You are viewing a plain text version of this content. The canonical link for it is here.
Posted to users@subversion.apache.org by Programmer <pr...@aogc.biz> on 2009/04/14 22:19:58 UTC
Newbie Question
I have successfully installed subversion on a Windows 2008 Server.
Client Tortoise SVN on Vista.
My root directory where I want to locate my repositories is D:\Repositories
I have created a repository called D:\Repositories\Projects\Project1
Config Files are as follows:
svnserve.conf
[general]
anon-access = none
auth-access = write
password-db = //./D:/Repositories/auth/passwrd
authz-db = //./D:/Repositories/auth/authz
....
passwrd
[users]
test = test
authz
#give all read access to all repos
[/]
* = r
#give test write access to repo Project1
[Project1:/]
test = rw
My problem is everything works except that I can not commit any changes
back. If I change the authz to [/] * = rw, I can do everything. Am I not
accessing the repo right in the second declaration in the authz file? I
have tried everything from absolute to relative pathing. What am I doing
wrong?
Any help would be appreciated.
Thanks,
Jeremy Schreckhise, M.B.A., B.S., MCP
Director of Information Technology
Arkansas Oklahoma Gas Corp.
115 N. 12th Street
Fort Smith, AR 72901
479-783-3181 ext. 2259
------------------------------------------------------
http://subversion.tigris.org/ds/viewMessage.do?dsForumId=1065&dsMessageId=1716923
To unsubscribe from this discussion, e-mail: [users-unsubscribe@subversion.tigris.org].
RE: Newbie Question
Posted by Programmer <pr...@aogc.biz>.
I do have repos for each project.
From: Crespo, Richard [mailto:RCrespo@kforce.com]
Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2009 10:12 AM
To: Programmer; users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: RE: Newbie Question
> # this is what I want. Repo specific permissions to particular repos for
particular users
> [Project1:/] # project is located in D:\Repositories\Project\Project1
Do you mean specific permissions to Project1, Project2, ....
If that is what you want it would be easier just creating separate
repositories for Project1, Project2, ...
_____
From: Programmer [mailto:prog@aogc.biz]
Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2009 11:06 AM
To: 'Bob Archer'; users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: RE: Newbie Question
Is the repo name in the authz file the same thing is what is created with
svnadmin create <repo name>? If so, then yes. My goal is to have a global
passwrd file and authz file. Is this not possible?
# this works for any user set up here, but won't this allow access for
anything in the default repository start folder, i.e. D:\Repositories\
[/]
test = test
# this is what I want. Repo specific permissions to particular repos for
particular users
[Project1:/] # project is located in D:\Repositories\Project\Project1
test = test
Thanks,
Jeremy
From: Bob Archer [mailto:Bob.Archer@amsi.com]
Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2009 9:56 AM
To: Programmer; users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: RE: Newbie Question
It all looks right to me. If you remove the repository name does it then
work? Svn is case sensitive. Are you sure "Project1" is the repo name?
BOb
_____
From: Programmer [mailto:prog@aogc.biz]
Sent: Tuesday, April 14, 2009 6:20 PM
To: users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: Newbie Question
I have successfully installed subversion on a Windows 2008 Server.
Client Tortoise SVN on Vista.
My root directory where I want to locate my repositories is D:\Repositories
I have created a repository called D:\Repositories\Projects\Project1
Config Files are as follows:
svnserve.conf
[general]
anon-access = none
auth-access = write
password-db = //./D:/Repositories/auth/passwrd
authz-db = //./D:/Repositories/auth/authz
....
passwrd
[users]
test = test
authz
#give all read access to all repos
[/]
* = r
#give test write access to repo Project1
[Project1:/]
test = rw
My problem is everything works except that I can not commit any changes
back. If I change the authz to [/] * = rw, I can do everything. Am I not
accessing the repo right in the second declaration in the authz file? I
have tried everything from absolute to relative pathing. What am I doing
wrong?
Any help would be appreciated.
Thanks,
Jeremy Schreckhise, M.B.A., B.S., MCP
Director of Information Technology
Arkansas Oklahoma Gas Corp.
115 N. 12th Street
Fort Smith, AR 72901
479-783-3181 ext. 2259
------------------------------------------------------
http://subversion.tigris.org/ds/viewMessage.do?dsForumId=1065&dsMessageId=1728630
To unsubscribe from this discussion, e-mail: [users-unsubscribe@subversion.tigris.org].
RE: Newbie Question
Posted by "Crespo, Richard" <RC...@kforce.com>.
> # this is what I want. Repo specific permissions to particular repos
for particular users
> [Project1:/] # project is located in D:\Repositories\Project\Project1
Do you mean specific permissions to Project1, Project2, ....
If that is what you want it would be easier just creating separate
repositories for Project1, Project2, ...
________________________________
From: Programmer [mailto:prog@aogc.biz]
Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2009 11:06 AM
To: 'Bob Archer'; users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: RE: Newbie Question
Is the repo name in the authz file the same thing is what is created
with svnadmin create <repo name>? If so, then yes. My goal is to have
a global passwrd file and authz file. Is this not possible?
# this works for any user set up here, but won't this allow access for
anything in the default repository start folder, i.e. D:\Repositories\
[/]
test = test
# this is what I want. Repo specific permissions to particular repos
for particular users
[Project1:/] # project is located in D:\Repositories\Project\Project1
test = test
Thanks,
Jeremy
From: Bob Archer [mailto:Bob.Archer@amsi.com]
Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2009 9:56 AM
To: Programmer; users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: RE: Newbie Question
It all looks right to me... If you remove the repository name does it
then work? Svn is case sensitive. Are you sure "Project1" is the repo
name?
BOb
________________________________
From: Programmer [mailto:prog@aogc.biz]
Sent: Tuesday, April 14, 2009 6:20 PM
To: users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: Newbie Question
I have successfully installed subversion on a Windows 2008 Server.
Client Tortoise SVN on Vista.
