Perfect this is what I was just reading in TortoiseSVN help. I just
wasnt sure if I could then delete the folder I had imported. It says in
the help that their are 2 ways in which it can store the files, in a db,
or in the native filesystem. How do you change between the two and will
using the native filesystem store the files outside of a db? Thanks for
all your help by the way.
Chris Hill wrote:
I believe the issue is that you don't need to stick your project into
c:\svnrepos\project1. When you create the repos, it creates a dir
structure like this:
conf/ dav/ db/ format hooks/ locks/ README.txt
And saves your files in its own special way. After you import the
c:\svnrpos\project1 folder into the repository, its not part of the
repository. If that makes sense. You can safely delete that dir,
unless you want it as a backup until you get more comfy with svn.
Subversion keeps the files inside its db in its own special format,
only keeping the parts of the files that have changed between
revisions to save disk space.
C
Mike Boutin wrote:
Just a few questions about SVN & TortoiseSVN. I have ran the 1 click
setup SVN that installs Subversion and TortoiseSVN. It created the
repository in c:\svnrepos
I stuck my project in a folder c:\svnrepos\project1, then I import
it into the repos. Now when I make a new directory and use CHeckout,
all the files from c:\svnrepos show up with checkmarks by them. Now
if I create a new textfile in the checkout dir, and update it into
the repos, and then I check c:\svnrepos\project1, the file i created
isnt anywhere to be found except in the checkout dir. Can anyone
tell me what im doing wrong? Thanks!
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