脑梗不能吃什么东西| 一个厂一个人念什么| 心属于五行属什么| 脖子下面的骨头叫什么| 夏天吃什么汤| 鸳鸯是什么意思| 手脚发麻挂什么科| 一个月大的小狗吃什么| 知了什么| 胆囊结石不宜吃什么| 非亲非故是什么意思| 冬瓜有什么功效和作用| 苋菜什么人不能吃| 手指发麻是什么原因引起的| 血液肿瘤是什么病| 口腔异味吃什么药| 大红袍适合什么季节喝| 耄耋读什么| 3.5是什么星座| 榴莲与什么食物相克| 11月出生是什么星座| 额头上长痘痘是什么原因| 什么的梨花| 婚姻宫是什么意思| 蛇蛋是什么样子的| 流清鼻涕是什么感冒| camouflage什么意思| 肝胆湿热喝什么茶| 夹层是什么意思| 什么是盆底肌| 鼻孔里面痒是什么原因| 百草枯什么味道| showroom是什么意思| 葡萄糖升高说明什么| 自然流产是什么症状| 市政协常委是什么级别| 土方是什么| 微波炉不热是什么原因| 草果是什么| 肾气不足吃什么药好| 唠叨是什么意思| 面藕是什么做的| 贪嗔痴是什么意思| 心急吃不了热豆腐什么意思| 类风湿因子是什么意思| 头顶痛什么原因| 大致是什么意思| 春晓描写的是什么季节| 北顶娘娘庙求什么灵验| 铁锚是什么意思| 大姨妈有黑色血块是什么原因| 集体户口和个人户口有什么区别| 梦见碗是什么意思| 通灵是什么意思| 进击的巨人真相是什么| 倒膜是什么意思| 青柠檬和黄柠檬有什么区别| 肺纤维化是什么意思| hpu是什么意思| 脾胃湿热吃什么中成药| 属鸡的幸运色是什么颜色| 梦到牛是什么意思| 一九八四年属什么生肖| 花茶是什么茶| 纯净水是什么水| 宫颈粘膜慢性炎是什么意思| 什么是什么非| 香兰素是什么东西| 鼻炎吃什么药好| 广东有什么特产| 灰面是什么面粉| 春天什么花开| 养肝吃什么食物| 偏光镜是什么意思| 热射病什么症状| 治白内障用什么药最好| 眼睛红肿吃什么消炎药| 龟头炎用什么软膏最好| 月经期间喝红糖水有什么好处| 女性排卵期一般在什么时候| 尿酸检查什么项目| 马后炮是什么意思| 智齿什么时候开始长| 清肺火肺热吃什么药最有效| 面包糠是什么做的| 高烧不退有什么好办法| 抑郁症发作是什么感觉| 牙龈上火是什么原因引起的| 脚心热什么原因| 守宫是什么意思| 补肾吃什么药| 腿麻木是什么原因引起的| 弯了是什么意思| 百田森的鞋什么档次| 尿多尿急是什么原因| 牛皮革是什么意思| 土字生肖有钱收是什么生肖| 传字五行属什么| 鹿皮绒是什么面料| 脑供血不足吃什么好| 心脏搭桥后最怕什么| 一什么圆月| 补肾最好的药是什么药| 打饱嗝是什么病的前兆| 梦见拉屎是什么意思| 导管是什么| 吃金针菇有什么好处| 临产是什么意思| 天伦之乐是什么意思啊| 打嗝吃什么药效果好| 为什么人会得抑郁症| 宇宙的中心是什么| 肌酐高吃什么药好| 鬼压床是什么原因造成的| 姑息治疗什么意思| 引什么大什么| 西洋参可以和什么一起泡水喝| 11月29是什么星座| 达菲是什么药| 胡饼是什么| 失眠缺什么维生素| 红楼梦是什么朝代| 59岁生日有什么讲究| 肌酐高是什么原因造成的| 顶臀径是指什么| 自述是什么意思| 篮子房是什么意思| 腿长身子短有什么说法| 际遇是什么意思| 2015属什么生肖| 办健康证要带什么证件| 补气血喝什么口服液好| 吃什么预防脑梗| 