My root directory where I want to locate my repositories is
D:\Repositories
I have created a repository called D:\Repositories\Projects\Project1
Config Files are as follows:
svnserve.conf
[general]
anon-access = none
auth-access = write
password-db = //./D:/Repositories/auth/passwrd
authz-db = //./D:/Repositories/auth/authz
........
passwrd
[users]
test = test
authz
#give all read access to all repos
[/]
* = r
#give test write access to repo Project1
[Project1:/]
test = rw
My problem is everything works except that I can not commit any changes
back. If I change the authz to [/] * = rw, I can do everything. Am I
not accessing the repo right in the second declaration in the authz
file? I have tried everything from absolute to relative pathing. What
am I doing wrong?
Any help would be appreciated.
Thanks,
Jeremy Schreckhise, M.B.A., B.S., MCP
Director of Information Technology
Arkansas Oklahoma Gas Corp.
115 N. 12th Street
Fort Smith, AR 72901
479-783-3181 ext. 2259
------------------------------------------------------
http://subversion.tigris.org/ds/viewMessage.do?dsForumId=1065&dsMessageId=1728383
To unsubscribe from this discussion, e-mail: [users-unsubscribe@subversion.tigris.org].
RE: Newbie Question
Posted by Bob Archer <bo...@amsi.com>.
> Dude, you're a genius. I guess the authz file is starting at the root
D:\Repositories and therefore [/] is relative to this directory.
[Projects/Project1:/] worked like a champ.
Yes, that is because it is "root"ing in that folder. I assume that is
where you are running svnserve from? Anyway, as I said if you specify
the -r root location to d:\Repositories\Projects then "Project1:" would
work.
> You were a huge help.
Glad you got it going.
BOb
------------------------------------------------------
http://subversion.tigris.org/ds/viewMessage.do?dsForumId=1065&dsMessageId=1729899
To unsubscribe from this discussion, e-mail: [users-unsubscribe@subversion.tigris.org].
RE: Newbie Question
Posted by Programmer <pr...@aogc.biz>.
Dude, you're a genius. I guess the authz file is starting at the root
D:\Repositories and therefore [/] is relative to this directory.
[Projects/Project1:/] worked like a champ.
You were a huge help.
Thanks!
Jeremy
From: Bob Archer [mailto:Bob.Archer@amsi.com]
Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2009 11:00 AM
To: Programmer; users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: RE: Newbie Question
So, when you do a check out you are specifying:
http://localhost/Project/Project1/SomeFolder ???
You may want to try to use Svnserve -r d:\Repositories\project
I am thinking your repository name is actually [Project/Project1:/] the way
you have it now. Give that a try in your authz file.
BTW: You could also have a separate authz file for each repository also. I
know you prefer a single file.
BOb
_____
From: Programmer [mailto:prog@aogc.biz]
Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2009 11:54 AM
To: Bob Archer; users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: RE: Newbie Question
I am just running net start svnserve with no parameters. The default
directory is D:\Repositories. Like I said the repos are running fine if I
open everything up in the authz file, i.e. [/] * = rw. Does [/] mean
D:\Repositories? Do I have to full qualify a unique repo
[D:\Repositories\Project\Project1]? Tried this.
Jeremy
From: Bob Archer [mailto:Bob.Archer@amsi.com]
Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2009 10:49 AM
To: Programmer; users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: RE: Newbie Question
So what is the value you are passing to the -r option on svnserve? Why do
you have the extra directory level:
D:\Repositories\Project\Project1
Why not just:
D:\Repositories\Project1
BOb
_____
From: Programmer [mailto:prog@aogc.biz]
Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2009 11:46 AM
To: Bob Archer; users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: RE: Newbie Question
K.
Repository Root: svn://localhost/Projects/Project1
-Jeremy
From: Bob Archer [mailto:Bob.Archer@amsi.com]
Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2009 10:36 AM
To: Programmer; users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: RE: Newbie Question
You have to run that command in your working copy (your checked out folder
where there is a .svn folder), not in the repo folder.
BOb
_____
From: Programmer [mailto:prog@aogc.biz]
Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2009 11:34 AM
To: Bob Archer; users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: RE: Newbie Question
When I run svn info D:\Repositories\Project\Project1 I get "svn:
'D:\Repositories\Project\Project1 is not a working copy' ". This is a
working repo because like I said if I us the [/] and open up all the
privileges I can use Tortoise on other work stations to checkout and modify.
Thanks,
-Jeremy
From: Bob Archer [mailto:Bob.Archer@amsi.com]
Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2009 10:19 AM
To: Programmer; users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: RE: Newbie Question
> Is the repo name in the authz file the same thing is what is created with
svnadmin create <repo name>?
Yes, it should be the same. If you run svn info on a WC checked out from
this repo if should show something like:
Repository Root: svn://ustawteam1/manage
You can see above our repo is named "manage".
> My goal is to have a global passwrd file and authz file. Is this not
possible?
Yes, that is possible. You are using the -r switch on svnserve and it is
working for multiple repos?
BOb
_____
From: Programmer [mailto:prog@aogc.biz]
Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2009 11:06 AM
To: Bob Archer; users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: RE: Newbie Question
Is the repo name in the authz file the same thing is what is created with
svnadmin create <repo name>? If so, then yes. My goal is to have a global
passwrd file and authz file. Is this not possible?
# this works for any user set up here, but won't this allow access for
anything in the default repository start folder, i.e. D:\Repositories\
[/]
test = test
# this is what I want. Repo specific permissions to particular repos for
particular users
[Project1:/] # project is located in D:\Repositories\Project\Project1
test = test
Thanks,
Jeremy
From: Bob Archer [mailto:Bob.Archer@amsi.com]
Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2009 9:56 AM
To: Programmer; users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: RE: Newbie Question
It all looks right to me. If you remove the repository name does it then
work? Svn is case sensitive. Are you sure "Project1" is the repo name?
BOb
_____
From: Programmer [mailto:prog@aogc.biz]
Sent: Tuesday, April 14, 2009 6:20 PM
To: users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: Newbie Question
I have successfully installed subversion on a Windows 2008 Server.
