If you mean web front end then try www.svnflash.com. It's not open source
but it's free for non-profit or open source projects.
The major advantages of SVNFlash are its awesome user interface and revision
graphs (whole history) of files and projects.
Look at the live demo and explore the Apache Repository at real time:
http://svnflash.com/index.php/live-demo
Pablo.
2010/4/13 Thomas Allen <thomasmallen_at_gmail.com>
> Hello everyone,
>
> One thing that I took for granted when doing all of my development in
> Git was the always-reliable gitk which provides cross-platform log and
> diff browsing. I'm sure it does more, but those were the main things I
> used it for.
>
> I am now working with a Subversion repository. Maybe I have not yet
> mastered the "log" command, but I find the output of the following
> two commands to be confusing:
>
> $ svn log -r HEAD
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
> r3617 | tallen | 2010-04-12 15:57:35 -0400 (Mon, 12 Apr 2010) | 1 line
>
> full comments + jslint fixes
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
> $ svn log | grep tallen # outputs nothing
>
> In general it would be very nice to have a tool to facilitate browsing
> recent revisions and their diffs; I do not need it to help with
> committing my changes or anything along those lines.
>
> So, does anybody know of a simple, cross-platform, open-source
> Subversion browser? I am on a Mac, and it seems that the only options
> are proprietary and heavy, such as Versions and CornerStone...
>
> Thomas Allen
>
Received on 2010-04-13 21:25:58 CEST