> > > > You can't mix svn and svk commits against the same repo. It confuses svk > > (not svn). > > > > You can use svk readonly, of course. > > Actually, that's not quite right. While svk's depot must only be used by > svk, the usual usage is to mirror a regular subversion repository with > svk into a svk depot, then work with it from there using svk. Any > changes in the svn repository are pulled in with svk sync, and any > changes to the mirrored copy are applied to the backing subversion > repository. >
Except that http://svk.elixus.org/?SVKFAQ says "Given an svk repository, do you have to use it via svk, or can you use svn programs to access it? Short answer: svn programs that only read the repository are working fine; those who actually write in the repository would bypass svk and make it fail. "