Client Tortoise SVN on Vista.
My root directory where I want to locate my repositories is D:\Repositories
I have created a repository called D:\Repositories\Projects\Project1
Config Files are as follows:
svnserve.conf
[general]
anon-access = none
auth-access = write
password-db = //./D:/Repositories/auth/passwrd
authz-db = //./D:/Repositories/auth/authz
....
passwrd
[users]
test = test
authz
#give all read access to all repos
[/]
* = r
#give test write access to repo Project1
[Project1:/]
test = rw
My problem is everything works except that I can not commit any changes
back. If I change the authz to [/] * = rw, I can do everything. Am I not
accessing the repo right in the second declaration in the authz file? I
have tried everything from absolute to relative pathing. What am I doing
wrong?
Any help would be appreciated.
Thanks,
Jeremy Schreckhise, M.B.A., B.S., MCP
Director of Information Technology
Arkansas Oklahoma Gas Corp.
115 N. 12th Street
Fort Smith, AR 72901
479-783-3181 ext. 2259
------------------------------------------------------
http://subversion.tigris.org/ds/viewMessage.do?dsForumId=1065&dsMessageId=1729875
To unsubscribe from this discussion, e-mail: [users-unsubscribe@subversion.tigris.org].
RE: Newbie Question
Posted by Bob Archer <bo...@amsi.com>.
So, when you do a check out you are specifying:
http://localhost/Project/Project1/SomeFolder ???
You may want to try to use Svnserve -r d:\Repositories\project
I am thinking your repository name is actually [Project/Project1:/] the
way you have it now. Give that a try in your authz file.
BTW: You could also have a separate authz file for each repository also.
I know you prefer a single file.
BOb
________________________________
From: Programmer [mailto:prog@aogc.biz]
Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2009 11:54 AM
To: Bob Archer; users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: RE: Newbie Question
I am just running net start svnserve with no parameters. The default
directory is D:\Repositories. Like I said the repos are running fine
if I open everything up in the authz file, i.e. [/] * = rw. Does [/]
mean D:\Repositories? Do I have to full qualify a unique repo
[D:\Repositories\Project\Project1]? Tried this.
Jeremy
From: Bob Archer [mailto:Bob.Archer@amsi.com]
Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2009 10:49 AM
To: Programmer; users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: RE: Newbie Question
So what is the value you are passing to the -r option on svnserve? Why
do you have the extra directory level:
D:\Repositories\Project\Project1
Why not just:
D:\Repositories\Project1
BOb
________________________________
From: Programmer [mailto:prog@aogc.biz]
Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2009 11:46 AM
To: Bob Archer; users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: RE: Newbie Question
K.
Repository Root: svn://localhost/Projects/Project1
-Jeremy
From: Bob Archer [mailto:Bob.Archer@amsi.com]
Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2009 10:36 AM
To: Programmer; users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: RE: Newbie Question
You have to run that command in your working copy (your checked out
folder where there is a .svn folder), not in the repo folder.
BOb
________________________________
From: Programmer [mailto:prog@aogc.biz]
Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2009 11:34 AM
To: Bob Archer; users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: RE: Newbie Question
When I run svn info D:\Repositories\Project\Project1 I get "svn:
'D:\Repositories\Project\Project1 is not a working copy' ". This is a
working repo because like I said if I us the [/] and open up all the
privileges I can use Tortoise on other work stations to checkout and
modify.
Thanks,
-Jeremy
From: Bob Archer [mailto:Bob.Archer@amsi.com]
Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2009 10:19 AM
To: Programmer; users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: RE: Newbie Question
> Is the repo name in the authz file the same thing is what is created
with svnadmin create <repo name>?
Yes, it should be the same. If you run svn info on a WC checked out from
this repo if should show something like:
Repository Root: svn://ustawteam1/manage
You can see above our repo is named "manage".
> My goal is to have a global passwrd file and authz file. Is this not
possible?
Yes, that is possible. You are using the -r switch on svnserve and it is
working for multiple repos?
BOb
________________________________
From: Programmer [mailto:prog@aogc.biz]
Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2009 11:06 AM
To: Bob Archer; users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: RE: Newbie Question
Is the repo name in the authz file the same thing is what is created
with svnadmin create <repo name>? If so, then yes. My goal is to have
a global passwrd file and authz file. Is this not possible?
# this works for any user set up here, but won't this allow access for
anything in the default repository start folder, i.e. D:\Repositories\
[/]
test = test
# this is what I want. Repo specific permissions to particular repos
for particular users
[Project1:/] # project is located in D:\Repositories\Project\Project1
test = test
Thanks,
Jeremy
From: Bob Archer [mailto:Bob.Archer@amsi.com]
Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2009 9:56 AM
To: Programmer; users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: RE: Newbie Question
It all looks right to me... If you remove the repository name does it
then work? Svn is case sensitive. Are you sure "Project1" is the repo
name?
BOb
________________________________
From: Programmer [mailto:prog@aogc.biz]
Sent: Tuesday, April 14, 2009 6:20 PM
To: users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: Newbie Question
I have successfully installed subversion on a Windows 2008 Server.
Client Tortoise SVN on Vista.
My root directory where I want to locate my repositories is
D:\Repositories
I have created a repository called D:\Repositories\Projects\Project1
Config Files are as follows:
svnserve.conf
[general]
anon-access = none
auth-access = write
password-db = //./D:/Repositories/auth/passwrd
authz-db = //./D:/Repositories/auth/authz
........
passwrd
[users]
test = test
authz
#give all read access to all repos
[/]
* = r
#give test write access to repo Project1
[Project1:/]
test = rw
My problem is everything works except that I can not commit any changes
back. If I change the authz to [/] * = rw, I can do everything. Am I
not accessing the repo right in the second declaration in the authz
file? I have tried everything from absolute to relative pathing. What
am I doing wrong?
Any help would be appreciated.