脑梗有什么症状| 孕妇吃红薯对胎儿有什么好处| 囊性无回声是什么意思| 肺大泡用什么药| wear是什么意思| 梦见买猪肉是什么预兆| 女人月经总是提前是什么原因| 小脑萎缩有什么症状| 脂肪瘤应该挂什么科| 1957属什么生肖| pouch什么意思| 梦见牙齿掉光了是什么征兆| 利好是什么意思| 北京大学什么专业最好| 瓜田李下什么意思| 灵芝对身体有什么好处| 为什么射出来的精子是黄色的| 晚上睡觉腿抽筋是什么原因| 后巩膜葡萄肿是什么意思| 什么叫安全期| 六十而耳顺是什么意思| 木兮是什么意思| 520是什么意思表白| 腿上长水泡是什么原因引起的| eft是什么意思| 福泽深厚什么意思| 孔子原名叫什么| 为什么我的眼中常含泪水| 1977年出生属什么生肖| 马克杯是什么| 扩容是什么意思| 黄芪什么人不能吃| 男人眉心有痣代表什么| 生日送百合花代表什么| 三点水真读什么| 羽毛球拍磅数是什么意思| 瑶柱是什么| 眼睛红痒用什么眼药水| 阴蒂瘙痒是什么原因| 鳞状上皮细胞高是什么原因| 口淡无味是什么原因| 年柱比肩是什么意思| 樱菜是什么菜| 执业药师什么时候考试| 脚背痛什么原因引起的| 明胶是什么东西| 医政科是做什么的| 感冒吃什么药最快| 疤痕增生是什么样子| 76年属什么生肖| 房早是什么意思| 12生肖为什么没有猫| 半枝莲有什么功效| 胡萝卜什么时候种植| 吃鹅蛋有什么好处| 抹茶色是什么颜色| 人分三六九等什么意思| 白砂糖是什么糖| 百分比是什么意思| 五月一号什么星座| 鲁迅原名什么| 血肌酐是什么意思| 脱髓鞘是什么病| 倪字五行属什么| 怀孕了吃什么药能打掉| 夏令时什么时候开始和结束| 喝柠檬水对身体有什么好处| 过敏不能吃什么| 血压低吃什么中成药| 膀胱结石是什么症状| 嘴巴周围长痘痘是什么原因引起的| 恩施玉露属于什么茶| 口苦口臭是什么原因| 数词是什么意思| 琥珀是什么意思| 拔罐之后要注意什么| 什么品牌的帽子好| 为什么会有蟑螂| 小猫发烧有什么症状| 7月12是什么星座| 空调出的水是什么水| 甲醛是什么| em是什么意思| 出汗多是什么病| 阴性阳性什么意思| 吹空调嗓子疼吃什么药| 什么是高压氧| 微波炉什么牌子好| 少阳病是什么意思| 口臭吃什么中成药| 双源ct主要检查什么| 早期肠癌有什么症状| 腺肌症是什么病| 什么是私人会所| 放屁特别臭是什么原因| 上焦中焦下焦是什么| 嘴唇紫红色是什么原因| 异地补办身份证需要什么手续| 毛尖属于什么茶| 马达是什么| 白细胞偏高什么原因| 双插头是什么意思| 蚧壳虫用什么药| 艺五行属性是什么| 大保健什么意思| 甲状腺功能亢进症是什么病| 驾驶证b2能开什么车| 私密是什么意思| 什么是凌汛| min代表什么| 什么样的人容易得心梗| 产褥期是什么意思| 束带是什么| 头晕头疼挂什么科| ceq是什么意思| 脂肪肝吃什么药| 什么生日的人有佛缘| 八月十六号是什么星座| 贾字五行属什么| 吲哚美辛是什么药| 新生儿为什么会有黄疸| 美国的国宝是什么动物| 龙舌兰是什么酒| 6月6是什么节日| 什么拉车连蹦带跳歇后语| 皮肤一碰就红是什么原因| 脸部神经跳动吃什么药| 老鼠怕什么| 半路杀出个程咬金是什么意思| 闰月要给父母买什么| 喜人是什么意思| 百度Jump to content

