Thanks for the speedy response.
I'm not really sure the best way to do this on the command line. The only
way I know is to just search for all the .svn directories and delete them.
I don't want to affect the server at all. I just want to remove the local
subversion information. Does that make sense?
Thanks,
Zack
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Mark Phippard [mailto:markphip@gmail.com]
> Sent: Tuesday, September 18, 2007 12:22 PM
> To: users@subclipse.tigris.org
> Subject: Re: [Subclipse-users] How Do You Unversion a File
>
>
> On 9/18/07, Zack Grossbart <zgrossbart@novell.com> wrote:
> > I am using svnClientAdapter and I want to unversion a file.
> What I mean is
> > that I have a working copy and I want to remove all the Subversion
> > information from it and keep the files. I want to make it look
> like it was
> > never added to Subversion. I see there is a doExport call on
> > ISVNClientAdapter, but that doesn't look exactly right. Any ideas?
>
> Forget svnClientAdapter and code for a second. You are a command line
> user. How would you do this?
>
> It is not clear what your real goal is. Showing how you would do what
> you want using the command line might help.
>
> --
> Thanks
>
> Mark Phippard
> http://markphip.blogspot.com/
>
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Received on Tue Sep 18 18:34:25 2007