Thanks,
Jeremy Schreckhise, M.B.A., B.S., MCP
Director of Information Technology
Arkansas Oklahoma Gas Corp.
115 N. 12th Street
Fort Smith, AR 72901
479-783-3181 ext. 2259
------------------------------------------------------
http://subversion.tigris.org/ds/viewMessage.do?dsForumId=1065&dsMessageId=1729029
To unsubscribe from this discussion, e-mail: [users-unsubscribe@subversion.tigris.org].
RE: Newbie Question
Posted by Programmer <pr...@aogc.biz>.
I am just running net start svnserve with no parameters. The default
directory is D:\Repositories. Like I said the repos are running fine if I
open everything up in the authz file, i.e. [/] * = rw. Does [/] mean
D:\Repositories? Do I have to full qualify a unique repo
[D:\Repositories\Project\Project1]? Tried this.
Jeremy
From: Bob Archer [mailto:Bob.Archer@amsi.com]
Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2009 10:49 AM
To: Programmer; users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: RE: Newbie Question
So what is the value you are passing to the -r option on svnserve? Why do
you have the extra directory level:
D:\Repositories\Project\Project1
Why not just:
D:\Repositories\Project1
BOb
_____
From: Programmer [mailto:prog@aogc.biz]
Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2009 11:46 AM
To: Bob Archer; users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: RE: Newbie Question
K.
Repository Root: svn://localhost/Projects/Project1
-Jeremy
From: Bob Archer [mailto:Bob.Archer@amsi.com]
Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2009 10:36 AM
To: Programmer; users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: RE: Newbie Question
You have to run that command in your working copy (your checked out folder
where there is a .svn folder), not in the repo folder.
BOb
_____
From: Programmer [mailto:prog@aogc.biz]
Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2009 11:34 AM
To: Bob Archer; users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: RE: Newbie Question
When I run svn info D:\Repositories\Project\Project1 I get "svn:
'D:\Repositories\Project\Project1 is not a working copy' ". This is a
working repo because like I said if I us the [/] and open up all the
privileges I can use Tortoise on other work stations to checkout and modify.
Thanks,
-Jeremy
From: Bob Archer [mailto:Bob.Archer@amsi.com]
Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2009 10:19 AM
To: Programmer; users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: RE: Newbie Question
> Is the repo name in the authz file the same thing is what is created with
svnadmin create <repo name>?
Yes, it should be the same. If you run svn info on a WC checked out from
this repo if should show something like:
Repository Root: svn://ustawteam1/manage
You can see above our repo is named "manage".
> My goal is to have a global passwrd file and authz file. Is this not
possible?
Yes, that is possible. You are using the -r switch on svnserve and it is
working for multiple repos?
BOb
_____
From: Programmer [mailto:prog@aogc.biz]
Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2009 11:06 AM
To: Bob Archer; users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: RE: Newbie Question
Is the repo name in the authz file the same thing is what is created with
svnadmin create <repo name>? If so, then yes. My goal is to have a global
passwrd file and authz file. Is this not possible?
# this works for any user set up here, but won't this allow access for
anything in the default repository start folder, i.e. D:\Repositories\
[/]
test = test
# this is what I want. Repo specific permissions to particular repos for
particular users
[Project1:/] # project is located in D:\Repositories\Project\Project1
test = test
Thanks,
Jeremy
From: Bob Archer [mailto:Bob.Archer@amsi.com]
Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2009 9:56 AM
To: Programmer; users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: RE: Newbie Question
It all looks right to me. If you remove the repository name does it then
work? Svn is case sensitive. Are you sure "Project1" is the repo name?
BOb
_____
From: Programmer [mailto:prog@aogc.biz]
Sent: Tuesday, April 14, 2009 6:20 PM
To: users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: Newbie Question
I have successfully installed subversion on a Windows 2008 Server.
Client Tortoise SVN on Vista.
My root directory where I want to locate my repositories is D:\Repositories
I have created a repository called D:\Repositories\Projects\Project1
Config Files are as follows:
svnserve.conf
[general]
anon-access = none
auth-access = write
password-db = //./D:/Repositories/auth/passwrd
authz-db = //./D:/Repositories/auth/authz
....
passwrd
[users]
test = test
authz
#give all read access to all repos
[/]
* = r
#give test write access to repo Project1
[Project1:/]
test = rw
My problem is everything works except that I can not commit any changes
back. If I change the authz to [/] * = rw, I can do everything. Am I not
accessing the repo right in the second declaration in the authz file? I
have tried everything from absolute to relative pathing. What am I doing
wrong?
Any help would be appreciated.
Thanks,
Jeremy Schreckhise, M.B.A., B.S., MCP
Director of Information Technology
Arkansas Oklahoma Gas Corp.
115 N. 12th Street
Fort Smith, AR 72901
479-783-3181 ext. 2259
------------------------------------------------------
http://subversion.tigris.org/ds/viewMessage.do?dsForumId=1065&dsMessageId=1728991
To unsubscribe from this discussion, e-mail: [users-unsubscribe@subversion.tigris.org].
RE: Newbie Question
Posted by Bob Archer <bo...@amsi.com>.
So what is the value you are passing to the -r option on svnserve? Why
do you have the extra directory level:
D:\Repositories\Project\Project1
Why not just:
D:\Repositories\Project1
BOb
________________________________
From: Programmer [mailto:prog@aogc.biz]
Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2009 11:46 AM
To: Bob Archer; users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: RE: Newbie Question
K.
Repository Root: svn://localhost/Projects/Project1
-Jeremy
From: Bob Archer [mailto:Bob.Archer@amsi.com]
Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2009 10:36 AM
To: Programmer; users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: RE: Newbie Question
You have to run that command in your working copy (your checked out
folder where there is a .svn folder), not in the repo folder.
BOb
________________________________
From: Programmer [mailto:prog@aogc.biz]
Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2009 11:34 AM
To: Bob Archer; users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: RE: Newbie Question
When I run svn info D:\Repositories\Project\Project1 I get "svn:
'D:\Repositories\Project\Project1 is not a working copy' ". This is a
working repo because like I said if I us the [/] and open up all the
privileges I can use Tortoise on other work stations to checkout and
modify.
