On 14 Jun 2025, at 16:52, Branko Čibej <[email protected]> wrote:
> That error comes from Serf; and there's no more descriptive message
> available. Looking at the code, this happens when something goes badly wrong
> with the network; it can't be the result of something the server sent over
> the wire.
>
> Which version of Serf are you using? And how repeatable is this?
This happens if you try to connect to server that requires a client
certificate, where the client certificate is in the standard windows
certificate store, and otherwise works fine in Firefox.
Trying a certificate in a P12 makes no difference, not confident I'm setting it
up in the correct place.
The version is this:
minfrin@PISTACHIO C:\Users\minfrin>svn --version --verbose
svn, version 1.14.5 (r1922182)
compiled Nov 30 2024, 08:20:48 on x86-microsoft-windows
Copyright (C) 2024 The Apache Software Foundation.
This software consists of contributions made by many people;
see the NOTICE file for more information.
Subversion is open source software, see http://subversion.apache.org/
The following repository access (RA) modules are available:
* ra_svn : Module for accessing a repository using the svn network protocol.
- with Cyrus SASL authentication
- handles 'svn' scheme
* ra_local : Module for accessing a repository on local disk.
- handles 'file' scheme
* ra_serf : Module for accessing a repository via WebDAV protocol using serf.
- using serf 1.3.10 (compiled with 1.3.10)
- handles 'http' scheme
- handles 'https' scheme
The following authentication credential caches are available:
* Wincrypt cache in C:\Users\minfrin\AppData\Roaming\Subversion
System information:
* running on x86_64-microsoft-windows10.0.26100
- Windows 10 Pro, build 26100 [6.3 Client Multiprocessor Free]
* linked dependencies:
- APR 1.7.5 (compiled with 1.7.5)
- APR-Util 1.6.3 (compiled with 1.6.3)
- Expat 2.2.9 (compiled with 2.2.9)
- SQLite 3.46.1 (compiled with 3.46.1)
- Utf8proc 2.1.0 (compiled with 2.1.0)
- ZLib 1.2.13 (compiled with 1.2.13)
- LZ4 1.7.5 (compiled with 1.7.5)
Regards,
Graham
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