Hi, Ben, and thanks for your reply. Unfortunately, I think that was the first (or perhaps the second) thing I tried, to no avail (also unfortunately, I'm away from my work computer for the rest of the day so I can't check my command history or the error message it generated).
As I think about my sitch, I realize that the folder I thought was the root of the repository probably isn't, because it's the root of the directory tree in which reside all the files that I edit day-to-day, and that's supposed to be a working copy, not the repository itself, correct? Assuming that's correct, my ultimate goal is to "relocate" my project, with history, to a new, empty Google code project (already created and reset)--how should I proceed: should I continue to try to svnsync my new Google project to my existing repository (to which I'll never again have access after tomorrow), and if so, how do I find my repository from knowing where a working copy is ('cause, clearly, I've forgotten)? Or should I just upload my working copy from its root, and then check that out to any place else I want to be able to work on it--would such an upload include the history, and would Google Code recognize it? Please advise/help! Thanks, DG YOU!...are Big Data <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_data>. On Wed, Oct 30, 2013 at 1:29 PM, Ben Reser <b...@reser.org> wrote: > On 10/30/13 1:08 PM, David Goldsmith wrote: > > Hi! I can't seem to get the formatting for my source repository > name--which is > > a Windows directory--correct for svnsync: I've tried forward slashes and > > backslashes, quotes and no quotes, relative path and absolute > path--nada. My > > repository, in Windows syntax, is C:\MWDM--how do I specify this as part > of the > > source argument to svnsync? Thanks, > > file:///C:/MWDM > > Note that there are 3 forward slashes before the path because you want a > blank > host entry. > > > http://svnbook.red-bean.com/en/1.7/svn.basic.in-action.html#svn.advanced.reposurls >