Ah, I should have realised it used the URL I checked out from! I'm new
to Subversion (obviously). Thanks a bunch, it works perfectly now. By
the way, if I'd known how to pipe input into a batch file, I'd have
hacked it in the first place lol ;)

Matt.

On Jan 27, 10:41 pm, VisualSVN Team <supp...@visualsvn.com> wrote:
> On Tue, Jan 27, 2009 at 10:19 PM,  <jkfl...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > Hi Ivan,
>
> > Thanks for your help, I had read that bit of the manual before, but I
> > couldn't find the 'servers' file to add that option!
>
> > I've found it now, and added ...visualsvn/conf/server.pem to the ssl-
> > auth-files, which appears to have worked, in that the error no longer
> > says the certificate is not issued by a trusted authority.
>
> > However, it still produces an error because the hostnames do not
> > match. The certificate is for myserver.mydomain.local, but it looks
> > like svn is trying to validate for localhost, so it still prompts to
> > accept or reject. How can I correct this?
>
> I see two possible solutions:
> - Checkout working copy using correct hostname (myserver.mydomain.local)
> - Run svn up command with redirecting input from file containing
> character 't'. Really dirty hack, but I think it should work. I meant:
> echo t | svn up c:\dir\
>
> --
> Ivan Zhakov
> VisualSVN Team

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