Thanks,
-Jeremy
From: Bob Archer [mailto:Bob.Archer@amsi.com]
Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2009 10:19 AM
To: Programmer; users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: RE: Newbie Question
> Is the repo name in the authz file the same thing is what is created
with svnadmin create <repo name>?
Yes, it should be the same. If you run svn info on a WC checked out from
this repo if should show something like:
Repository Root: svn://ustawteam1/manage
You can see above our repo is named "manage".
> My goal is to have a global passwrd file and authz file. Is this not
possible?
Yes, that is possible. You are using the -r switch on svnserve and it is
working for multiple repos?
BOb
________________________________
From: Programmer [mailto:prog@aogc.biz]
Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2009 11:06 AM
To: Bob Archer; users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: RE: Newbie Question
Is the repo name in the authz file the same thing is what is created
with svnadmin create <repo name>? If so, then yes. My goal is to have
a global passwrd file and authz file. Is this not possible?
# this works for any user set up here, but won't this allow access for
anything in the default repository start folder, i.e. D:\Repositories\
[/]
test = test
# this is what I want. Repo specific permissions to particular repos
for particular users
[Project1:/] # project is located in D:\Repositories\Project\Project1
test = test
Thanks,
Jeremy
From: Bob Archer [mailto:Bob.Archer@amsi.com]
Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2009 9:56 AM
To: Programmer; users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: RE: Newbie Question
It all looks right to me... If you remove the repository name does it
then work? Svn is case sensitive. Are you sure "Project1" is the repo
name?
BOb
________________________________
From: Programmer [mailto:prog@aogc.biz]
Sent: Tuesday, April 14, 2009 6:20 PM
To: users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: Newbie Question
I have successfully installed subversion on a Windows 2008 Server.
Client Tortoise SVN on Vista.
My root directory where I want to locate my repositories is
D:\Repositories
I have created a repository called D:\Repositories\Projects\Project1
Config Files are as follows:
svnserve.conf
[general]
anon-access = none
auth-access = write
password-db = //./D:/Repositories/auth/passwrd
authz-db = //./D:/Repositories/auth/authz
........
passwrd
[users]
test = test
authz
#give all read access to all repos
[/]
* = r
#give test write access to repo Project1
[Project1:/]
test = rw
My problem is everything works except that I can not commit any changes
back. If I change the authz to [/] * = rw, I can do everything. Am I
not accessing the repo right in the second declaration in the authz
file? I have tried everything from absolute to relative pathing. What
am I doing wrong?
Any help would be appreciated.
Thanks,
Jeremy Schreckhise, M.B.A., B.S., MCP
Director of Information Technology
Arkansas Oklahoma Gas Corp.
115 N. 12th Street
Fort Smith, AR 72901
479-783-3181 ext. 2259
------------------------------------------------------
http://subversion.tigris.org/ds/viewMessage.do?dsForumId=1065&dsMessageId=1728958
To unsubscribe from this discussion, e-mail: [users-unsubscribe@subversion.tigris.org].
RE: Newbie Question
Posted by Programmer <pr...@aogc.biz>.
K.
Repository Root: svn://localhost/Projects/Project1
-Jeremy
From: Bob Archer [mailto:Bob.Archer@amsi.com]
Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2009 10:36 AM
To: Programmer; users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: RE: Newbie Question
You have to run that command in your working copy (your checked out folder
where there is a .svn folder), not in the repo folder.
BOb
_____
From: Programmer [mailto:prog@aogc.biz]
Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2009 11:34 AM
To: Bob Archer; users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: RE: Newbie Question
When I run svn info D:\Repositories\Project\Project1 I get "svn:
'D:\Repositories\Project\Project1 is not a working copy' ". This is a
working repo because like I said if I us the [/] and open up all the
privileges I can use Tortoise on other work stations to checkout and modify.
Thanks,
-Jeremy
From: Bob Archer [mailto:Bob.Archer@amsi.com]
Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2009 10:19 AM
To: Programmer; users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: RE: Newbie Question
> Is the repo name in the authz file the same thing is what is created with
svnadmin create <repo name>?
Yes, it should be the same. If you run svn info on a WC checked out from
this repo if should show something like:
Repository Root: svn://ustawteam1/manage
You can see above our repo is named "manage".
> My goal is to have a global passwrd file and authz file. Is this not
possible?
Yes, that is possible. You are using the -r switch on svnserve and it is
working for multiple repos?
BOb
_____
From: Programmer [mailto:prog@aogc.biz]
Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2009 11:06 AM
To: Bob Archer; users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: RE: Newbie Question
Is the repo name in the authz file the same thing is what is created with
svnadmin create <repo name>? If so, then yes. My goal is to have a global
passwrd file and authz file. Is this not possible?
# this works for any user set up here, but won't this allow access for
anything in the default repository start folder, i.e. D:\Repositories\
[/]
test = test
# this is what I want. Repo specific permissions to particular repos for
particular users
[Project1:/] # project is located in D:\Repositories\Project\Project1
test = test
Thanks,
Jeremy
From: Bob Archer [mailto:Bob.Archer@amsi.com]
Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2009 9:56 AM
To: Programmer; users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: RE: Newbie Question
It all looks right to me. If you remove the repository name does it then
work? Svn is case sensitive. Are you sure "Project1" is the repo name?
BOb
_____
From: Programmer [mailto:prog@aogc.biz]
Sent: Tuesday, April 14, 2009 6:20 PM
To: users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: Newbie Question
I have successfully installed subversion on a Windows 2008 Server.
Client Tortoise SVN on Vista.
