Yes, but is problem was the he copied all files. SVN stores files on the
local project in its own directories. If he copied these directories as
well, then he will get the problem he has.



On 5/12/07, Jochem van Dieten <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Will Tomlinson wrote:
> > I do have a question. I'm workin remotely this weekend. I had copied the
> subeversion'd website onto my usb drive.
> >
> > I setup a different machine somewhere else, then installed subversion on
> it.
> >
> > Then I copied the site from the usb to the new machine, and subversion
> recognizes it.
>
> Of course it does. Open the file entries in your .svn subdirectory and
> you will see why.
>
>
> > I just wanna shut it off so I can set it up fresh, because the commits
> try routing to a non-existent folder on this machine. lol!
>
> So make sure the repository is accessible. VPN and a mapped directory, a
> SSH tunnel, directly over the network or whatever, SVN can work with it.
> Once you have done that, delete what you have now and do a fresh checkout.
>
> Jochem
>
> 

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