> How could you have tried the command line if you have not done this?
> JavaHL and the command line have the same requirements.
I should clarify. I have the SVN binaries installed on OS X client
machine. I am able to co from the command line using "svn co svn
+ssh://" with public key authentication. However, when I switch to
JavaHL in Subclipse I always get the "file not found error" described
here: http://subclipse.tigris.org/servlets/ReadMsg?list=users&msgNo=3334
I have yet to get Subclipse to find my local SVN binaries with the
JavaHL method selected.
I thought you were saying if I opened eclipse from the terminal I
would get a prompt for a password in the terminal when I tried to
invoke a Subclipse checkout.
> I am sure there that Eclipse and Subclipse adds some overhead
> during the
> checkout process itself, but if it only takes about 30s after the
> checkout
> completes, I have to think most of the slowness is during the actual
> checkout.
Yes, I'm fairly certain that the majority of that time is spent
during the actual checkout from what the Eclipse console is indicating.
Bradley
On May 3, 2006, at 3:29 PM, Mark Phippard wrote:
> Bradley Wagner <bradley.wagner@hannonhill.com> wrote on 05/03/2006
> 03:25:57 PM:
>
>>> What have you tried? If you have the command line working, and you
>>> have
>>> the JavaHL binaries I would almost expect it to just work. JavaHL
>>> will
>>> not prompt you for credentials, so you need to be using some kind of
>>> key-agent, but most SSH users already do. I think if you launch
>>> Eclipse
>>> from a Terminal session then it ssh will prompt you for info as
>>> needed
>>> within that session.
>>
>> I have not tried setting up the config files to do all the necessary
>> ssh auth yet, but I will. I'll definitely try that trick about
>> launching from within terminal. I had no idea it would prompt me like
>> that.
>
> How could you have tried the command line if you have not done this?
> JavaHL and the command line have the same requirements.
>
>>> It would be worth seeing how long it takes to do File -> Import
>>> of an
>>> existing project. That would give an idea as to how much the
>>> combined
>>> Eclipse/Subclipse overhead should be.
>>
>> I will also try this and see if the combined time is a lot less than
>> 12min. I suspect it will be. Honstly, I hope its some problem with
>> JavaSVN connecting to my ssh server because its likely that we won't
>> be able to switch to using apache or svnserve as a daemon for some
>> time.
>
> I am sure there that Eclipse and Subclipse adds some overhead
> during the
> checkout process itself, but if it only takes about 30s after the
> checkout
> completes, I have to think most of the slowness is during the actual
> checkout.
>
> Mark
>
>
>
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--
Bradley Mitchell Wagner
Software Developer
Hannon Hill Corporation
main: (678) 904-6900 ext. 115
email: bradley.wagner@hannonhill.com
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Received on Wed May 3 21:34:58 2006