Hi all,
I appreciate all the tips and info I've received from my server config
questions. It looks like I need to do much more to secure my server before
tackling he SVN portion. I'm going to take a step back and do that first. If
necessary I'll (re)post once that'
Hi all,
I appreciate all the tips and info I've received from my server config
questions. It looks like I need to do much more to secure my server before
tackling he SVN portion. I'm going to take a step back and do that first. If
necessary I'll (re)post once that'
On 8/19/2013 6:19 PM, Ben Reser wrote:
On 8/19/13 9:07 AM, Scott Frankel wrote:
I'm new to SVN server configuration and find myself setting up a
CentOS 6.4 server with svn version 1.6.1, following the red-bean
book.
I'd strongly urge you not to use 1.6.1, see the list of applicable
security is
On 8/20/2013 1:19 AM, olli hauer wrote:
On 2013-08-20 01:41, Nico Kadel-Garcia wrote:
I think he meant "subversion-1.6.11", which is the default version for
CentOS 6.4.
Check the SELinux settings in /etc/sysconfig/selinux.
Set the line to 'SELINUX=permissive' (or disabled)
After changing the
On 2013-08-20 01:41, Nico Kadel-Garcia wrote:
> I think he meant "subversion-1.6.11", which is the default version for
> CentOS 6.4.
Check the SELinux settings in /etc/sysconfig/selinux.
Set the line to 'SELINUX=permissive' (or disabled)
After changing the SELINUX value a reboot is required
Addi
I think he meant "subversion-1.6.11", which is the default version for
CentOS 6.4.
On Mon, Aug 19, 2013 at 6:19 PM, Ben Reser wrote:
> On 8/19/13 9:07 AM, Scott Frankel wrote:
> > I'm new to SVN server configuration and find myself setting up a CentOS
> 6.4 server with svn version 1.6.1, follow
On 8/19/13 9:07 AM, Scott Frankel wrote:
> I'm new to SVN server configuration and find myself setting up a CentOS 6.4
> server with svn version 1.6.1, following the red-bean book.
I'd strongly urge you not to use 1.6.1, see the list of applicable
security issues here:
http://subversion.apache.or
On 8/19/2013 12:13 PM, Scott Frankel wrote:
This is my first brush with Apache, OpenSSL, and general server config. Thanks
in advance for your suggestions! BTW, I'm not subscribed and would appreciate
being cc'd on any replies.
Scott
DAV svn
SVNParentPat
;> people that I approve, use cmd-line svn and do so securely.
>
> These are standard goals.
Good. I mention them in hopes it whittles-down in advance any suggestions you
might have. eg: the red-bean book has quite a lot to say about tunneling
svnserve, which is not germane to my setu
On 8/19/2013 12:42 PM, David Chapman wrote:
How many repositories do you have? You shouldn't use SVNParentPath if
you have only one repository; use SVNPath. I don't know if that is the
direct cause of your problem, but you should fix it.
I suggest planning for multiple repositories from the
David Chapman wrote on Mon, Aug 19, 2013 at 09:42:42 -0700:
> You shouldn't use SVNParentPath if you have only one repository; use
> SVNPath. I don't know if that is the direct cause of your problem,
> but you should fix it.
I disagree. I'm not aware of a reason to prefer one over the other.
ror] [client 93.174.93.213] File does not
> exist: /var/www/html/MyAdmin
>
>
> This doesn't look good at all. My Location directive follows below. The
> /etc/svn-auth.htdigest exists and appears to be valid. My goal is to setup
> the repo, serve it via Apache, provide
use cmd-line svn and do so securely.
These are standard goals.
This is my first brush with Apache, OpenSSL, and general server config. Thanks
in advance for your suggestions! BTW, I'm not subscribed and would appreciate
being cc'd on any replies.
Scott
DAV svn
SVNParentP
only a small number of people that
I approve, use cmd-line svn and do so securely.
This is my first brush with Apache, OpenSSL, and general server config. Thanks
in advance for your suggestions! BTW, I'm not subscribed and would appreciate
being cc'd on any replies.
Scott
14 matches
Mail list logo