Am Thu, 10 Feb 2011 14:27:17 -0600 schrieb Ryan Schmidt <subversion-20...@ryandesign.com>:
> > $ svnadmin create repo1 > $ svnadmin create repo1/repo2 > svnadmin: 'repo1/repo2' is a subdirectory of an existing repository > rooted at 'repo1' $ svnadmin create repo2 > $ mv repo2 repo1 > $ ls repo1 > README.txt db hooks repo2 > conf format locks > $ > > Et voilĂ , you have repo2's directory inside repo1's directory. > Yes, this is the only way I would be able to do it, though its a pretty nasty thing if you have scripts, creating your repositories on the fly. Again because noone really understood the problem: I need nested repositories because without I can not grant granular access rights. Eg: I have a redmine project called x and a repository called x. I have access to that repos and some other dudes. Now I need to create a new subproject that belongs virtually to x called z. To maintain this connection I want it to be visible within redmine as a subproject to x. I also want to grant access to that project to different people than I granted to x. Still I need to maintain the connection to x and hence the need of creating subrepositories... Funny noone of you mentioned one damn reason why the force option would be bad. You just said "Its not like we want it to be" but apart from that, your argumentation is not present.
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