紫癜是什么病 严重吗

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Apache Subversion
Original author(s)CollabNet
Developer(s)Apache Software Foundation
Initial release20 October 2000; 24 years ago (2025-08-06)
Repository
Written inC
Operating system
TypeRevision control
LicenseApache-2.0[a]
Websitesubversion.apache.org Edit this on Wikidata
百度 诺兰博士认为,进一步研究Ata的骨老化过速,可能会在未来的某一天,让患者受益。

Apache Subversion (often abbreviated SVN, after its command name svn) is a version control system distributed as open source under the Apache License.[1] Software developers use Subversion to maintain current and historical versions of files such as source code, web pages, and documentation. Its goal is to be a mostly compatible successor to the widely used Concurrent Versions System (CVS).

The open source community has used Subversion widely: for example, in projects such as Apache Software Foundation, FreeBSD, SourceForge, and from 2006 to 2019, GCC. CodePlex was previously a common host for Subversion repositories.

Subversion was created by CollabNet Inc. in 2000, and is now a top-level Apache project being built and used by a global community of contributors.[2]

History

[edit]

CollabNet founded the Subversion project in 2000 as an effort to write an open-source version-control system which operated much like CVS but which fixed the bugs and supplied some features missing in CVS.[3] By 2001, Subversion had advanced sufficiently to host its own source code,[3] and in February 2004, version 1.0 was released.[4] In November 2009, Subversion was accepted into Apache Incubator: this marked the beginning of the process to become a standard top-level Apache project.[5] It became a top-level Apache project on February 17, 2010.[6]

Version Original release date Latest version Latest release date Status
Unsupported: 1.0 2025-08-06 1.0.9 2025-08-06 No longer supported
Unsupported: 1.1 2025-08-06[7] 1.1.4 2025-08-06 No longer supported
Unsupported: 1.2 2025-08-06[8] 1.2.3 2025-08-06 No longer supported
Unsupported: 1.3 2025-08-06[9] 1.3.2 2025-08-06 No longer supported
Unsupported: 1.4 2025-08-06[10] 1.4.6 2025-08-06 No longer supported
Unsupported: 1.5 2025-08-06[11] 1.5.9 2025-08-06 No longer supported
Unsupported: 1.6 2025-08-06[12] 1.6.23 2025-08-06 No longer supported
Unsupported: 1.7 2025-08-06[13] 1.7.22 2025-08-06 No longer supported
Unsupported: 1.8 2025-08-06[14] 1.8.19 2025-08-06 No longer supported
Unsupported: 1.9 2025-08-06[15] 1.9.12 2025-08-06 No longer supported
Unsupported: 1.10 2025-08-06[16] 1.10.8 2025-08-06 No longer supported
Unsupported: 1.11 2025-08-06[17] 1.11.1 2025-08-06 No longer supported
Unsupported: 1.12 2025-08-06[18] 1.12.2 2025-08-06 No longer supported
Unsupported: 1.13 2025-08-06[19] 1.13.0 2025-08-06 No longer supported
Latest version: 1.14 2025-08-06[20] 1.14.5[21][22][23] 2025-08-06 Fully supported, LTS
Future version: 1.15 20XX 1.15.0 (Not yet released) In development
Legend:
Unsupported
Supported
Latest version
Preview version
Future version

Release dates are extracted from Apache Subversion's CHANGES file,[24] which records all release history.

Features

[edit]
  • Commits as true atomic operations (interrupted commit operations in CVS would cause repository inconsistency or corruption).
  • The system maintains versioning for directories and some specific file metadata (see Properties). Users can move or copy files and entire directory-trees very quickly, while retaining full revision history (as being implemented by a reference to the original object).
  • Versioning of symbolic links.
  • Native support for binary files, with space-efficient binary-diff storage.
  • Apache HTTP Server as network server, WebDAV/Delta-V for protocol. There is also an independent server process called svnserve that uses a custom protocol over TCP/IP.
  • Branching is implemented by a copy of a directory, thus it is a cheap operation, independent of file size.
  • Natively client–server, layered library design.
  • Client/server protocol sends diffs in both directions.
  • Parsable output, including XML log output.
  • Open source licensedApache License since the 1.7 release; prior versions use a derivative of the Apache Software License 1.1.
  • Internationalized program messages.
  • File locking for unmergeable files ("reserved checkouts").
  • Path-based authorization.
  • Language bindings for C#, PHP, Python, Perl, Ruby, and Java.
  • Full MIME support – users can view or change the MIME type of each file, with the software knowing which MIME types can have their differences from previous versions shown.
  • Merge tracking – merges between branches will be tracked, this allows automatic merging between branches without telling Subversion what does and does not need to be merged.
  • Changelists to organize commits into commit groups.

Repository types

[edit]

Subversion offers two types of repository storage.

