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Re: Commit in synchronize view

From: Eugene Kuleshov <eu_at_javatx.org>
Date: 2005-01-04 20:48:30 CET

Mark Phippard wrote:

  As I said I have repository:

  http://host/repos/projectName
   \-- trunk
          \-- all code in here

  I have that code checked out locally by using command line svn and
have added it to Eclipse workspace. Now I can't attach it to the
repository. The best Subclipse did to me is deleting all .svn directories.

  regards,
  Eugene

>Can you please step back and just explain again what you are trying to do?
> Which of my two scenarios are you trying to accomplish? All of our
>previous messages seemed to indicate #2, but now I think it is #1.
>
>Subclipse has a problem working with https:// repositories in that we have
>no ability to accept your server certificate. You can solve this by using
>the svn command line, and running an svn ls command against your
>repository. It should then ask you to accept the certificate and just
>tell it to do so permanently.
>
>If you wanted to add your Eclipse project directly to trunk, then the
>"trunk" folder cannot already exist in the repository. If you wanted it
>in "trunk/project" then you can do this by clicking "Use specificied
>project name" and typing that value. It will then create the "project"
>folder inside trunk and add to it.
>
>If you already have code loaded in the trunk folder of your repository,
>then you should probably be using the Checkout option to initially
>populate your Eclipse workspace as a WC associated with Subclipse.
>
>Mark
>
>
>
>Eugene Kuleshov <eu@javatx.org> wrote on 01/04/2005 02:17:56 PM:
>
>
>
>>Mark Phippard wrote:
>>
>> Could it be anyhow related to repository structure? I have
>>https://host:/repos/projname/trunk and tried to specify "trunk" as a
>>module name in share project wizard. SVN repository is locatd at
>>https://host:/repos/projname
>>
>> By the way, it is in windows and I can work with this repository from
>>command line SVN or TortoiseSVN tools.
>>
>> regards,
>> Eugene
>>
>>
>>
>>>Eugene Kuleshov <eu@javatx.org> wrote on 01/04/2005 11:24:00 AM:
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>> In my case Subclipse just deleting all .svn directories if they
>>>>already there or complaining that artifact already exists. Am I doing
>>>>something wrong?
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>There are two "modes" for Share Project.
>>>
>>>1) New unversioned project to be added to the repository. Wizard
>>>
>>>
>walks
>
>
>>>you through process of selecting repository provider, specifying
>>>
>>>
>location
>
>
>>>in repository etc.. This then creates the project folder in the
>>>repository, and then checks it back out. This turns your project into
>>>
>>>
>a
>
>
>>>WC (where everything is unversioned) and you can then add/commit.
>>>
>>>2) Project is somehow already a valid WC. In this mode, you get an
>>>immediate dialog that tells you it found the .svn folders as well as
>>>
>>>
>some
>
>
>>>other info, such as the target repository. It then offers to "connect"
>>>
>>>
>
>
>
>>>the WC up to Subclipse, which simply does some kind of internal
>>>registration within Eclipse.
>>>
>>>It sounds like you are not getting the dialog in #2, and it is
>>>
>>>
>proceeding
>
>
>>>down path #1. We should examine why. I am not sure what Subclipse
>>>checks. It may just check for a .svn folder in the project root --
>>>
>>>
>that
>
>
>>>seems most likely.
>>>
>>>Mark
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
Received on Wed Jan 5 06:48:30 2005

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