My root directory where I want to locate my repositories is D:\Repositories
I have created a repository called D:\Repositories\Projects\Project1
Config Files are as follows:
svnserve.conf
[general]
anon-access = none
auth-access = write
password-db = //./D:/Repositories/auth/passwrd
authz-db = //./D:/Repositories/auth/authz
....
passwrd
[users]
test = test
authz
#give all read access to all repos
[/]
* = r
#give test write access to repo Project1
[Project1:/]
test = rw
My problem is everything works except that I can not commit any changes
back. If I change the authz to [/] * = rw, I can do everything. Am I not
accessing the repo right in the second declaration in the authz file? I
have tried everything from absolute to relative pathing. What am I doing
wrong?
Any help would be appreciated.
Thanks,
Jeremy Schreckhise, M.B.A., B.S., MCP
Director of Information Technology
Arkansas Oklahoma Gas Corp.
115 N. 12th Street
Fort Smith, AR 72901
479-783-3181 ext. 2259
------------------------------------------------------
http://subversion.tigris.org/ds/viewMessage.do?dsForumId=1065&dsMessageId=1728934
To unsubscribe from this discussion, e-mail: [users-unsubscribe@subversion.tigris.org].
RE: Newbie Question
Posted by Bob Archer <bo...@amsi.com>.
You have to run that command in your working copy (your checked out
folder where there is a .svn folder), not in the repo folder.
BOb
________________________________
From: Programmer [mailto:prog@aogc.biz]
Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2009 11:34 AM
To: Bob Archer; users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: RE: Newbie Question
When I run svn info D:\Repositories\Project\Project1 I get "svn:
'D:\Repositories\Project\Project1 is not a working copy' ". This is a
working repo because like I said if I us the [/] and open up all the
privileges I can use Tortoise on other work stations to checkout and
modify.
Thanks,
-Jeremy
From: Bob Archer [mailto:Bob.Archer@amsi.com]
Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2009 10:19 AM
To: Programmer; users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: RE: Newbie Question
> Is the repo name in the authz file the same thing is what is created
with svnadmin create <repo name>?
Yes, it should be the same. If you run svn info on a WC checked out from
this repo if should show something like:
Repository Root: svn://ustawteam1/manage
You can see above our repo is named "manage".
> My goal is to have a global passwrd file and authz file. Is this not
possible?
Yes, that is possible. You are using the -r switch on svnserve and it is
working for multiple repos?
BOb
________________________________
From: Programmer [mailto:prog@aogc.biz]
Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2009 11:06 AM
To: Bob Archer; users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: RE: Newbie Question
Is the repo name in the authz file the same thing is what is created
with svnadmin create <repo name>? If so, then yes. My goal is to have
a global passwrd file and authz file. Is this not possible?
# this works for any user set up here, but won't this allow access for
anything in the default repository start folder, i.e. D:\Repositories\
[/]
test = test
# this is what I want. Repo specific permissions to particular repos
for particular users
[Project1:/] # project is located in D:\Repositories\Project\Project1
test = test
Thanks,
Jeremy
From: Bob Archer [mailto:Bob.Archer@amsi.com]
Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2009 9:56 AM
To: Programmer; users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: RE: Newbie Question
It all looks right to me... If you remove the repository name does it
then work? Svn is case sensitive. Are you sure "Project1" is the repo
name?
BOb
________________________________
From: Programmer [mailto:prog@aogc.biz]
Sent: Tuesday, April 14, 2009 6:20 PM
To: users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: Newbie Question
I have successfully installed subversion on a Windows 2008 Server.
Client Tortoise SVN on Vista.
My root directory where I want to locate my repositories is
D:\Repositories
I have created a repository called D:\Repositories\Projects\Project1
Config Files are as follows:
svnserve.conf
[general]
anon-access = none
auth-access = write
password-db = //./D:/Repositories/auth/passwrd
authz-db = //./D:/Repositories/auth/authz
........
passwrd
[users]
test = test
authz
#give all read access to all repos
[/]
* = r
#give test write access to repo Project1
[Project1:/]
test = rw
My problem is everything works except that I can not commit any changes
back. If I change the authz to [/] * = rw, I can do everything. Am I
not accessing the repo right in the second declaration in the authz
file? I have tried everything from absolute to relative pathing. What
am I doing wrong?
Any help would be appreciated.
Thanks,
Jeremy Schreckhise, M.B.A., B.S., MCP
Director of Information Technology
Arkansas Oklahoma Gas Corp.
115 N. 12th Street
Fort Smith, AR 72901
479-783-3181 ext. 2259
------------------------------------------------------
http://subversion.tigris.org/ds/viewMessage.do?dsForumId=1065&dsMessageId=1728827
To unsubscribe from this discussion, e-mail: [users-unsubscribe@subversion.tigris.org].
RE: Newbie Question
Posted by Programmer <pr...@aogc.biz>.
When I run svn info D:\Repositories\Project\Project1 I get "svn:
'D:\Repositories\Project\Project1 is not a working copy' ". This is a
working repo because like I said if I us the [/] and open up all the
privileges I can use Tortoise on other work stations to checkout and modify.
Thanks,
-Jeremy
From: Bob Archer [mailto:Bob.Archer@amsi.com]
Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2009 10:19 AM
To: Programmer; users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: RE: Newbie Question
> Is the repo name in the authz file the same thing is what is created with
svnadmin create <repo name>?
Yes, it should be the same. If you run svn info on a WC checked out from
this repo if should show something like:
Repository Root: svn://ustawteam1/manage
You can see above our repo is named "manage".
> My goal is to have a global passwrd file and authz file. Is this not
possible?
Yes, that is possible. You are using the -r switch on svnserve and it is
working for multiple repos?
BOb
_____
From: Programmer [mailto:prog@aogc.biz]
Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2009 11:06 AM
To: Bob Archer; users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: RE: Newbie Question
Is the repo name in the authz file the same thing is what is created with
svnadmin create <repo name>? If so, then yes. My goal is to have a global
passwrd file and authz file. Is this not possible?