Berkeley DB (deprecated)

[edit]

The original development of Subversion used the Berkeley DB package. Subversion has some limitations with Berkeley DB usage when a program that accesses the database crashes or terminates forcibly. No data loss or corruption occurs, but the repository remains offline while Berkeley DB replays the journal and cleans up any outstanding locks. The safest way to use Subversion with a Berkeley DB repository involves a single server-process running as one user (instead of through a shared filesystem).[25] The Berkeley DB backend was deprecated in version 1.8.[26]

FSFS

[edit]

In 2004, a new storage subsystem was developed and named FSFS. It works faster than the Berkeley DB backend on directories with a large number of files and takes less disk space, due to less logging.[25]

Beginning with Subversion 1.2, FSFS became the default data store for new repositories.

The etymology of "FSFS" is based on Subversion's use of the term "filesystem" for its repository storage system. FSFS stores its contents directly within the operating system's filesystem, rather than a structured system like Berkeley DB. Thus, it is a "[Subversion] FileSystem atop the FileSystem".

FSX

[edit]

A new filesystem, called FSX, is under development to remove some limitations of FSFS. It was added in version 1.9 and not considered production-ready.[27] As of version 1.14, it is still marked as experimental.[28]

Repository access

[edit]

Access to Subversion repositories can take place by:

  1. Local filesystem or network filesystem,[29] accessed by client directly. This mode uses the file:///path access scheme.
  2. WebDAV/Delta-V (over http or http) using the mod_dav_svn module for Apache 2. This mode uses the http://host/path access scheme or http://host/path for secure connections using ssl.
  3. Custom "svn" protocol (default port 3690), using plain text or over TCP/IP. This mode uses either the svn://host/path access scheme for unencrypted transport or svn+ssh://host/path scheme for tunneling over ssh.

All three means can access both FSFS and Berkeley DB repositories.

Any 1.x version of a client can work with any 1.x server. Newer clients and servers have additional features and performance capabilities, but have fallback support for older clients/servers.[30]

Layers

[edit]

Internally, a Subversion system comprises several libraries arranged as layers. Each performs a specific task and allows developers to create their own tools at the desired level of complexity and specificity.

Fs
The lowest level; it implements the versioned filesystem which stores the user data.
Repos
Concerned with the repository built up around the filesystem. It has many helper functions and handles the various "hooks" that a repository may have, e.g., scripts that run when an action is performed. Together, Fs and Repos constitute the "filesystem interface".
mod_dav_svn
Provides WebDAV/Delta-V access through Apache 2.
Ra
Handles "repository access", both local and remote. From this point on, repositories are referred to using URLs, e.g.
  • file:///path/ for local access,
  • http://host/path/ or http://host/path/ for WebDAV access, or
  • svn://host/path/ or svn+ssh://host/path/ for the SVN protocol.
Client, Wc
The highest level. It abstracts repository access and provides common client tasks, such as authenticating users or comparing versions. Subversion clients use the Wc library to manage the local working copy.

Filesystem

[edit]

One can view the Subversion filesystem as "two-dimensional".[31] Two coordinates are used to unambiguously address filesystem items:

Each revision in a Subversion filesystem has its own root, which is used to access contents at that revision. Files are stored as links to the most recent change; thus a Subversion repository is quite compact. The system consumes storage space proportional to the number of changes made, not to the number of revisions.

The Subversion filesystem uses transactions to keep changes atomic. A transaction operates on a specified revision of the filesystem, not necessarily the latest. The transaction has its own root, on which changes are made. It is then either committed and becomes the latest revision, or is aborted. The transaction is actually a long-lived filesystem object; a client does not need to commit or abort a transaction itself, rather it can also begin a transaction, exit, and then can re-open the transaction and continue using it. Potentially, multiple clients can access the same transaction and work together on an atomic change, though no existing clients expose this capability.

