Debian :: Does Subversion Have Specific Meanings About U
Jun 26, 2011
I use subversion to check out some small projects and small games from time to time. Sometimes I see the 'U' which means upgrading coming in different places or even coming twice 'UU' . Now I always wondered if there is some specific reason why it comes out that. Here's an example of the check-out done from a game called dawn-rpg. As the name suggests its a role-playing game . dawn-rpg.sourceforge.net Anyway here's the checkout :-
[Code]...
Now see that all the deviations of U from third line as to how they appear ? Put simply 'A' is for addition of new files and 'U' is for upgrading/new version of somefile but do not undertand why it behaves/d that way. I have seen this in some others svn also.
Using NSsbackup on Ubunu 10.04 desktop. Generally all is successful - except for two things.First: If my USB WD Passport destination drive is not awake at the time the backup is started, the backup fails. But if I run ls -al on the drive, that wakes it up enough to take the backup. How to deal with this problem?Second, I have a question on the meanings of one of the commands: "format". In some examples I see "format = none", in others "format=1".What do these mean? Is this related to what type of compression might be being used after the tarball is created? Compression typethat name) is not mentioned in the/etc/nssbackup.conf file, for instance.
I'm trying to get this rather troublesome (and poorly made, I might add) game to work correctly, and right now it has frozen to a black screen with a frozen cursor. I can't figure out how to shutdown X, but while this game is frozen as it is, I might as well figure out what the process status SL+ means. If anyone has a link to a list of process status codes and their meanings
How to install using yum? Because when I tried this: yum install gcc gmake make libcpp libgcc libstdc++ gcc4 gcc4-c++ gcc4-gfortran subversion ruby ncurses-devel -y Subversion did not install, I tried this:
I am accessing my subversion repository from svn+ssh:// I set up a new group called for the repository, and then I added two users to this group, harry and sally. Here is the problem. harry logs in and commits a file After commit a ton of the files have been saved by harry, and have the new owner and group:
group: harry owner: harry
sally no longer has access to the repository! Is there any way to prevent the group from changing when harry commits a file? I tried just writing a file with VIM after logging in via ssh with one of the users, and this does NOT change the group. subversion is doing something special that changes the permissions.
I'm running Fedora 10 with apache and I installed mod_dav_svn so that I could set up a secured remote code repository. It appeared to be working ok until I turned on SSL and basic Authentication.I even verified in my subversion.conf httpd configuration file that it is pointing to the correct password file. When I attempt to access it from my web browser, it prompts me for a user name and password, but it will not let me log in. I tried to disable SSL thinking that that might have been the problem, but I get the same results either way. Can anyone please help me resolve this problem?
I have C/C++ source codes and the corresponding binaries in proj/src and proj/bin.I have `import`ed both directories into my svn project and then `checkout`ed both. Later I made changes to the source code and hence new executables, but I'm not able to `checkin` the executables back to the svn project.`svn status` ignores the executables in the proj/bin directory. What should I do to `checkin` executables?
I have my subversion setup over apache already, so that isn't my question. My question is in regards to the appearance of my repo over the http(s) protocol.
(cross-posted in LQ>Forums>Linux>Software)I have Subversion 1.6.6 on Linux.I have C/C++ source codes and the corresponding binaries in proj/src and proj/bin.I have `import`ed both directories into my svn project and then `checkout`ed both. Later I made changes to the source code and hence new executables, but I'm not able to `checkin` the executables back to the svn project.`svn status` ignores the executables in the proj/bin directory. What should I do to `checkin` executables?
I installed openSuse 11.4 (KDE). It was excellent - everything was working great except for Subversion which use to work fine on 11.3 (command line is broken on 11.4, Eclipse/Subclipse works fine on both).
Subversion kept going to the proxy server instead of going directly to our internal Subversion server. I tried (1.) setting the proxy settings in Yast with excluding for our Subversion server, (2.) tried adding the usual settings in ~/.subversion/servers (which worked fine in 11.3). I could not check out on the command line from the local server, I can check out from external servers, eg: Google.