# this works for any user set up here, but won't this allow access for
anything in the default repository start folder, i.e. D:\Repositories\
[/]
test = test
# this is what I want. Repo specific permissions to particular repos for
particular users
[Project1:/] # project is located in D:\Repositories\Project\Project1
test = test
Thanks,
Jeremy
From: Bob Archer [mailto:Bob.Archer@amsi.com]
Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2009 9:56 AM
To: Programmer; users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: RE: Newbie Question
It all looks right to me. If you remove the repository name does it then
work? Svn is case sensitive. Are you sure "Project1" is the repo name?
BOb
_____
From: Programmer [mailto:prog@aogc.biz]
Sent: Tuesday, April 14, 2009 6:20 PM
To: users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: Newbie Question
I have successfully installed subversion on a Windows 2008 Server.
Client Tortoise SVN on Vista.
My root directory where I want to locate my repositories is D:\Repositories
I have created a repository called D:\Repositories\Projects\Project1
Config Files are as follows:
svnserve.conf
[general]
anon-access = none
auth-access = write
password-db = //./D:/Repositories/auth/passwrd
authz-db = //./D:/Repositories/auth/authz
....
passwrd
[users]
test = test
authz
#give all read access to all repos
[/]
* = r
#give test write access to repo Project1
[Project1:/]
test = rw
My problem is everything works except that I can not commit any changes
back. If I change the authz to [/] * = rw, I can do everything. Am I not
accessing the repo right in the second declaration in the authz file? I
have tried everything from absolute to relative pathing. What am I doing
wrong?
Any help would be appreciated.
Thanks,
Jeremy Schreckhise, M.B.A., B.S., MCP
Director of Information Technology
Arkansas Oklahoma Gas Corp.
115 N. 12th Street
Fort Smith, AR 72901
479-783-3181 ext. 2259
------------------------------------------------------
http://subversion.tigris.org/ds/viewMessage.do?dsForumId=1065&dsMessageId=1728724
To unsubscribe from this discussion, e-mail: [users-unsubscribe@subversion.tigris.org].
RE: Newbie Question
Posted by Bob Archer <bo...@amsi.com>.
> Is the repo name in the authz file the same thing is what is created
with svnadmin create <repo name>?
Yes, it should be the same. If you run svn info on a WC checked out from
this repo if should show something like:
Repository Root: svn://ustawteam1/manage
You can see above our repo is named "manage".
> My goal is to have a global passwrd file and authz file. Is this not
possible?
Yes, that is possible. You are using the -r switch on svnserve and it is
working for multiple repos?
BOb
________________________________
From: Programmer [mailto:prog@aogc.biz]
Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2009 11:06 AM
To: Bob Archer; users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: RE: Newbie Question
Is the repo name in the authz file the same thing is what is created
with svnadmin create <repo name>? If so, then yes. My goal is to have
a global passwrd file and authz file. Is this not possible?
# this works for any user set up here, but won't this allow access for
anything in the default repository start folder, i.e. D:\Repositories\
[/]
test = test
# this is what I want. Repo specific permissions to particular repos
for particular users
[Project1:/] # project is located in D:\Repositories\Project\Project1
test = test
Thanks,
Jeremy
From: Bob Archer [mailto:Bob.Archer@amsi.com]
Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2009 9:56 AM
To: Programmer; users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: RE: Newbie Question
It all looks right to me... If you remove the repository name does it
then work? Svn is case sensitive. Are you sure "Project1" is the repo
name?
BOb
________________________________
From: Programmer [mailto:prog@aogc.biz]
Sent: Tuesday, April 14, 2009 6:20 PM
To: users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: Newbie Question
I have successfully installed subversion on a Windows 2008 Server.
Client Tortoise SVN on Vista.
My root directory where I want to locate my repositories is
D:\Repositories
I have created a repository called D:\Repositories\Projects\Project1
Config Files are as follows:
svnserve.conf
[general]
anon-access = none
auth-access = write
password-db = //./D:/Repositories/auth/passwrd
authz-db = //./D:/Repositories/auth/authz
........
passwrd
[users]
test = test
authz
#give all read access to all repos
[/]
* = r
#give test write access to repo Project1
[Project1:/]
test = rw
My problem is everything works except that I can not commit any changes
back. If I change the authz to [/] * = rw, I can do everything. Am I
not accessing the repo right in the second declaration in the authz
file? I have tried everything from absolute to relative pathing. What
am I doing wrong?
Any help would be appreciated.
Thanks,
Jeremy Schreckhise, M.B.A., B.S., MCP
Director of Information Technology
Arkansas Oklahoma Gas Corp.
115 N. 12th Street
Fort Smith, AR 72901
479-783-3181 ext. 2259
------------------------------------------------------
http://subversion.tigris.org/ds/viewMessage.do?dsForumId=1065&dsMessageId=1728484
To unsubscribe from this discussion, e-mail: [users-unsubscribe@subversion.tigris.org].
RE: Newbie Question
Posted by Programmer <pr...@aogc.biz>.
Is the repo name in the authz file the same thing is what is created with
svnadmin create <repo name>? If so, then yes. My goal is to have a global
passwrd file and authz file. Is this not possible?
# this works for any user set up here, but won't this allow access for
anything in the default repository start folder, i.e. D:\Repositories\
[/]
test = test
# this is what I want. Repo specific permissions to particular repos for
particular users
[Project1:/] # project is located in D:\Repositories\Project\Project1
test = test
Thanks,
Jeremy
From: Bob Archer [mailto:Bob.Archer@amsi.com]
Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2009 9:56 AM
To: Programmer; users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: RE: Newbie Question
It all looks right to me. If you remove the repository name does it then
work? Svn is case sensitive. Are you sure "Project1" is the repo name?
BOb
_____
From: Programmer [mailto:prog@aogc.biz]
Sent: Tuesday, April 14, 2009 6:20 PM
To: users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: Newbie Question
I have successfully installed subversion on a Windows 2008 Server.
Client Tortoise SVN on Vista.
