On Tue, Jan 2, 2018 at 1:42 PM, Johan Corveleyn <jcor...@gmail.com> wrote: > On Tue, Jan 2, 2018 at 1:29 PM, Bo Berglund <bo.bergl...@gmail.com> wrote: >> On Tue, 02 Jan 2018 09:59:15 +0000, Daniel Shahaf >> <d...@daniel.shahaf.name> wrote: >> >>>Branko ?ibej wrote on Tue, 02 Jan 2018 09:42 +0100: >>>> On 01.01.2018 21:28, Bo Berglund wrote: >>>> > Is there a command to show the revision when an item (directory or >>>> > file) was actually created in svn? >>>> >>>> Currently the only hack to do this is by using 'svn log --stop-on-copy' >>>> in a working copy. >>> >>>Wouldn't 'svn log --stop-on-copy URL' work? >>> >>>There's also this (not immediately obvious) command for showing the >>>revision that created TARGET at that location, via a copy or otherwise: >>> >>> svn log -r 0:HEAD -q -v --stop-on-copy --limit=1 -- TARGET >> >> I believe this only works in a working copy, not on the server in a >> hook... > > As Daniel suggested, this also works with a URL as target. You don't > need a working copy. It's fine to run 'svn' with a URL from within a > hook: > > svn log -r 0:HEAD -q -v --stop-on-copy --limit=1 -- $URL_TO_BRANCH > > Some svn admins only try to limit their hooks to svnlook, but at some > point that falls short of what you need to do ('svn' is often more > powerful). I see no problem using the 'svn' executable.
Forgot to add: an important difference, of course, is that 'svn' can only be used to inspect revisions that have already been committed (like from a post-commit hook, or from tools that run in a cron job and inspect committed revisions). If you want to inspect an uncommitted transaction, as you would do in the pre-commit hook, then you have no alternative, you have to use svnlook. -- Johan