This documentation was written to describe the 1.7.x series of Apache™ Subversion®. If you are running a different version of Subversion, you are strongly encouraged to visit http://www.svnbook.com/ and instead consult the version of this documentation appropriate for your version of Subversion.
You can get new files into your Subversion repository in two ways: svn import and svn add. We'll discuss svn import now and will discuss svn add later in this chapter when we review a typical day with Subversion.
The svn import command is a quick way to copy an unversioned tree of files into a repository, creating intermediate directories as necessary. svn import doesn't require a working copy, and your files are immediately committed to the repository. You typically use this when you have an existing tree of files that you want to begin tracking in your Subversion repository. For example:
$ svn import /path/to/mytree \ http://svn.example.com/svn/repo/some/project \ -m "Initial import" Adding mytree/foo.c Adding mytree/bar.c Adding mytree/subdir Adding mytree/subdir/quux.h Committed revision 1. $
The previous example copied the contents of the local
directory mytree
into the directory
some/project
in the repository. Note
that you didn't have to create that new directory
first—svn import does that for you.
Immediately after the commit, you can see your data in the
repository:
$ svn list http://svn.example.com/svn/repo/some/project bar.c foo.c subdir/ $
Note that after the import is finished, the original local directory is not converted into a working copy. To begin working on that data in a versioned fashion, you still need to create a fresh working copy of that tree.
Subversion provides the ultimate flexibility in terms of how you arrange your data. Because it simply versions directories and files, and because it ascribes no particular meaning to any of those objects, you may arrange the data in your repository in any way that you choose. Unfortunately, this flexibility also means that it's easy to find yourself “lost without a roadmap” as you attempt to navigate different Subversion repositories which may carry completely different and unpredictable arrangements of the data within them.
To counteract this confusion, we recommend that you follow
a repository layout convention (established long ago, in the
nascency of the Subversion project itself) in which a handful
of strategically named Subversion repository directories
convey valuable meaning about the data they hold. Most
projects have a recognizable “main line”,
or trunk, of development;
some branches, which are divergent
copies of development lines; and
some tags, which are named, stable
snapshots of a particular line of development. So we first
recommend that each project have a
recognizable project root in the
repository, a directory under which all of the versioned
information for that project—and only that
project—lives. Secondly, we suggest that each project
root contain a trunk
subdirectory for the
main development line, a
branches
subdirectory in which specific
branches (or collections of branches) will be created, and
a tags
subdirectory in which specific
tags (or collections of tags) will be created. Of course, if
a repository houses only a single project, the root of the
repository can serve as the project root, too.
Here are some examples:
$ svn list file:///var/svn/single-project-repo trunk/ branches/ tags/ $ svn list file:///var/svn/multi-project-repo project-A/ project-B/ $ svn list file:///var/svn/multi-project-repo/project-A trunk/ branches/ tags/ $
We talk much more about tags and branches in Chapter 4, Branching and Merging. For details and some advice on how to set up repositories when you have multiple projects, see the section called “Repository Layout”. Finally, we discuss project roots more in the section called “Planning Your Repository Organization”.
Subversion tries hard not to limit the type of data you can place under version control. The contents of files and property values are stored and transmitted as binary data, and the section called “File Content Type” tells you how to give Subversion a hint that “textual” operations don't make sense for a particular file. There are a few places, however, where Subversion places restrictions on information it stores.
Subversion internally handles certain bits of data—for example, property names, pathnames, and log messages—as UTF-8-encoded Unicode. This is not to say that all your interactions with Subversion must involve UTF-8, though. As a general rule, Subversion clients will gracefully and transparently handle conversions between UTF-8 and the encoding system in use on your computer, if such a conversion can meaningfully be done (which is the case for most common encodings in use today).
In WebDAV exchanges and older versions of some of
Subversion's administrative files, paths are used as XML
attribute values, and property names in XML tag names. This
means that pathnames can contain only legal XML (1.0)
characters, and properties are further limited to ASCII
characters. Subversion also prohibits TAB
,
CR
, and LF
characters in
path names to prevent paths from being broken up in diffs or
in the output of commands such as svn log
or svn status.
While it may seem like a lot to remember, in practice these limitations are rarely a problem. As long as your locale settings are compatible with UTF-8 and you don't use control characters in path names, you should have no trouble communicating with Subversion. The command-line client adds an extra bit of help—to create “legally correct” versions for internal use it will automatically escape illegal path characters as needed in URLs that you type.