Subversion, svn: Difference between revisions
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[[Deciding which Source Management Tool to use |
* [[Deciding which Source Management Tool to use]] |
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* Here the most important link: [https://subversion.apache.org/packages.html Subversion] |
* Here the most important link: [https://subversion.apache.org/packages.html Subversion] |
Latest revision as of 01:27, 5 August 2024
- Here the most important link: Subversion
- Here is the 2nd most important link: the documentation
But if you'd like to use Tortoise (gui + command line):
see also
- Svn via https
- Browse svn history with browser - ViewVC
- Backup and restore or migrate subversion/svn repositories
- Browse svn repositories with your browser: websvn
- move svn repository
get svn
You need a working svn, so with Debian you would do something like
apt-get install subversion
while with Windows you either use winget
winget install TortoiseSVN
or get one of the Windows binaries:
- SilkSVN for just the command line, as far as I know
- TortoiseSVN to get a graphical interface in your explorer (or Total Commander), command line still available but has to be selected during install (I ALWAYS install the command line too, some things are just more understandable when done on the command line)
- VisualSVN for an interface inside Visual Studio
- Cirata which I have no idea about
- some more clients
svn, creating a repository locally
- either use the command line in Linux
svnadmin create /var/svn/repo01
- or use the command line in Windows
svnadmin create d:\data\repos\svn\test
- Test it under Linux
svn list /var/svn/repo01
- Test it under Windows
svn list file:///D:/data/repos/svn/test/
As you see, svnadmin uses local paths and svn uses remote paths. You will not use svnadmin often or even not at all, so it is not that important to you.
If you are using TortoiseSVN you can skip the whole thing, just
- use your Total Commander or File Explorer to show the folder where you want the new repository,
- create an empty folder like "test2",
- go inside the empty folder,
- right click inside and select "TortoiseSVN / Create repository here".
- done. :-)
using a local repository
- Go to your working folder (you have one, right?), something like "C:\work".
- with Linux
svn checkout /var/svn/repo01 testX01
- with Windows
svn checkout file:///D:/data/repos/svn/test/ testX01
- checkout with TortoiseSVN
- right-click the empty area and
- select "SVN Checkout..."
- URL of repository: file:///D:/data/repos/svn/test/
- Checkout directory: C:\work\test
Adding existing project to own trunk inside (new) local repository
- go the folder where the new repository will be created
cd /D d:\data\repos\svn
- create the new repository
svnadmin create tutorials
- check it
svn list file:///d:/data/repos/svn/tutorials
- think about the tree/dir structure we want
/ ue4 GDPwUE trunk branches tags
- Create this structure in the repository: (consider to not use "--parents" so you find typing errors)
svn mkdir file:///d:/data/repos/svn/tutorials/ue4/GDPwUE/trunk -m "creating trunk dir for GDPwUE" --parents svn mkdir file:///d:/data/repos/svn/tutorials/ue4/GDPwUE/branches -m "creating branches dir for GDPwUE" svn mkdir file:///d:/data/repos/svn/tutorials/ue4/GDPwUE/tags -m "creating tags dir for GDPwUE"
- import the project to trunk (the content of GDPwUE will be inside trunk)
svn import C:\work\tutorials\ue4\GDPwUE file:///d:/data/repos/svn/tutorials/ue4/GDPwUE/trunk -m "initial import of GDPwUE"
- now move the original GDPwUE somewhere else for safekeeping, in case you did something wrong
- checkout the project
cd /D c:/work/tutorials svn checkout file:///d:/data/repos/svn/tutorials/ue4/GDPwUE/trunk GDPwUE cd GDPwUE svn log svn log -q svn log -v tree
Import, last minute, lazy, safe
If you think you are done with the creation of directories, use
svn list file:///D:/data/repos/svn/tutorials/ue5/UE5-Character-Creation/trunk
to be sure the directory for import is there. Now change to the directory you want to import from like
cd /d C:\work\tutorials\UE5-Character-Creation
Now you use the cursor keys to get the "svn list" line from before and just edit it to
svn import . file:///D:/data/repos/svn/tutorials/ue5/UE5-Character-Creation/trunk -m "initial import of project UE5-Character-Creation"
This way the chances for a wrong letter somewhere are lower. Yes, I am a coward in certain situations.
