Hello,

In fact the old data has nearly nothing to do with the new code I want
to commit, so there is no need to keep the old code. In fact it will
even not be written in the same language, so I think a clean repo
would make sense...

Thanks

On 10 fév, 19:52, mwhdev <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hello there.  We generally consider repository resets to be a Bad Practice.
> There are typically only three legitimate reasons for resetting a
> repository:
>
>  1. Something really sensitive, confidential, or illegal was accidentally
> committed, and now exists in the history forever.
>
>  2. Some huge garbage was accidentally committed, and now a ridiculous
> amount of disk quota is wasted.
>
>  3. A project owner wants to replicate a prior repository into the
> repository using the 'svnsync' tool (which requires an empty repository at
> revision 0).
>
> If you're simply trying to "delete the mess", our recommendation is to just
> "svn rm" all data in the latest revision, so that your filesystem appears to
> be empty again.  This still gives you a clean start in terms of repository
> organization, but without losing the older data.
>
> On Tue, Feb 10, 2009 at 7:34 AM, Nebelmann <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > Hi,
>
> > Could someone please reset the projecthttp://code.google.com/p/kawax
> > ?
> > I would like to start it again with a completely different code...
>
> > Thanks
>
> > Nebelmann

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