Ryan, Thank you for straightening me out. I do want multiple projects in a 
single repository, so I will start over using the first of your nice examples, 
that is, with svn mkdir, etc.. Thank you for all your help. pcr

-----Original Message-----
From: Ryan Schmidt [mailto:subversion-20...@ryandesign.com]
Sent: Tuesday, April 5, 2011 01:28 PM
To: p...@pcrt.us
Cc: 'Subversion Users'
Subject: Re: Multiple projects

Please use Reply All so your replies go to the list too, not just to me. This 
way others can participate in and benefit from the discussion.On Apr 5, 2011, 
at 10:57, p...@pcrt.us wrote:> Yes, I see the great flexibility. But there are 
no examples in the book of the svnadmin commands to do it. The command I used, 
from appendix A, set up several directories underneath repos, with no 
intevening project directories. I hesitate to change the paths to those 
directories by brute force and have no idea how to use svnadmin to do all the 
reshuffeling. I would rather start over, but again, I could find no example of 
an svn create that puts in the project directories. I apologize if this all 
sounds dumb.

 "svnadmin create" is only used to create the repository (the filesystem, the 
database). What you do with the repository (filesystem, database) after that 
(i.e. what directories and files you put in it) is up to you, and you'll be 
using the svn command, not the svnadmin command, to do so.On Apr 5, 2011, at 
11:47,

 p...@pcrt.us wrote:> Alright, I think I have it now. There is no one svnadmin 
create statement that can set up three projects. But I can do them one at a 
time it seems. I did this> >

#mkdir /usr/svn/repos/project1>
# svnadmin create /usr/svn/repos/project1>
#mkdir /usr/svn/repos/project2>
# svnadmin create /usr/svn/repos/project2>
# mkdir /usr/svn/repos/project3>
# svnadmin create /usr/svn/repos/project3> >

Now each of the project directories has a tree of directories labled conf db 
format hooks locks and a README.txt> > Thanks for your help.

You've used multiple svnadmin create commands, which means you now have several 
independent repositories; based on the names you've given them, I suspect you 
intend to use each repository to contain a single project. That's fine. By the 
way, you don't need to "mkdir" before you "svnadmin create"; svnadmin will 
create the directory for you.You can now create the trunk, branches and tags 
directories in each project's repository:

svn mkdir file:///usr/svn/repos/project1/trunk
svn mkdir file:///usr/svn/repos/project1/branches
svn mkdir file:///usr/svn/repos/project1/tags
svn mkdir file:///usr/svn/repos/project2/trunk
svn mkdir file:///usr/svn/repos/project2/branches
svn mkdir file:///usr/svn/repos/project2/tags
svn mkdir file:///usr/svn/repos/project3/trunk
svn mkdir file:///usr/svn/repos/project3/branches
svn mkdir file:///usr/svn/repos/project3/tags

Alternately, you could have decided to create a single repository to hold all 
your projects:

svnadmin create /usr/svn/myrepository

Then you would create directories for each project inside it, along with the 
trunk / branches / tags directories:

svn mkdir file:///usr/svn/myrepository/project1
svn mkdir file:///usr/svn/myrepository/project1/trunk
svn mkdir file:///usr/svn/myrepository/project1/branches
svn mkdir file:///usr/svn/myrepository/project1/tags
svn mkdir file:///usr/svn/myrepository/project2
svn mkdir file:///usr/svn/myrepository/project2/trunk
svn mkdir file:///usr/svn/myrepository/project2/branches
svn mkdir file:///usr/svn/myrepository/project2/tags
svn mkdir file:///usr/svn/myrepository/project3
svn mkdir file:///usr/svn/myrepository/project3/trunk
svn mkdir file:///usr/svn/myrepository/project3/branches
svn mkdir file:///usr/svn/myrepository/project3/tags

Or, if the versions of each project are the same and the projects are highly 
interrelated, then perhaps this structure is more desirable:

svn mkdir file:///usr/svn/myrepository/trunk
svn mkdir file:///usr/svn/myrepository/trunk/project1
svn mkdir file:///usr/svn/myrepository/trunk/project2
svn mkdir file:///usr/svn/myrepository/trunk/project3
svn mkdir file:///usr/svn/myrepository/branches
svn mkdir file:///usr/svn/myrepository/tags

In each case, instead of using a file:// URL to the repository, of course you 
should really be setting up svnserve and/or httpd to access the 
repository(ies), and you should then use the corresponding svn:// or http:// 
URL(s) you've chosen.You'll have to decide whether you want multiple 
repositories, one for each project, or a single repository containing multiple 
projects; there are trade-offs either way. If you change your mind later, you 
can always change it -- combine multiple repositories into one, or split a 
monolithic repository into several smaller ones -- but again both operations 
come with consequences.



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