5/29/2023 0 Comments Subversion locking![]() ![]() Crashes occur remotely with TortoiseSVN using Apache, but not SVNServe. What we know at this point: SVNServe works, Apache does not, assuming local/file works. Okay, I think I now have enough information to formulate an answer. HTTPort routes that out to your home computer.Have you looked at HTTPort or a similar program? I used it when I worked for a big company to allow me to connect to arbitrary internet ports. Or if you could put up an application-aware router in front of your web server, such as ISA server, you can route requests based on the domain name, and have multiple web servers with different internal IPs accessed by the same external IP (I do this). If you can get a second IP address, that would help. ![]() Sorry if this doesn't help you under your tight constraints. My svn server is available internally and externally at I believe it does use Apache, but they set it up for you. It has web access available out of the box. I have been using it a long time, and I love it. It's a free, current, all-in-one SVN solution specifically designed for windows servers. IF you can manage to either run IIS on another port, or access your subversion via web on a port that is not port 80, you might want to check out VisualSVN. If you want to be able to use or to check out files, then you will need to integrate with a web server, which generally involves port 80 (but doesn't have to). Nobody has complained, and they all like the system (once I'd told them not to try resolving conflicts with binary files) When I converted to SVN from VSS, I decided to go with the copy-merge-modify approach, and then slap locks on everything if it didn't work out well. Again, send a message to the mailing list to see if everyone else wants this change. If the 'lock dialog' is a Tortoise thing, you can configure the dialogs to auto-close if there's no errors. In most cases the lock is a manual thing you need to explicitly lock and unlock, so most people using it would want to have to ensure they unlock. Note that the revert functionality does not contact the server, so he might consider that an undesirable change. Stefan is quite good about making fixes, and it sounds like the no-unlock config item should also apply to revert as well as commit. I think your issues are with VisualSVN, you need to contact them to configure the product to not show the dialog and to automatically unlock on revert. How can I resolve these issues? I really don't want to hear a sales pitch on why we should use copy-modify-merge, please just help me resolve the issues. ![]() Is there a way to hide this dialog, and only display it if an error occurs. It would be nice to be able to assume that the lock was completed successfully.
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