Ryan Schmidt wrote on Thu, 18 Mar 2010 at 05:33 -0500:
> If your hostname is not UTF-8, how is Subversion to know what
> character encoding it's using? It seems to me it's a bug (of your OS)
> to present a non-UTF-8 string (or possibly even a non-ASCII string) as
> a valid hostname.
We get the hos
hostname is irrelevant for those not using their PCs as servers (like
me). I've been using this computer (with this hostname) for about a
year without any problems. It was used for Internet access, but only
client side.
AFAIK, Windows has a notion of "ansi" encoding, which is a single-byte
encodin
On Mar 18, 2010, at 03:47, Dmitry Savvateev wrote:
> Yes, indeed, the host name contained cyrillics. I changed it, and the
> problem disappeared.
>
> I think, the host name was automatically generated by the system
> (sounded like "user-pc" in Russian). That means the problem may be
> rather com
Yes, indeed, the host name contained cyrillics. I changed it, and the
problem disappeared.
I think, the host name was automatically generated by the system
(sounded like "user-pc" in Russian). That means the problem may be
rather common, and it makes sense to encode hostname in UTF-8 before
using
svn:sync-lock is set by svnsync as follows:
apr_err = apr_gethostname(hostname_str, sizeof(hostname_str), pool);
...
mylocktoken = svn_string_createf(pool, "%s:%s", hostname_str,
svn_uuid_generate(pool));
...
/* Except in the very last iteration, tr
Yes, I know that, but svn:sync-lock is a system property added by
svnsync during synchronization, to keep the target repository locked.
How do I re-encode it?
2010/3/17 Ryan Schmidt :
> On Mar 17, 2010, at 00:08, Dmitry Savvateev wrote:
>
>> I've ran into the following problem with svnsync on Wind
On Mar 17, 2010, at 00:08, Dmitry Savvateev wrote:
> I've ran into the following problem with svnsync on Windows Vista.
> I'm trying to mirror a repository from my flash drive to the local
> disk, and keep getting the following message:
>
> svnsync: Cannot accept 'svn:sync-lock' property because