Thanks for your answer! Hm ok. SVN is not the best solution but is it impossible by that fact? The example is abstract for a bigger problem, so my chief interest lay in feasibility and the way how to do it. Otherwise we have to transform much data into Git etc.
2011/9/29 Andy Levy <andy.l...@gmail.com> > On Thu, Sep 29, 2011 at 06:58, rmp8...@googlemail.com > <rmp8...@googlemail.com> wrote: > > Hi there, > > I like to use SVN for my documents and backup my data. In major I use my > > USB-Stick for this which has a repository, but once a week I want to give > > all the revisions / commits (not only the head) made on the stick to a > major > > repository. > > How do I do that? > > -- > > In detail: > > I have a major repository on a big external drive. And a latest subset on > my > > stick always with me. > > If the stick runs full I delete everything and get the 10 latest > revisions: > > > > "svnadmin dump -revision 90:100 > Latest.dump" (if 100 is the HEAD) > > "svnadmin create MyRepository" > > "svnadmin load MyRepository < Latest.dump" > > > > And I update and commit only on stick for a week (lets say my > head-revision > > will be 120 then). > > At weekend I like to give those commits made on the stick to the main > > repository on the external. > > What will be the command for it? > > I think Subversion may not be the best fit for your usage. What you > describe is very easy (from that I understand) with a DVCS like Git or > Mercurial - they're basically designed to be used in this way, while > Subversion isn't. > > Perhaps a hybrid approach with git-svn? >