Hello,
I have Site5 for hosting and have spent over 4 hours working with them
attempting to connect to my repository.
I created it in terminal appropriately, and created a rsa key which is
in my home directory and in the .ssh folder in my home directory as
instructed.
When connecting in ssh I
Hi Christopher,
Error 210002 is a connection error (as you probably might have
guessed), we are working to improve error reporting in Versions for
these errors.
Can you try removing the trailing colon from the host-name part of
your URL?
So instead of:
Yes, actually initially I didn't have the colon, but still does not
work.
Also the svn/project folder is directly above the public_html
directory, not a sub directory, which is why I imagine the colon or
something is needed. I'm not sure if their is a log in my console or
something that would
+1 This would be quite nice. In Eclipse, the Subversive plugin puts a
checkmark by each item to select whether it should be part of the
commit. The trick (as always) is how best to provide the desired
functionality in a tasteful and useful way, not just spewing
information all over the
When your working a rapidly changing project with lots of team members
it can be hard to figure out what's recently changed, the timeline
view is great at this, except commits made by me look exactly the same
as commits made by everyone else.
It would be nice to have a subtle effect which made
Hi all,
As discussed with Christopher, I've removed the original messages from
the group because they contained a real hostname.
The original discussion is quoted below with a redacted hostname.
- Dirk
the Versions team
On Oct 13, 1:52 pm, Christopher Beckwith heavyma...@gmail.com wrote:
Yep that's exactly the way I though it would work. And obviously if
they didn't match you wouldn't see any difference in the list at all,
it would look as it does now.
I realise there are probably exceptions to this, but as long as the
different was subtle I think it could work quite well.
On
This would be very helpful since hunting down individual files to commit in
the UI with a large repository is not so user friendly, especially if you
mis-click and loose all your previous selections.
On Tue, Oct 13, 2009 at 8:30 AM, Quinn Taylor quinntay...@mac.com wrote:
+1 This would be quite
Hi all,
I have created a new project using Xcode;
now how do I put it under versions control?
I have my own account at beanstalk, I think I have to import project
into my online repository...but how do I do this?
Thanks,
Marco
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