Hi.

As you'll no doubt realise, your request indicates functionality that is 
available with a distributed version control system, such as git.

If it isn't an option to switch the overall version control system, you 
could consider using git locally and then integrating with Subversion. As I 
understand it, while unconnected you can commit the changes to the local 
git repository and then use those commits to generate Subversion commits 
when you're connected again. You might want to investigate the git-svn 
tool. I don't do this but I expect you can do a little reasearch to 
identify the advantages and disadvantages.

Another possibility is to use patch files. If you makes changes to the 
working copy, TortoiseSVN has an option to create a patch file that 
captures those changes. You could use that capability to capture a 
potential commit. Then continue to develop and create another patch file to 
capture the next potential commit. The second patch file will capture the 
changes from both sets of changes. Later, when you're connected, you can 
apply the patch files, one at a time, in the order that they were 
generated. The duplicate changes captured in the second patch file are 
likely to be ignored when the that patch is applied.

This last option does need careful management. Firstly, I don't believe it 
doesn't capture changes to binary files. [N.B. It'd be great if it captured 
the whole of the modified file.] Secondly, cumulating the changes in 
multiple patch files might have issues where your offline changes add and 
remove bits from the same sections in the same files. It may still be 
workable but I expect that you'll really need to understand how it's 
working to completely avoid issues. Perhaps you can try experimenting and 
see what works for you.

These are simply suggestions for you to investigate and determine, for 
yourself, whether they are applicable. I use patch files - but not for this 
purpose, but I don't use the other approaches.

Perhaps others will have better suggestions.

Good luck.

On Monday, 11 November 2019 18:47:00 UTC, Bernard wrote:
>
> Hello, thanks for this list. I am an happy user of tortoiseSVN and i have 
> a request.
>
> I am using a central SVN server, not connected to internet.
>
> But i work sometimes far away, where i do some builds that normally i 
> should commit if connected.
>
> How would it be possible :
>  1- to commit some "local versions" to keep track of the versions i need,
>  2- to commit these local versions on the central server when i come back 
> to the central connection.
>
> It could mean to have a 2-stage server, a local server to make the logical 
> version, and the ability to commit the local server versions to the central 
> server...
>
> Any idea on that need for "intermittent connection" version management ?
>
> I tried to look for this subject before but found nothing.
>
> Thanks a lot!
>

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