Properties

[edit]

One important feature of the Subversion filesystem is properties: simple name=value pairs of text. Most properties occur on filesystem entries (i.e., files and directories). These are versioned just like other changes to the filesystem. The Subversion client reserves the 'svn:' prefix for built-in properties, but other names can be used to define custom properties.

svn:executable
Makes a file on Unix-hosted working copies executable, when supported by the filesystem.
svn:mime-type
Stores the Internet media type ("MIME type") of a file. Affects the handling of diffs and merging.
svn:ignore
A list of filename patterns to ignore in a directory. Similar to CVS's .cvsignore file.
svn:keywords
A list of keywords to substitute into a file when changes are made. The file itself must also reference the keywords as $keyword$ or $keyword:...$. This is used to maintain certain information (e.g., author, date of last change, revision number) in a file without human intervention.
The keyword substitution mechanism originates from RCS and from CVS.[32]
svn:eol-style
Makes the client convert end-of-line characters in text files. Used when the working copy is needed with a specific EOL style. "native" is commonly used, so that EOLs match the user's OS EOL style. Repositories may require this property on all files to prevent inconsistent line endings, which can cause a problem in itself.
svn:externals
Allows parts of other repositories to be automatically checked out into a subdirectory.
svn:needs-lock
Specifies that a file is to be checked out with file permissions set to read-only. This is designed for use with the locking mechanism. The read-only permission reminds one to obtain a lock before modifying the file: obtaining a lock makes the file writable, and releasing the lock makes it read-only again. Locks are only enforced during a commit operation. Locks can be used without setting this property. However, that is not recommended, because it introduces the risk of someone modifying a locked file; they will only discover it has been locked when their commit fails.
svn:special
This property is not meant to be set or modified directly by users. As of 2010 it is only used for having symbolic links in the repository. When a symbolic link is added to the repository, a file containing the link target is created with this property set. When a Unix-like system checks out this file, the client converts it to a symbolic link.
svn:mergeinfo
Used to track merge data (revision numbers) in Subversion 1.5 (or later). This property is automatically maintained by the merge command, and it is not recommended to change its value manually.[33]

Subversion also uses properties on revisions themselves. Like the above properties on filesystem entries, the names are completely arbitrary, with the Subversion client using certain properties prefixed with 'svn:'. However, these properties are not versioned, and they can be changed later if allowed by a pre-revprop-change hook.[34]

svn:date
The date and time stamp of a revision.
svn:author
The name of the user that submitted the change(s).
svn:log
The user-supplied description of the change(s).

Branching and tagging

[edit]

Subversion uses the inter-file branching model from Perforce[35] to implement branches and tagging. A branch is a separate line of development.[36] Tagging refers to labeling the repository at a certain point in time so that it can be easily found in the future. In Subversion, the only difference between branches and tags is how they are used.

A new branch or tag is set up by using the "svn copy" command, which should be used in place of the native operating system mechanism. The copied directory is linked to the original in the repository to preserve its history, and the copy takes very little extra space in the repository.

All the versions in each branch maintain the history of the file up to the point of the copy, plus any changes made since. One can "merge" changes back into the trunk or between branches.

alt text
Visualization of a simple Subversion project

Limitations and problems

[edit]

A known problem in Subversion affects the implementation of the file and directory rename operation. As of 2014, Subversion implements the renaming of files and directories as a "copy" to the new name followed by a "delete" of the old name. Only the names change, all data relating to the edit history remains the same, and Subversion will still use the old name in older revisions of the "tree". However, Subversion may become confused when a move conflicts with edits made elsewhere,[37] both for regular commits and when merging branches.[38] The Subversion 1.5 release addressed some of these scenarios while others remained problematic.[39] The Subversion 1.8 release addressed some of these problems by making moves a first-class operation on the client, but it is still treated as copy+delete in the repository.[40]

As of 2013, Subversion lacks some repository-administration and management features. For instance, someone may wish to edit the repository to permanently remove all historical records of certain data. Subversion does not have built-in support to achieve this simply.[41]

Subversion stores additional copies of data on the local machine, which can become an issue with very large projects or files, or if developers work on multiple branches simultaneously. In versions prior to 1.7 these .svn directories on the client side could become corrupted by ill-advised user activity like global search/replace operations.[42] Starting with version 1.7 Subversion uses a single centralized .svn folder per working area.[43]

Subversion does not store the modification times of files. As such, a file checked out of a Subversion repository will have the 'current' date (instead of the modification time in the repository), and a file checked into the repository will have the date of the check-in (instead of the modification time of the file being checked in). This might not always be what is wanted.[44] To mitigate this, third-party tools exist that allow for preserving modification time and other filesystem meta-data.[45][46] However, giving checked out files a current date is important as well — this is how tools like make(1) will take notice of a changed file for rebuilding it.

