Stanimir Stamenkov wrote:
I want to search for solutions, complain about my favorite missing
features, and reply to other people's problems when I've already
solved them.
Search for solutions in the archives:
http://subversion.apache.org/mailing-lists.html
You may even use Google:
On Wed, Jul 28, 2010 at 11:35 PM, Bob Archer wrote:
While I do agree that forums are somewhat more user friendly... Aren't there
also several Web properties that let you participate in the mail list via
your browser that make it very much like a forum would appear?
I prefer mailing lists.
On Fri, Jul 9, 2010 at 07:16, David Weintraub qazw...@gmail.com wrote:
Are you setting up a Subversion repository and don't know whether you
should use HTTP or SVN, or does your repository allow you to access
your Subversion repository both ways, and you want to know which to
use.
SVN is
Ryan,
AFAIK if you're going to commit several things at once, they
need to all reside in a common parent directory that is a
working copy of the same repository.
Thanks for your help. While not immediately obvious, this was in fact the
problem. Also, thank you for your time and effort on
On Wed, Jul 28, 2010 at 09:48:33PM +, Bob wrote:
Hi,
When I do svn diff file1 on a file that I just added to my working copy
since
the last commit, it prints a diff that shows the entire file being added.
However, if I had a file that was added in a previous revision (say 42), and I
try
I tried building subversion from a directory _build in the source
(rather than building in tree). This worked fine for subversion,
but the swig bindings failed because (for example) svn_client.c
was not copied to _build/subversion/bindings/swig/python/
Building in tree works fine, but the
On Thu, Jul 29, 2010 at 03:43:54AM -0700, Michael McNeil Forbes wrote:
I tried building subversion from a directory _build in the source
(rather than building in tree). This worked fine for subversion,
but the swig bindings failed because (for example) svn_client.c
was not copied to
Hi there,
i need your help getting an overview and configuring a subversion
server. What i have to do is setting up a subversion server using ldap
and ssh. After reading some theory about it i'm totally confused :-) So
i hope you can help me with that.
What i have: A suse server with a
http://subversion.tigris.org/issues/show_bug.cgi?id=3687
Sorry I should have come to this mailing list before submitting my question on
Issue Tracker.
Since this issue can only be reproduced on some build machines in my company,
I'd like to ask some experts' help on how to do the
If you're using svn+ssh://, maybe ssh is prompting you?
Can you run the offending command under a debugger and investigate where it
spends its time?
jason_zhuyx wrote on Thu, Jul 29, 2010 at 09:59:56 -0700:
http://subversion.tigris.org/issues/show_bug.cgi?id=3687
Sorry I should have come
On Wed, Jul 28, 2010 at 2:13 PM, Ds Jstc dsj...@gmail.com wrote:
But I have one big problem that I can't resolve.
It's this: the mailing list paradigm drives me insane.
I want to search for solutions, complain about my favorite missing features,
and reply to other people's problems when I've
On Thu, Jul 29, 2010 at 4:59 AM, STF SVN lapsap7+...@gmail.com wrote:
I already have a working SVN server using HTTP, but I'd like to see
some other alternatives, especially those which could provide better
performance. The problem right now is that some users are accessing
the SVN within a
On Jul 29, 2010, at 15:40, David Weintraub wrote:
Subversion is known for simplicity, ease of use, but speed isn't one
of them. The entire .svn directory thing slows Subversion down --
especially since the entire diff is kept in there.
I wouldn't say Subversion is inherently slow at all.
On Thu, Jul 29, 2010 at 16:40, David Weintraub qazw...@gmail.com wrote:
On Thu, Jul 29, 2010 at 4:59 AM, STF SVN lapsap7+...@gmail.com wrote:
I already have a working SVN server using HTTP, but I'd like to see
some other alternatives, especially those which could provide better
performance.
Hi everyone:
I have some problems in using svn commands. I think this is because I have
some file which have same names but in different cases(such as align.c and
Align.c).
I tried to delete one of the files, and got:
Hu-DimatoMacBook-Pro:reconstruction3d dhu$ svn delete
Hello.
My subversion repository has some directories with restricted access configured
by the authz file. This works very well, and checkouts with partial visibility.
However if I need to make a branch, I cannot seem to do that with partial
visibility. In all cases that I have tried the svn
On Jul 29, 2010, at 16:04, Di Hu wrote:
I have some problems in using svn commands. I think this is because I have
some file which have same names but in different cases(such as align.c and
Align.c).
I tried to delete one of the files, and got:
Hu-DimatoMacBook-Pro:reconstruction3d dhu$
Hi there,
this is in addition to my last post:
If i use
- svn:// protocol everything will be sent in plain text so this will
have security issues - not usable for me
- svn+ssh:// protocol i need an account on the server for every person
for two reasons: The authentication using ssh and to
On Fri, Jul 30, 2010 at 01:57:53AM +0200, Nils Wilhelm wrote:
Hi there,
this is in addition to my last post:
If i use
- svn:// protocol everything will be sent in plain text so this will
have security issues - not usable for me
- svn+ssh:// protocol i need an account on the server for
Hi Ryan:
Thanks for your suggestion. I did use svn add align.c sometime before. But
I don't know if subversion thinks Align.c is called align.c. I tried svn
rm align.c, but nothing happend. And I could see both Align.c and align.c
after using svn ls. I also tried to commit after removing them.
In a project, we originally created a branch because we need to create
a system which was basically a variation of the original project and
share the common unchanged code with the trunk.
Since then, the trunk has now gone into end of life and so I want cut
the trunk off at the branch point and
On Jul 29, 2010, at 20:34, Di Hu wrote:
And I could see both Align.c and align.c
after using svn ls.
Ah, ok, that is a problem then. As you probably know, the Mac's default
filesystem is case-insensitive, while Subversion repositories are
case-sensitive. And your repository seems to think
Hi Ryan:
The problem has been sloved. I am profoundly grateful.
Di
Ryan Schmidt-75 wrote:
On Jul 29, 2010, at 21:11, Di Hu wrote:
I tired to rename one of the files via direct repository URLs. But still
failed. The checkout command is svn checkout
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