On Tue, Feb 21, 2012 at 12:37 PM, Les Mikesell wrote:
> On Tue, Feb 21, 2012 at 11:18 AM, e-letter wrote:
>
>> Readers,
>>
>> The manual states that 'hotcopy' of 'dump' are examples of commands to
>> use to create a copy of a repository. An svn repository was created on
>> a network using the pro
On Tue, Feb 21, 2012 at 11:18 AM, e-letter wrote:
> Readers,
>
> The manual states that 'hotcopy' of 'dump' are examples of commands to
> use to create a copy of a repository. An svn repository was created on
> a network using the protocol 'svn+ssh'; what is the most appropriate
> method to make
Readers,
The manual states that 'hotcopy' of 'dump' are examples of commands to
use to create a copy of a repository. An svn repository was created on
a network using the protocol 'svn+ssh'; what is the most appropriate
method to make a copy (e.g. onto a CD) and then use that copy to
transfer that
On 19/02/2010 12:13, Andy Levy wrote:
> You can easily run Subversion in a relatively small VM with storage
> located on a SAN (which will appear as a local drive to the OS and
> applications running on it) unless you've got a very large number of
> users/amount of traffic.
Or he could just run su
On Thu, Feb 18, 2010 at 10:12, Vicky Chester wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I'm looking at setting up an SVN repository using apache. I'd like to be
> able to put the repository folder onto a shared network drive and have
> apache run on a separate PC. The network drive gets backed up every night
> whereas
Hi all,
I'm looking at setting up an SVN repository using apache. I'd like to be
able to put the repository folder onto a shared network drive and have
apache run on a separate PC. The network drive gets backed up every night
whereas the PC doesn't, hense the split.
When I've been looking round h
On Thu, Dec 17, 2009 at 10:40, Chris Coleman wrote:
> Olivier Sannier wrote:
>>This last message comes from the Windows security modules, most likely
>> because the computer is not on the same domain or because the time is
>> different between the server and the client.
> This is a very good sugge
Olivier Sannier wrote:
>This last message comes from the Windows security modules, most likely
because the computer is not on the same domain or because the time is
different between the server and the client.
This is a very good suggestion. This partner is coming from a network
outside of our ow
> We have a partner who needs visibility into our SVN repository. It
> is a local repository with no http server (Apache) access.
>
> If this partner is granted Read Only permissions to the directory
> on the Windows Server where the repository is stored - would that
> be enough to interact with S
Chris Coleman wrote:
Error: Can't open file
Error: '\\aab1234\Common\repo\MyProject\trunk\format':
Error: The system detected a possible attempt to compromise security.
Please ensure
Error: that you can contact the server that authenticated you.
This last message comes from the Windows securit
We have a partner who needs visibility into our SVN repository. It is a
local repository with no http server (Apache) access.
If this partner is granted Read Only permissions to the directory on the
Windows Server where the repository is stored - would that be enough to
interact with SVN? Would a
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