Subversion uses a centralized revision control model. Ben Collins-Sussman, one of the designers of Subversion, believes a centralised model would help prevent "insecure programmers" from hiding their work from other team members during development.[47] Some users of version control systems see the centralised model as detrimental; famously, Linus Torvalds attacked Subversion's model and its developers.[48]

Subversion often does not deal well with the filename normalization performed by the HFS+ filesystem. This can cause problems when files with accented characters in their names are added to the repository on a non-HFS+ filesystem and the repository is then used with HFS+.[49]

Subversion tags and branches

[edit]

Revision numbers are difficult to remember in any version-control system. For this reason, most systems offer symbolic tags as user-friendly references to them. Subversion does not have such a feature and what its documentation recommends to use instead is very different in nature. Instead of implementing tags as references to points in history, Subversion recommends making snapshot copies into a well-known subdirectory ("tags/") in the space of the repository tree. Only a few predefined references are available: HEAD, BASE, PREV and COMMITTED.

This history-to-space projection has multiple issues:

  1. When a snapshot is taken, the system does not assign any special meaning to the name of the tag/snapshot. This is the difference between a copy and a reference. The revision is recorded and the snapshot can be accessed by URL. This makes some operations less convenient and others impossible. For instance, a naive svn diff -r tag1:tag2 myfile does not work; it is slightly more complicated than that to achieve, requiring the user to know and input URL/paths to the snapshots instead of just the names: svn diff <URL-TO-TAG1>/myfile <URL-TO-TAG2>/myfile. Other operations like for instance svn log -r tag1:tag2 myfile are just impossible.
  2. When two (ideally independent) object types live in the repository tree, a "fight to the top" can ensue. In other words, it is often difficult to decide at which level to create the tags/ subdirectory:
    trunk/
         /componentfoo/
         /componentbar/
    tags/
        /1.1/
            /componentfoo/
            /componentbar/
    
     or 
    componentfoo/
                /trunk/
                /tags/
                     /1.1/
    componentbar/
                /trunk/
                /tags/
                     /1.1/
    
  3. Tags, by their conventional definition, are both read-only and light-weight, on the repository and client. Subversion copies are not read-only, and while they are light-weight on the repository, they are incredibly heavy-weight on the client.

To address such issues, posters on the Subversion mailing lists have suggested a new feature called "labels" or "aliases".[50] SVN labels would more closely resemble the "tags" of other systems such as CVS or Git. The fact that Subversion has global revision numbers opens the way to a very simple label → revision implementation. Yet as of 2013, no progress has been made and symbolic tags are not in the list of the most wanted features.[51]

Development and implementation

[edit]

CollabNet has continued its involvement with Subversion, but the project runs as an independent open source community. In November 2009, the project was accepted into the Apache Incubator, aiming to become part of the Apache Software Foundation's efforts.[52] Since March 2010, the project is formally known as Apache Subversion, being a part of the Apache Top-Level Projects.[53]

In October 2009, WANdisco announced the hiring of core Subversion committers as the company moved to become a major corporate sponsor of the project. This included Hyrum Wright, president of the Subversion Corporation and release manager for the Subversion project since early 2008, who joined the company to lead its open source team.[54]

The Subversion open-source community does not provide binaries, but potential users can download binaries from volunteers.[55] While the Subversion project does not include an official graphical user interface (GUI) for use with Subversion, third parties have developed a number of different GUIs, along with a wide variety of additional ancillary software.

Work announced in 2009 included SubversionJ (a Java API) and implementation of the Obliterate command, similar to that provided by Perforce. Both of these enhancements were sponsored by WANdisco.[56]

The Subversion committers normally have at least one or two new features under active development at any one time. The 1.7 release of Subversion in October 2011 included a streamlined HTTP transport to improve performance and a rewritten working-copy library.[57]

In 2002, a design contest was held to select the logo for Subversion. The original entries can be found here as well as the votes for each logo. The current logo received the most votes in the contest.

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Apache-2.0 since 2025-08-06.

