Hi Michael and welcome to the group, This information exists in your repository, but not in your working copy. So indeed, if you can no longer connect to the repository, you will no longer be able to access this information.
If you truly want to be able to see for each revision which lines of code were committed and by whom, the only practical way to store that information is in the form of an svn repository or a repository dump that you can later use to recreate a repository. Versions doesn't have this functionality built in and to do it you'll need to be able to login to your svn server. For more info, google "svnadmin dump". If just information about which file someone committed a change to and when is enough, just the history log may do. In that case, the command line "svn log -v" command will output a log that's very similar to Versions' timeline view. Run for example "svn log -v --non-interactive > mylogfile.txt" in a Terminal window that's in your working copy directory to create or overwrite a file named mylogfile.txt that contains all this information. There are also options to export the log in XML and with less detailed information, type "svn help log" to learn more about them. I hope this helps, - Dirk On Jul 23, 5:39 pm, Michael <ivers...@gmail.com> wrote: > How would I export into a text file the entire timeline of code > commits ? > > I want to have on my local hard drive every line of code committed and > changed. > > I think this content exists in the history log. > > If I become disconnected to the source repository, do I lose this > content from my SVN ? -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Versions" group. To post to this group, send email to versi...@googlegroups.com. To unsubscribe from this group, send email to versions+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/versions?hl=en.