My root directory where I want to locate my repositories is D:\Repositories
I have created a repository called D:\Repositories\Projects\Project1
Config Files are as follows:
svnserve.conf
[general]
anon-access = none
auth-access = write
password-db = //./D:/Repositories/auth/passwrd
authz-db = //./D:/Repositories/auth/authz
....
passwrd
[users]
test = test
authz
#give all read access to all repos
[/]
* = r
#give test write access to repo Project1
[Project1:/]
test = rw
My problem is everything works except that I can not commit any changes
back. If I change the authz to [/] * = rw, I can do everything. Am I not
accessing the repo right in the second declaration in the authz file? I
have tried everything from absolute to relative pathing. What am I doing
wrong?
Any help would be appreciated.
Thanks,
Jeremy Schreckhise, M.B.A., B.S., MCP
Director of Information Technology
Arkansas Oklahoma Gas Corp.
115 N. 12th Street
Fort Smith, AR 72901
479-783-3181 ext. 2259
------------------------------------------------------
http://subversion.tigris.org/ds/viewMessage.do?dsForumId=1065&dsMessageId=1728341
To unsubscribe from this discussion, e-mail: [users-unsubscribe@subversion.tigris.org].
RE: Newbie Question
Posted by Bob Archer <bo...@amsi.com>.
It all looks right to me... If you remove the repository name does it
then work? Svn is case sensitive. Are you sure "Project1" is the repo
name?
BOb
________________________________
From: Programmer [mailto:prog@aogc.biz]
Sent: Tuesday, April 14, 2009 6:20 PM
To: users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: Newbie Question
I have successfully installed subversion on a Windows 2008 Server.
Client Tortoise SVN on Vista.
My root directory where I want to locate my repositories is
D:\Repositories
I have created a repository called D:\Repositories\Projects\Project1
Config Files are as follows:
svnserve.conf
[general]
anon-access = none
auth-access = write
password-db = //./D:/Repositories/auth/passwrd
authz-db = //./D:/Repositories/auth/authz
........
passwrd
[users]
test = test
authz
#give all read access to all repos
[/]
* = r
#give test write access to repo Project1
[Project1:/]
test = rw
My problem is everything works except that I can not commit any changes
back. If I change the authz to [/] * = rw, I can do everything. Am I
not accessing the repo right in the second declaration in the authz
file? I have tried everything from absolute to relative pathing. What
am I doing wrong?
Any help would be appreciated.
Thanks,
Jeremy Schreckhise, M.B.A., B.S., MCP
Director of Information Technology
Arkansas Oklahoma Gas Corp.
115 N. 12th Street
Fort Smith, AR 72901
479-783-3181 ext. 2259
------------------------------------------------------
http://subversion.tigris.org/ds/viewMessage.do?dsForumId=1065&dsMessageId=1728299
To unsubscribe from this discussion, e-mail: [users-unsubscribe@subversion.tigris.org].
Re: Newbie Question
Posted by Andy Levy <an...@gmail.com>.
On Wed, Apr 15, 2009 at 20:43, Andrey Repin <an...@freemail.ru> wrote:
> Greetings, Programmer!
>
>> I have successfully installed subversion on a Windows 2008 Server.
>
>> Client Tortoise SVN on Vista.
>
>> My root directory where I want to locate my repositories is D:\Repositories
>
>> I have created a repository called D:\Repositories\Projects\Project1
>
> What was the
> svnadmin create ....
> command?
>
>> Config Files are as follows:
>
>> #give test write access to repo Project1
>
>> [Project1:/]
>
>> test = rw
>
> Repo name MUST BE lowercase.
Not at all true. Repository names can be upper, lower, or mixed case -
as long as you're consistent when you use it, since SVN is
case-sensitive.
------------------------------------------------------
http://subversion.tigris.org/ds/viewMessage.do?dsForumId=1065&dsMessageId=1736132
To unsubscribe from this discussion, e-mail: [users-unsubscribe@subversion.tigris.org].
------------------------------------------------------
http://subversion.tigris.org/ds/viewMessage.do?dsForumId=1065&dsMessageId=1736165
To unsubscribe from this discussion, e-mail: [users-unsubscribe@subversion.tigris.org].
Re: Newbie Question
Posted by Andy Levy <an...@gmail.com>.
On Wed, Apr 15, 2009 at 20:43, Andrey Repin <an...@freemail.ru> wrote:
> Greetings, Programmer!
>
>> I have successfully installed subversion on a Windows 2008 Server.
>
>> Client Tortoise SVN on Vista.
>
>> My root directory where I want to locate my repositories is D:\Repositories
>
>> I have created a repository called D:\Repositories\Projects\Project1
>
> What was the
> svnadmin create ....
> command?
>
>> Config Files are as follows:
>
>> #give test write access to repo Project1
>
>> [Project1:/]
>
>> test = rw
>
> Repo name MUST BE lowercase.
Not at all true. Repository names can be upper, lower, or mixed case -
as long as you're consistent when you use it, since SVN is
case-sensitive.
------------------------------------------------------
http://subversion.tigris.org/ds/viewMessage.do?dsForumId=1065&dsMessageId=1736132
To unsubscribe from this discussion, e-mail: [users-unsubscribe@subversion.tigris.org].
Re: Newbie Question
Posted by Andrey Repin <an...@freemail.ru>.
Greetings, Programmer!
> I have successfully installed subversion on a Windows 2008 Server.
> Client Tortoise SVN on Vista.
> My root directory where I want to locate my repositories is D:\Repositories
> I have created a repository called D:\Repositories\Projects\Project1
What was the
svnadmin create ....
command?
> Config Files are as follows:
> #give test write access to repo Project1
> [Project1:/]
> test = rw
Repo name MUST BE lowercase.
--
WBR,
Andrey Repin (anrdaemon@freemail.ru) 16.04.2009, <4:42>
Sorry for my terrible english...
------------------------------------------------------
http://subversion.tigris.org/ds/viewMessage.do?dsForumId=1065&dsMessageId=1736033
To unsubscribe from this discussion, e-mail: [users-unsubscribe@subversion.tigris.org].