On Fri, Oct 15, 2010 at 12:42 PM, Stefan Sperling <s...@elego.de> wrote: > On Fri, Oct 15, 2010 at 10:51:36AM +0100, emerson wrote: >> It was quite surprising today when we were having problems with the >> proxy, and then we noticed that TortoiseSVN would override command >> line svn. Is that suppose to happen? >> After unchecking the proxy configuration on tortoisesvn, the command >> line started to work again, showing command line svn was actually >> using tortoise proxy configuration. > > The proxy settings are read by the Subversion client library, > and are thus shared between TortoiseSVN and other Subversion clients. > So nothing is "overridden". It's shared. > > Just FYI, on Windows, this configuration can be stored in the registry, > or in the "Application Data" area inside a folder called Subversion > (something like C:\Documents and Settings\User\Subversion). > See http://svnbook.red-bean.com/nightly/en/svn.advanced.confarea.html > > If you need separate configurations for clients you could either > make the svn command client use a different configuration (see the > --config-dir option), or you could try to make tortoise store its > configuration elsewhere (but I don't know if that's possible).
For TortoiseSVN, see http://tortoisesvn.net/docs/release/TortoiseSVN_en/tsvn-dug-settings.html#tsvn-dug-settings-registry In the section Configuration, it says: "You can specify a different location for the Subversion configuration file using registry location HKCU\Software\TortoiseSVN\ConfigDir. This will affect all TortoiseSVN operations." Alternatively, you can specify it as an option when starting tortoisesvn.exe (/configdir:"path\to\config\dir"). See http://tortoisesvn.net/docs/nightly/TortoiseSVN_en/apc.html Cheers, -- Johan