Subversion server

=Introduction=

Source can be used to host your subversion repositories. It uses the WebDAV protocol and is therefore available from a webbrowser anywhere in the world which is great for collaboration with people outside the department. However, we still keep a fine control of who can access the repositories and your repositories are not open to the world by default.

=Important: backup policy=

We are doing our best to make Source as reliable as we can but keep in mind that it is an old machine.

The hard drive on Source is backed up once a day incrementally and a full backup is performed every week using the department backup system. Additionally, we backup the repositories separately if activity has been noticed.

However, we cannot garantee that a problem will not occur at some point. You are encouraged to use Source for your day to day work but please, keep important versions of your software backed up somewhere else too, just in case :-(

= Creating a repository =

First step
First contact an administrator to get a subversion account. They will create an empty repository for you and email you with login information.

For the sake of explanation, let's call your project myproject and the login you have been given mylogin. You will also be given a password, just type it whenever the software asks you to.

The repository will be accessible from a web browser at the URL http://source.ggy.bris.ac.uk/subversion/myproject/

Adding extra users
If you collaborate with other developpers, you will need to ask for accounts for them too. At this stage, it's probably best to speak directly to the administrators. They will need to know the name and the institution of each new user. If you want to control access to specific parts of your project, i.e. some people can access some sections but not all, you will have to let them know too.

=Using the command line client=

The svn command line client
The subversion command line client is called svn on Linux/Unix systems. It is available from most machines within the department. To check that you can use it, just type:

svn --version

If it is not available (the above command returns an error) and you don't have administrator rights on your machine, contact a [mailto:ggy-comp@bristol.ac.uk Computer Officer] to have subversion installed on your machine.

Importating data in your repository
If the data that you want to import into the repository is in the folder mylocalfolder, you need to send the data inside this folder to the subversion repository. We recommend that you import your data into the trunk section of the repository. Using a trunk will allow you to branch and tag later on in your development. Read the Subversion pages for detailed information about this. The following instructions will import the whole content of mylocalfolder into the subversion repository:

cd mylocalfolder svn import. http://source.ggy.bris.ac.uk/subversion/myproject/trunk --user-name mylogin -m "Initial import."

This will import the content of mylocalfolder into trunk in the repository and will use "Initial import" as the log message.

Checking out a working copy
To start working with Subversion, you first need to checkout your repository into a workingcopy:

svn checkout http://source.ggy.bris.ac.uk/subversion/myproject/trunk --user-name mylogin workingcopy

Now you can go into workingcopy and check that all is here:

cd workingcopy ls -a

If everything worked, you can now delete localfolder. Note that in workingcopy and all its subfolders, you will find '.svn/' folders. They are used to track the changes you make to the working copy. You should never edit or delete these folders.

Day to day work
Now that your repository is setup and you have a working copy, read the Subversion pages to understand how to use the repository for your daily work.

=Using TortoiseSVN on Windows=

The TortoiseSVN shell extension


On Microsoft Windows, it is possible to install a shell extension for Windows Explorer which makes all subversion commands directly avalaible from the normal Windows Explorer menus--you may right click, or go to the file menu.

TortoiseSVN is available from http://tortoisesvn.tigris.org.

Just right click anywhere or go the file menu to see whether it is installed on your machine. If it is not available and you do not have administrator rights on your computer, please contact a [mailto:ggy-comp@bristol.ac.uk Computer Officer].



Importating data in your repository


Imagine that the data that you want to import into your repository is in the folder mylocalfolder. The repository was previously created, but empty. We recommend that you import your data into the trunk section of the repository. Using a trunk will allow you to branch and tag later on in your development. Read the Subversion pages for detailed information about this. You should provide a log message when you make the import.





TortoiseSVN will prompt you you when any authenication is needed. Note that you may check the box if you would like TortoiseSVN to save your authentication for this particular session.



Checking out a working copy
To start working with Subversion, you first need to checkout your repository into a workingcopy:



Now you can go into workingcopy and check that all is here:

If everything worked, you can now delete mylocalfolder. Note that in workingcopy and all its subfolders, you will find '.svn/' folders. They are used to track the changes you make to the working copy. You should never edit or delete these folders.



Day to day work
Now that your repository is setup and you have a working copy, read the Subversion pages to understand how to use the repository for your daily work. Most instructions have been written for the command line client but you will find equivalent commands when your right click on a file or folder in windows explorer.

=Using websvn=

After importing data in your repository, you can browse it via a web interface called WebSVN. On the source server, the WebSVN frontend is located at http://source.ggy.bris.ac.uk/websvn. You will be asked for your login information and the repositories to which you have access will be visible.

Changing login in WebSVN
The login information is cached and if for some reason you want to login as another user (myotherlogin), use the following URL: http://myotherlogin@source.ggy.bris.ac.uk/websvn. The password for the new user will be asked before you can access the files.