References

[edit]

Footnotes

[edit]
  1. ^ "Subversion". directory.fsf.org. Free Software Directory. 2020. Retrieved 3 October 2023.
  2. ^ "The Apache Software Foundation Announces 20th Anniversary of Apache Subversion". GlobeNewswire News Room (Press release). 2025-08-06. Retrieved 2025-08-06.
  3. ^ a b Collins-Sussman, Ben; Brian W. Fitzpatrick; C. Michael Pilato (2011). "What is Subversion? > Subversion's History". Version Control with Subversion (for Subversion 1.7). Retrieved 15 March 2012.
  4. ^ Benjamin Zeiss (2004). "subversion 1.0 is released". Linux Weekly News. Retrieved 30 March 2014.
  5. ^ Rubinstein, David (4 November 2009). "Subversion joins forces with Apache". SD Times. Archived from the original on 2025-08-06. Retrieved 15 March 2012.
  6. ^ "Subversion is now Apache Subversion". 18 February 2010. Archived from the original on 12 May 2011. Retrieved 15 March 2012.
  7. ^ "Subversion 1.1 Release Notes". Retrieved 2025-08-06.
  8. ^ "Subversion 1.2 Release Notes". Retrieved 2025-08-06.
  9. ^ "Subversion 1.3 Release Notes". Retrieved 2025-08-06.
  10. ^ "Subversion 1.4 Release Notes". Retrieved 2025-08-06.
  11. ^ "Subversion 1.5 Release Notes". Retrieved 2025-08-06.
  12. ^ "Apache Subversion 1.6 Release Notes". Retrieved 2025-08-06.
  13. ^ "Apache Subversion 1.7 Release Notes". Retrieved 2025-08-06.
  14. ^ "Apache Subversion 1.8 Release Notes". Retrieved 2025-08-06.
  15. ^ "Apache Subversion 1.9 Release Notes". Retrieved 2025-08-06.
  16. ^ "Apache Subversion 1.10 Release Notes". Retrieved 2025-08-06.
  17. ^ "Apache Subversion 1.11 Release Notes". Retrieved 2025-08-06.
  18. ^ "Apache Subversion 1.12 Release Notes". Retrieved 2025-08-06.
  19. ^ "Apache Subversion 1.13 Release Notes".
  20. ^ "Apache Subversion 1.14 LTS Release Notes". subversion.apache.org. Retrieved 2025-08-06.
  21. ^ The Subversion Team. "Apache Subversion News Archives". subversion.apache.org. The Apache Software Foundation. Retrieved 2025-08-06.
  22. ^ Sahlberg, Daniel (2025-08-06). "Release Announcement – [SECURITY][ANNOUNCE] Apache Subversion 1.14.5 released". lists.apache.org. User mailing list for Subversion. The Apache Software Foundation. Retrieved 2025-08-06.
  23. ^ The Subversion Team (2025-08-06). "Changelog for Version 1.14.5 and earlier". Apache Subversion. The Apache Software Foundation. Retrieved 2025-08-06.
  24. ^ "Apache Subversion's CHANGES file". Retrieved 2025-08-06.
  25. ^ a b Ben Collins-Sussman; Brian W. Fitzpatrick; C. Michael Pilato (2011). "Chapter 5: Strategies for Repository Deployment". Version Control with Subversion: For Subversion 1.7. O'Reilly.
  26. ^ "Apache Subversion 1.8 Release Notes". Apache Project. Retrieved 5 May 2020.
  27. ^ "Apache Subversion 1.9 Release Notes".
  28. ^ "Subversion: Built-in back-ends". Retrieved 2025-08-06. #define SVN_FS_TYPE_FSX "fsx"
    EXPERIMENTAL filesystem backend.
    It is not ready for general production use. Please consult the respective release notes on suggested usage scenarios.
  29. ^ Berkeley DB relies on file locking and thus should not be used on (network) filesystems which do not implement them
  30. ^ SVN 1.5 release notes
  31. ^ Basic Merging
  32. ^ "rcs(1)". OpenBSD manual pages.
  33. ^ Subversion Properties
  34. ^ pre-revprop-change
  35. ^ Inter-File Branching: A Practical Method for Representing Variants Archived 2025-08-06 at the Wayback Machine
  36. ^ Branching / Tagging — TortoiseSVN
  37. ^ "Implement true renames". Archived from the original on 2025-08-06. Retrieved 2025-08-06.
  38. ^ Advanced Merging
  39. ^ Copy/move-related improvements in Subversion 1.5
  40. ^ Working copy records moves as first-class operation in Subversion 1.8
  41. ^ "[SVN-516] svn obliterate". Retrieved 2025-08-06.
  42. ^ "Subclipse - Repair SVN Checksum".
  43. ^ Working Copy Metadata Storage Improvements (client)
  44. ^ "[SVN-1256] Ability to preserve last modification time (mtime) of files under version control". Retrieved 2025-08-06.
  45. ^ FreezeAttrib (saves/restores file attributes using properties)
  46. ^ fsvs – Full System Versioning System on GitHub
  47. ^ Programmer Insecurity @ iBanjo
  48. ^ Google Tech Talk video and its transcript
  49. ^ "[SVN-2464] Canonicalize / stringprep UTF-8 filenames to handle composed / decomposed differences shown by e.g. Mac OS X HFS+". Retrieved 2025-08-06.
  50. ^ For example: Weintraub, David (23 May 2005). "Subversion 'labels' vs. 'tags'". SVN Dev (Mailing list). Retrieved 5 May 2020.
  51. ^ "Apache Subversion Roadmap". Apache Project. Retrieved 5 May 2020.
  52. ^ "Subversion Submitted to Become a Project at The Apache Software Foundation". November 4, 2009. Retrieved October 1, 2019.
  53. ^ "CollabNet Supports Subversion's Graduation to Apache Top-Level Project". CollabNet. 1 March 2010. Archived from the original on 2025-08-06.
  54. ^ WANdisco (January 7, 2010). "WANdisco Names Hyrum Wright to Lead Subversion Open Source Efforts". News release. Open Source magazine. Archived from the original on 2025-08-06. Retrieved October 29, 2011.
  55. ^ "Apache Subversion Binary Packages". Official project website. Retrieved October 29, 2011.
  56. ^ WANdisco (October 28, 2009). "WANdisco Presents New Initiatives for the Subversion Open Source Project". News release. CM Crossroads. Archived from the original on 2025-08-06. Retrieved October 29, 2011.
  57. ^ "Apache Subversion Roadmap". Official project website. Retrieved October 29, 2011.

