I have the same problem. I've made a backup copy of my solution, then went under VisualSVN in VS2008 and clicked "Get solution from subversion" and it downloaded and the icons showed up. However, as soon as I made a change and pressed commit in VS2008 - all the icons changed and the VisualSVN tools are disabled and only Add or Get solution are available.
What gives? On Apr 9, 11:39 am, Amplify Studios <[email protected]> wrote: > I have the same exact problem, and actually the same setup. I have a > solution with a web site project and a couple referenced assembly > projects as well, both of which are in a different repository on the > same SVN server, and located in slightly different subdirectory path. > > The idea of putting all the projects of a given solution under one > local folder and source-controlling it in one place in SVN, is just > not feasible for us since we have several assembly projects we bring > into most/all of our web site projects. We must be able to source- > control individual projects within a solution, and store them in > different subfolder hierarchies, both locally and in SVN. > > Erik > > On Apr 6, 7:08 pm, Amethi <[email protected]> wrote: > > > > > Hi Olga, > > > I've sent a screenshot over. > > > Standard c# web-projectwith a couple of other c# library projects as > > well. > > I'm using Windows Vista SP1 > > Version 1.4.2 of VisualSVN > > Version 1.7 of VisualSVN Server > > TortoiseSVN 1.6.0, Build 15855 - 32 Bit , 2009/03/21 12:36:36 > > > Working copy - everything under one folder, except one libraryproject > > which is elsewhere on the local drive and is in another repository on > > the same svn server. > > > I'd rather not have to create a new working copy, I'd rather it just > > detect the fact it was source-controlled, but if I have to, I will :-( > > > Thanks... > > > On Apr 6, 9:31 pm, VisualSVN Support <[email protected]> wrote: > > > > Hi! > > > > >I've installed VisualSVN and expected it to pick up the fact the > > > >solution was under source-control, but it hasn't > > > > Please could you send us the screen shot of the Solution explorer? > > > > We also need some information about your configuration: > > > - what kinds of projects do you use? > > > - what version of the Windows do you use? > > > - what version of the VisualSVN do you use? > > > - what version of the VisualSVN Server do you use? > > > - what version of the TortoiseSvn do you use? > > > > We need some additional information about your working copy layout. > > > How solution file,projectfiles and other files are located (Windows > > > Explorer screenshots are welcome)? > > > > You could also use "Get solution from subversion" VisualSVN command > > > from the Visual Studio main menu to create a new working copy. > > > > Thank you! > > > > On Mon, Apr 6, 2009 at 1:57 AM, Amethi <[email protected]> wrote: > > > > > Hi all, > > > > > Forgive me if this sounds stupid, but I'm having problems getting > > > > VisualSVN going with anexistingsolution under VisualSVN Server > > > > control. > > > > > As above, I have a VS2008 solution that's already under VisualSVN > > > > Server control, I've installed VisualSVN and expected it to pick up > > > > the fact the solution was under source-control, but it hasn't, and I > > > > don't see how I can get it to? > > > > > Attempting to "AddSolution to Subversion" throws a warning saying > > > > it's already source-controlled. This looked a bit ominous, so I didn't > > > > go ahead with it. > > > > > Any help appreciated. I can't see where I'm going wrong... > > > > -- > > > Olga Dolidze > > > VisualSVN Support- Hide quoted text - > > > - Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text - > > - Show quoted text -

