-up, I found a copy of 1.9.7 in the archives and have
installed that. The log entries below indicate that it's being used.
INFO
Dear Geertjan,
Thanks - I’ll try that. I don't think OpenJDK existed when I last looked at
Java. Astonishing how you can get out-of-date so fast.
Best regards,
Peter
mailto:netbe...@ptoye.com
www.ptoye.com
-
Monday, October 14, 2019, 10:18:27 AM, you wrote:
On Mon,
As a follow-up, I found a copy of 1.9.7 in the archives and have
installed that. The log entries below indicate that it's being used.
INFO [org.netbeans.modules.subversion.client.SvnClientFactory]: running
on javahl
INFO [org.netbeans.modules.subversion]: Finished indexing svn cache with
8
I have to apologize.
I just checked my logs, and it appears that NetBeans 11.1 is falling
back to a command line since I have Slik SVN 1.12 installed. According
to the logs:
INFO [org.netbeans.libs.svnclientadapter]: Javahl client adapter is not
available
Incompatible JavaHL library loaded.
Dear Mark,
Just a few question:
1. Was the IDE automatically recognize the SilkSVN library on startup
without any configuration once it was installed?
2. What is the current name (probably path) to the native dll (right now
the IDE tries to locate the libsvnjavahl-1.dll)
3. Does the
On Wed, 9 Oct 2019, 05:13 Lou, wrote:
> -Dremote.platform.home=/home/pi/jre/
>
...
> '/home/pi/jre//bin/java'
>
That double slash looks suspicious. Maybe the slashes at the end of the
various remote location properties need removing?
Best wishes,
Neil
I use the Slik SVN client with the advanced installation on Windows 10
Professional with NetBeans 11.1.
This seems to work reasonably well, although I mostly work with git
these days.
. . . just my two cents
/mde/
On 10/14/2019 9:45 PM, László Kishalmi wrote:
> Well, NetBeans had support for 3