Sources

[edit]
  • C. Michael Pilato, Ben Collins-Sussman, Brian W. Fitzpatrick; Version Control with Subversion; O'Reilly; ISBN 0-596-00448-6 (1st edition, paperback, 2004, full book online, mirror)
  • Garrett Rooney; Practical Subversion; Apress; ISBN 1-59059-290-5 (1st edition, paperback, 2005)
  • Mike Mason; Pragmatic Version Control Using Subversion; Pragmatic Bookshelf; ISBN 0-9745140-6-3 (1st edition, paperback, 2005)
  • William Nagel; Subversion Version Control: Using the Subversion Version Control System in Development Projects; Prentice Hall; ISBN 0-13-185518-2 (1st edition, paperback, 2005)

Further reading

[edit]
[edit]
布病挂什么科 用膳是什么意思 租赁费计入什么科目 球蛋白的功效与作用是什么 妹妹是什么意思
是什么表情 肾积液是什么原因造成的 梦见自己换衣服是什么意思 身份证后四位是什么意思 子宫肌瘤吃什么好
什么水果下火 青海湖里面有什么鱼 9月份是什么星座的 冬枣不能和什么一起吃 11月15日什么星座
忍者神龟是什么意思 今年什么时候进伏天 阿尔茨海默病吃什么药 肺结节什么症状 什么品牌的冰箱好
白头翁吃什么食物hcv8jop6ns4r.cn 吃什么排便cl108k.com 油性记号笔用什么能擦掉hcv7jop5ns1r.cn 释迦摩尼是什么意思inbungee.com 山药长什么样tiangongnft.com
双肾泥沙样结石是什么意思hcv8jop3ns3r.cn 混合性皮肤用什么护肤品比较好hcv8jop0ns0r.cn 鱼靠什么呼吸hcv9jop5ns8r.cn 什么是生物钟naasee.com 投诉护士找什么部门hcv9jop8ns0r.cn
松鼠代表什么生肖hcv7jop7ns3r.cn 6月7号什么星座helloaicloud.com 两肺结节是什么意思aiwuzhiyu.com 性格缺陷是什么意思hcv8jop5ns9r.cn 酒后吐吃什么可以缓解hcv9jop1ns4r.cn
mico是什么意思hcv8jop4ns3r.cn 小个子适合什么发型hcv8jop1ns1r.cn 为什么减肥一直减不下来hcv9jop4ns6r.cn 91年属什么生肖imcecn.com 九月初十是什么星座hcv8jop3ns7r.cn
百度