![visualsvn and tortoisesvn visualsvn and tortoisesvn](http://www.hifisimtech.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/ascacloudmodels.png)
- #VISUALSVN AND TORTOISESVN HOW TO#
- #VISUALSVN AND TORTOISESVN INSTALL#
- #VISUALSVN AND TORTOISESVN UPDATE#
- #VISUALSVN AND TORTOISESVN SOFTWARE#
I have my whole repository sync’ed on several machines so the code, but not the version history, is duplicated. I keep meaning wo write a script to do this but haven’t gotten around to it. You have to do this with a separate backup script that shuts down SVN and then copies the repository to a WHS folder that is duplicated. How exciting! Only one thing, is there any way to get the home server to back up the respositories since you have to turn duplication off? I want to have the security of knowing if the drive containing my repositories fails I can recover them. Click on the Settings button and open the remote access tab.
![visualsvn and tortoisesvn visualsvn and tortoisesvn](https://i.imgur.com/UJt9FpL.jpg)
You just have to setup your WHS to allow remote/web access. Non-intranet access is definitely possible. Is this possible? What needs to be done to enable secure remote svn access?
![visualsvn and tortoisesvn visualsvn and tortoisesvn](https://rajibmahmud.files.wordpress.com/2009/01/setup62.jpg)
Question regarding remote access (from non-intranet). At first I was getting “405 Method Not Allowed” errors when attempting to browse the repository with TortoiseSVN, but then I enabled sharing of the Repositories folder and that seemed to have worked. Just got it up and running, and am impressed so far. Just want to say, thank you for cluing me in to VisualSVN.
#VISUALSVN AND TORTOISESVN HOW TO#
I’ll probably be adding another blog post on how to set this up.
#VISUALSVN AND TORTOISESVN UPDATE#
Update 1st Dec: A friend here at Microsoft just pinged me to say they’ve set something similar up using Visual Studio Team Foundation Server 2008. VisualSVN also makes a VS client plug-in which I’m considering taking a look at although it’s $49 a seat. I rarely have to resort to the Subversion console client. You should now be able to open in a web browser and see you repository you created.įor a client I’m using TortoiseSVN and AnkhSVN, a Visual Studio plug-in for VS solution integration.
#VISUALSVN AND TORTOISESVN INSTALL#
Remember to install everything into a \Program Files\ folder on the D: drive and not into the WHS system drive, which is very small and will quickly fill up.
#VISUALSVN AND TORTOISESVN SOFTWARE#
Overall the install process is very similar to installing the Squeezebox software I up on WHS last month.The downside of this is I now have two web servers running on my Home Server box but the low friction install makes up for that at the moment. VisualSVN Server has a nice setup that installs the Apache web server and Subversion. I ended up installing Subversion on my Home Server box using the VisualSVN Server installer. Windows Home Server already supports this, all I had to do was get Subversion running on it. I needed to expose a server so I could access it remotely. It’s small and simple enough to run on my development machine at home to give me source code control on small personal coding projects (read more about the development tools I use). Eventually much of this code may well get published on CodePlex but for now it’s very incomplete and I need somewhere to work on it. I’ve been thinking of other ways to put my Windows Home Server to good use and my recent trip to Florida got me exploring ways I could work on a couple of personal coding projects while traveling. Setting up Subversion on Windows Home Server Friday, Novem– 10:08 AM