On 9/17/10 1:23 AM, Gary wrote:
Johnathan wrote:
There's not much that Subversion cannot run on.

No, sure :) I was really looking for hints as to what general properties
a server should have. For example I would suspect that CPU speed isn't
much of an issue because actually the server is only "active"
occasionally, whereas storage reliability would be a major
requirement. Like I said, I have my own ideas but was interested in
others' input as well.

Yes, subversion isn't picky about where it runs, so choose hardware/os based on other requirements. If you don't have a huge number of users, performance probably won't be a big issue anyway but RAM is cheap so get plenty and so are disks so make sure you have a reliable raid set and some way to back it up.

If it should be Linux, BSD, whatever, is less of an issue because we
already have sooooo many variations in use *rolls eyes*

Again, running subversion isn't the thing to drive this choice. If you want to pay for support get a platform where you can (Red Hat, Collabnet). If you don't, either get something similar (Centos, subversion from the rpmforge repository), or any popular platform that has well maintained package updates (maybe Ubuntu), or anything where you have local expertise. You'd probably want Ubuntu's LTS version if you go that route so you don't have to do major upgrades frequently on your server.

--
  Les Mikesell
   lesmikes...@gmail.com

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