On Fri, Feb 12, 2010 at 10:15 PM, Andrey Repin wrote:
> Don't do that. Check out it where it'll be used.
Telling people "don't do what you want to do; do what you don't want
instead" is not helpful.
> First, CMD is quite powerful, if you know how to cook it.
It doesn't really matter how powerfu
Greetings, Glenn Maynard!
>> Use the native windows CLI. No clumsy Cygwin needed. But, to each his own.
> What, CMD? That's an order of magnitude worse than Cygwin.
First, CMD is quite powerful, if you know how to cook it.
Second, http://jpsoft.com/
Third, I think Bob was referring to native Wi
Greetings, Glenn Maynard!
>> Although I'm not sure why he wouldn't check out with a windows client. I'm
>> not sure how connecting to a Linux machine to checkout to a folder mounted
>> on a windows machine is easier than using the
>> windows CLI.
> It's easier because it's a fully configured CL
Greetings, Glenn Maynard!
> Is there any way to change the native newline mode for a particular
> working copy?
> I'm checking out code in Linux, over a CIFS mount to a Windows machine
> where it's being used. This is much easier for me than any of the
> solutions involving Windows clients, but
On Fri, Feb 12, 2010 at 6:23 PM, Bob Archer wrote:
> Use the native windows CLI. No clumsy Cygwin needed. But, to each his own.
What, CMD? That's an order of magnitude worse than Cygwin.
> I would complain to MS about Studio mangling your line endings. Although my
> understanding was it suppor
> > Although I'm not sure why he wouldn't check out with a windows client.
> I'm not sure how connecting to a Linux machine to checkout to a folder
> mounted on a windows machine is easier than using the windows CLI.
>
> It's easier because it's a fully configured CLI that I already have
> running
On Feb 12, 2010, at 16:32, Glenn Maynard wrote:
>> Although I'm not sure why he wouldn't check out with a windows client. I'm
>> not sure how connecting to a Linux machine to checkout to a folder mounted
>> on a windows machine is easier than using the windows CLI.
>
> It's easier because it's
On Fri, Feb 12, 2010 at 5:16 PM, Bob Archer wrote:
> Ah I see. Then wouldn't he just specify svn:eol-style CRLF? Assuming he only
> every edits with Windows tools.
This isn't Windows-only code, and it's not code that only I'm
touching. If someone's checking it out in Linux to compile in Linux
n
> On Feb 12, 2010, at 16:05, Bob Archer wrote:
>
> >> Is there any way to change the native newline mode for a particular
> >> working copy?
> >>
> >> I'm checking out code in Linux, over a CIFS mount to a Windows machine
> >> where it's being used. This is much easier for me than any of the
> >>
On Feb 12, 2010, at 16:05, Bob Archer wrote:
>> Is there any way to change the native newline mode for a particular
>> working copy?
>>
>> I'm checking out code in Linux, over a CIFS mount to a Windows machine
>> where it's being used. This is much easier for me than any of the
>> solutions inv
> Is there any way to change the native newline mode for a particular
> working copy?
>
> I'm checking out code in Linux, over a CIFS mount to a Windows machine
> where it's being used. This is much easier for me than any of the
> solutions involving Windows clients, but ends up with Unix line
>
Is there any way to change the native newline mode for a particular
working copy?
I'm checking out code in Linux, over a CIFS mount to a Windows machine
where it's being used. This is much easier for me than any of the
solutions involving Windows clients, but ends up with Unix line
endings, leadi
On Fri, Feb 12, 2010 at 3:56 PM, Justin Connell
wrote:
> I have a repository that has been in use for well over a year and over this
> period the size on disk has grown to over 150 GB, I found that when running
> svnadmin dump, that the resulting dump file was at 46 GB on disk and then
> when loa
Hi,
I have a repository that has been in use for well over a year and over
this period the size on disk has grown to over 150 GB, I found that when
running svnadmin dump, that the resulting dump file was at 46 GB on disk
and then when loading the dump file into a new repository that the size
o
On Feb 12, 2010, at 1:27 AM, Johan Corveleyn wrote:
> On Fri, Feb 12, 2010 at 12:44 AM, David Brodbeck
> wrote:
>> Actually, I take that back, the manual says it's the *first* match:
>> "Another important fact is that the first matching rule is the one which
>> gets applied to a user."
>> (http
Hello,
I can't see any message in FF while browsing mail archives. When I
click message header a "Loading ..." box appears and nothing happens.
http://mail-archives.apache.org/mod_mbox/subversion-announce/201001.mbox/browser
Please, CC.
BTW, are there any Subversion archives with ability to subs
you will also
On Fri, Feb 12, 2010 at 9:30 AM, Ramachandran, Vishwanath(IE10) <
vishwanath.ramachand...@honeywell.com> wrote:
> Hi there
>
>
>
> For public (read-only to everyone repositories) such as example
> http://myrepository.com/Public users still get prompted with an
> authentication dial
Hi there
For public (read-only to everyone repositories) such as example
http://myrepository.com/Public users still get prompted with an
authentication dialog., can we get rid of this, we have authenticated
our subversion with LDAP, if I remove the "require valid -user" entry
from subversion.co
Hi, it seems the old http://subversion.tigris.org/links.html page was not
migrated to subversion.apache.org. While I can understand that it's quite a
burden to maintain a lot of information about third party tools etc, I think
that some of the content of that page should be added somewhere on the n
On Fri, Feb 12, 2010 at 12:44 AM, David Brodbeck
wrote:
> Actually, I take that back, the manual says it's the *first* match:
> "Another important fact is that the first matching rule is the one which gets
> applied to a user."
> (http://svnbook.red-bean.com/nightly/en/svn.serverconfig.pathbaseda
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