svn, What you normally need
- get current version
svn up
- add a file which is not yet managed by svn
svn add <file>
- commit your changes (Windows uses here " instead of ')
svn commit -m '<description>'
Get an idea about your svn-urls:
svn info
Create a branch from an existing Url: (use ", not ' with Windows)
Below I use URLs with absolute paths. If you are inside a working directory, consider to use the "Relative URL" you can get with "svn info". Look at the chapter about tags to get an example. Branches and tags are created in the same way anyway.
svn copy https://192.168.20.1:3690/svn/src/c++/YourProject/trunk \ https://192.168.20.1:3690/svn/src/c++/YourProject/branches/YourFixForBadError \ -m 'we have a bad bad error'
You just created the branch in the repository, now get it:
svn up
Do your changes and fixes, then
svn status
do get an idea which files you added or changed. If you added files, add them to subversion with
svn add <file>
Commit all your changes with (" for Windows)
svn commit -m '<description>'
if it took a lot of time for all this, get the current trunk into your branch:
svn merge <url-to-trunk> svn status svn diff svn commit
Go to your trunk
cd <whatever>src/c++/yourProject/trunk
if you are unsure, what you did:
svn diff <trunk-url> <branch-url>
merge the branch into the trunk:
svn merge <url-to-branch> svn status svn commit -m '<description>'
Create a tag
There are multiple ways to do it. You don't even need a working copy. The following is how I do it. And I do it of course in the best way possible (for me, because I don't know a lot, *ups*).
- Go to your working directory which should normally be a checked out "trunk".
svn info
- Look at
- "Relative URL:" and
- "Revision:".
Relative URL should be something like
Relative URL: ^/examples/ShowActor/trunk
Now you do something like:
svn mkdir "^/examples/ShowActor/tags" -m "creating tags directory" svn copy -r 9 "^/examples/ShowActor/trunk" "^/examples/ShowActor/tags/1.0-stairs-only" -m "creating tag"
Branches and Tags are "the same". They are cheap copies and you just have to use them the right way. You will normally never checkout "/examples" or "/examples/ShowActor/". You will instead checkout "/examples/ShowActor/trunk" and perhaps use
svn switch "^/examples/ShowActor/tags/1.0-stairs-only"
to switch to that tag, build and try it. But do NOT commit to it. Pretty please! (Only commit to trunk and branches!)
Then switch back to your trunk with
svn switch "^/examples/ShowActor/trunk"
undo an "add"
svn revert --recursive <folder> svn revert --recursive .
other project as subdirectory, internal link
If you have a repository with the path
/c++/_internal
and you in some project like
/c++/myProject
you want to use the first one without using ../ you can use the following (the last . is important too, Windows: use " instead of ')
svn propset svn:externals '^/c++/_internal _internal' . svn up
svn, commit a message with an apostrophe
What will not work:
svn commit -m 'user's test'
What should work
svn commit -m "user's test"
What we want to show here
svn commit -m 'user'\''s test'
So we have three parts in the commit
'user' \' 's test'
svn, ignore
Types
There are three ways to ignore files/directories:
- in your repository you set ignores for this directory and all below and it just works, no need to think about it
svn propset svn:global-ignores "Intermediate" .
- in your repository you set ignores for this directory and if you want it for all EXISTING sub-directories too you use "--recursive":
svn propset svn:ignore "Intermediate" .
- in your configuration file for your svn installation in the "global-ignores" section you set it for all repositories at once, but have it only locally.
What to use
So... in nearly all cases you want either "svn:global-ignores" or "svn:ignore".
Reason? You want it to work for everyone who checks out the repository or - how it is normal for large projects - parts of the repository. A new member of the team should not add "Intermediate" to the repository because he was not told yet not to do it. He will just not see it when working with svn normally.
Use a file and a script to ease your life
How do you do it and keep sane?
Create a file ".svnignore" with content like: (of course depending on YOUR needs, I added .sln here because this is for an Unreal Engine repository)
*.sln .vs .vsconfig Binaries Build DerivedDataCache DesignTimeBuild FileContentIndex Intermediate Releases Saved v17
Create a script like "use-ignore-file.cmd" with content like:
svn propset svn:global-ignores -F .svnignore . svn update
Add both files to svn. After using propset you will probably have to use "svn update" before you can do other stuff. That's why...
Notes about ignore
Keep in mind that these ignores only meddle with the normal display. Meaning a normal
svn status
will react to these ignores and show or not show something.
But nobody keeps you from adding a file/folder to svn, because the ignores ONLY change the display. After adding an ignored item to the repository, it will be handled like a normal item. The ignore will be ignored :-)
And if you want to see the status with the ignored files:
svn status --no-ignore