If I changed the http:// access port, do I need to checkout my working copy or 
I can just switch to the "new" address, or there is no affect my existing 
working copy?

      From: Joseph Bruni <jbr...@icloud.com>
 To: James <oldyounggu...@yahoo.com> 
Cc: "users@subversion.apache.org" <users@subversion.apache.org> 
 Sent: Wednesday, February 11, 2015 11:40 PM
 Subject: Re: http:// works on intranet but not internet
   




On Feb 11, 2015, at 8:54 PM, James <oldyounggu...@yahoo.com> wrote:
I was able to access SVN server from different machines by using my public ip 
address, such as http://146.115.74.4/svn/repository1, within my home network. 
But I cannot access it from outside with internet. The test web page behave the 
same. I am using the default port: 80.

I have configured my FVS318 NETGRAR router forwarding the http traffic to my 
web server machine which is the same machine as the SVN server.
Any idea?
Thanks,James



Many ISPs block port 80 unless you purchase a “commercial grade” internet 
connection. Check your terms and conditions. You’ll probably find some language 
that explicitly prohibits you from running a server.
This is easy enough to work around. Just have your web server listen on a 
different port other than the well known http port 80.



  

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