(I installed from the live CD download. I think this is using something some plasma widget thing for the network management.) Why is Subversion not using the usual ~/.subversion/servers file for its settings in 11.4 (KDE)? What is it using and how can I make it not use the proxy server? (Someone else mentioned his Subversion only started working after he used some Chrome plug-in to change the proxy settings but had no idea why?)
I just installed 10.04 today and i love it I'm trying to install some software tried devede but i didn't like it only text menu's and nothing more.I also found tovid software looks really cool and i was wanting to try it i tried to install the debs but no go the tovid website say's to install from subversion it also says something about installing ffmpeg from subversion.So what is subversion and how do i install from it?
Am configured SVN on Ubuntu 10.04 ,It's Working fine ;svn access method is svn://ipaddress .In this method am not encrypting the password ,Currently my passwd (/homesvnMyProject/conf )file like that [users]test = testNow i want to Implement the password Encryption for any users, without implementing svn+ssh:// method
I'm using Fedora 8 and subversion 1.4.4. I just want to upgrade subversion to version 1.6 and tried with rpmforge. But rpmforge is used for Centos, not for Fedora I ran 'yum --enablerepo=rpmforge update subversion' but it displayed error
Code: Error: Missing Dependency: libneon.so.25()(64bit) is needed by package subversion-1.6.12-0.1.el5.rf.x86_64 (rpmforge) Error: Missing Dependency: python(abi) = 2.4 is needed by package subversion-1.6.12-0.1.el5.rf.x86_64 (rpmforge)
I installed python 2.5 in my server, but it still displays errors. Is there the way to upgrade subversion without a source?
I have downloaded several service GUIs to support work with subversion; the most developed one is "kdesvn". I also tried some CVS surfaces. It is always the same problem: I cannot connect to a repository in the local file system. This is weird! The greatest use of versioning in my practice it to work local, and it should not be difficult to program streaming with local files (WinCVS allowed me to do this.)
I am trying to make subversion to use the user account from bugzilla. I surf the net and found many threads related but most of them are out-of-dated. I have install the following software on ubuntu10.10
How do I give permission to a logged in user to stop/start a specific service without entering a root/sudo password? So they can do a simple "service SomeService stop|start" It is for a headless Ubuntu server.
I want to know How to set up Subversion server to run Multiple Projects? I want something to manage it over the web or manage it over kloxo as I am currently using control panel kloxo.
I need to search a bunch of files in a specific folder for a specific number and add all the numbers together to a total sum. I use Rsync everyday, everytime I run rsync i get a logfile (rsync output) witch contains the textstring "Total bytes sent: xxxxxx".
The "xxxxx" can vary in lenght. I need to extract the "xxxxxx" from each file and add the numbers together to a total size over a week or a month. Is this possible? And I wish to only use bash. One way of doing stuff at a time my friends .
my system I want user1 and only user1 to be able to mount and unmount a specific partition, this partition contains backups and is usually mounted read only, needs to be temporarily mounted read/write by user1 while doing the backup.user1 is an unprivileged user. I've read that the user option will let any user mount the file-system (and only that user can then subsequently unmount it) and that the users option allows any user to mount or unmount the file-system.I also found this in mount's man pageQuote:The owner option is similar to the user option, with the restriction that the user must be the owner of the special file. This may be useful e.g. for /dev/fd if a login script makes the console user owner of this device. The group option is similar, with the restriction that the user must be member of the group of the special file.So it looks like I'd need a login script for that user to make the user owner of the device file (/dev/voiceserv/backup in this case)
I'm trying to configure our mail server to block email from a specific sender reaching a specific recipient. In other words, if one of our employees is getting harassed by a 'stalker', how would one go about blocking, at the MTA (Sendmail) level, a specific sender email address from reaching a particular users inbox? We do not want to capture the email - simply block it before it consumes server resources.The Sendmail server (MTA) is a front end to our Exchange server so no user accounts exist on the Linux server. We simply use it as a SPAM and Virus scanner then forward clean email to the Exchange server.