On Sun, Jul 17, 2011 at 02:06, Andy Canfield <andy.canfi...@pimco.mobi> wrote: > We are running svnserve on a Mac OS X. > > I can not get the subversion server to control access. I executed the server > by this command: > /usr/bin/svnserve --daemon --root=/var/svn > --config-file=/var/svn/config/svnserve.conf > As long as file /var/svn/config/svnserve.conf contains the original line: > # anon-access = read > this command works: > svn info svn://localhost/sample > Of COURSE I don't want random hackers to have read access to my source code > !!!!! > As soon as that line is changed to > anon-access = none > the error message comes back: > svn: No access allowed to this repository > > (By the way, I originally changed the "#" to a space and got an error on > that line. Apparently the keyword MUST start in the first column.) > > I have added this line to 'passwd' - > andy = canfield > I have added these lines to 'authz' - > [/sample] > andy = rw > The documentation for 'svn' says that if you don't give a user name and > password you will be prompted for them. I have never under an circumstances > been prompted. Even this command fails with the same error message: > svn info --username=andy --password=canfield svn://localhost/sample
Did you specify in svnserve.conf where your passwd & authz files are located?