SVN server installation (Linux)

Revision as of 19:36, 26 January 2014 by WikiFreak (talk | contribs)

SVN is used to managed file revisions, branches and application releases. You have to install a SVN server, then a client on each remote computer.


SVN server

Linux (subversion)

installation

Required package

apt-get install subversion

Source folder You must indicate to subversion how it's going to work

mkdir /var/svn
mkdir /var/svn/myRepository

Set rights

chown -R www-data:www-data /var/svn/myRepository 
chmod -R 777 /var/svn/myRepository

→ Use "www-data" user:group if you want to setup web access through HTTP(S) protocol later on.


Server automatic startup

Create SVN startup script

vim /etc/init.d/svnServer

Put the following content

#!/bin/sh
### BEGIN INIT INFO
# Provides:             svn
# Required-Start:       $remote_fs
# Required-Stop:        $remote_fs
# Default-Start:        2 3 4 5
# Default-Stop:         0 1 6
# Short-Description:    SVN server
### END INIT INFO

do_start () {
	svnserve -d -r /var/svn --pid-file /var/run/svnserve.pid
}
do_stop () {
	start-stop-daemon --stop --quiet --pidfile /var/run/svnserve.pid
}

case "$1" in
	start)
  		do_start
 		;;
 	stop)
 		do_stop
 		exit $?
 		;;
 	restart)
 		do_stop
		sleep 1s
 		do_start
 		;;
	*)
		echo "Usage: $0 start|stop|restart" >&2
		exit 3
		;;
esac

Set execution flags:

chmod 750 /etc/init.d/svnServer


Update boot sequence

Create symlink

ln -s /etc/init.d/svnServer /usr/bin/svnServer

Register SVN server to server startup

cd /etc/init.d
update-rc.d svnServer defaults


Start SVN server

/etc/init.d/svnServer start


How to remove SVN from boot?

Just execute the following sequence

update-rc.d -f svnserve remove


SVN repository

To do any advanced task, you've to use "svnadmin" To create repository you have to: 1. Create folder 2. Defines rights 3. Creates users


1. Create root folder

svnadmin create /var/svn/myRepo

Create repo structure

cd /var/svn/myRepo
mkdir trunk
mkdir tags
mkdir branches
chmod -R 755 */


2. Adjust rights

vim /var/svn/myRepo/conf/svnserve.conf

Adjust values:

anon-access = none		→ disable anonymous access
auth-access = write		→ allow read / write to all users
password-db = passwd		→ password required to log-in
realm = 'java'		→ Name of the current repo (without quotes!)

3. Create users

vim /var/svn/myRepo/conf/passwd

Restart your server to use the new repository.


Repository access

You can use the repository with the following SVN URL: svn://server/java


LDAP + WebSVN access

Instead of “svn://” + dedicated SVN user you can use “https://myServer/dav_svn/” + LDAP user. Please read the Apache 2 documentation to get more information.

>> TODO : add link <<


Windows

Installation

Users / groups configuration

  • Open the Visual SVN server application.
  • Open properties

Action > Properties

Windows SVN server 01
  • Click Repositories, adjust “Everyone” rights to Read Only
Windows SVN server 02
  • Add a new user and add 'read / write' permissions to this new user
Windows SVN server 03
Windows SVN server 04


Create a new repository (1) – standalone use

Right click on “repositories” -> create New Repository

Windows SVN server 05

Enter the repository name and let the server create the default structure for you:

Windows SVN server 06

→ Note the SVN URL. You’ll need it later when you’re gonna setup your project, within the maven pom.


Create a new repository (2) – mirror Google Code

Google provides a free subversion service through its “Google Code” service. However, there’s no quality analysis. … So, in order to provide quality checks we will mirror the google code repository.

Therefore, we’ll be able to perform quality scans.

  • Create a new repository, see previous chapter
Windows SVN server 07
  • Right click on the repository -> All tasks -> Manage hooks
Windows SVN server 08

You have to edit the “pre-revision property change hook” and put the following command:

exit 0

This will check that the execution (synchronization) was successful.

Windows SVN server 09


SVN client

The SVN client version must match the server version for better performances and to avoid errors.


Windows

Tortoise SVN is the best one available. http://tortoisesvn.tigris.org/

!! During installation, don't forget to install the svn command line tools !!


Linux

Command line client

apt-get install subversion

Then you can use the svn command:

  • svn co --username=yourUserName --password=yourpassword http://path-to-your-svn
  • svn add file
  • svn commit -m "my revision comment"

Graphical client

RabbitVCS is a good alternative to tortoise SVN: http://rabbitvcs.org/

apt-get install rabbitvcs-cli rabbitvcs-core rabbitvcs-gedit rabbitvcs-nautilus