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I 'm basically confused as to how to export the latest files to my web server. I work with 3 other developers at work so subversion is a must really. We liked the idea that subversion allows multiple users to edit the same file.

Pushing from subversion to web server

This guy says use svn export but wouldn't that messup if multiple people commit at the same time. Could I do something clever with the commit hook script?

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  • What do you mean by things "messing-up" because multiple people are committing at once?
    – ctford
    Oct 11, 2009 at 15:45

3 Answers 3

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An SVN export grabs the current version of the repository (or, a specific version if you specify) and drops it onto the local file system such that it is not actually under version control. What this means is that if you do an export, you cannot subsequently do a checkin from that exported directory (because it lacks the .svn folders that are required for talking to the central SVN repo).

You can create a post-commit hook that will automate this process for you - such that the web server always has the most recent version out of the repository. It doesn't matter if people "commit at the same time", because SVN treats it as atomic operations. In the end, you would end up with the most recent version on the web server.

There can be problems with this - if someone introduces a problem, or a bug, or hadn't done a get latest themselves and therefore screwed something up, then this automatically gets pushed to your webserver. For obvious reasons, this type of thing is avoided for production web servers - but really it boils down to what your own needs are.

Depending on your development environment and webserver environment, you might also look into something like Capistrano. It can be a bear to setup if you work from windows, and almost but impossible if your webserver is also Windows. But, if/when you do get it setup, its wonderful - it'll handle all the "connect via ssh, cd to correct directory, do export" and any other task that you want to automate for a deployment.

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  • You were saying it could cause problems if you were hadn't done a get latest themselves but I thought subversion would tell you your file is out of date if someone has commited the same file before you
    – Ageis
    Oct 11, 2009 at 16:32
  • SVN will complain if you are trying to check in a file that has a newer version on the central server. It will not complain if you are checking in files that were not changed on the central server. However, this does not mean there were no breaking changes. You can imagine, for a website, that someone changed the javascript or CSS file that you were depending on for your updates to work. Or for webapps such as ASP.NET, Ruby on Rails, etc, they have other dependencies that can cause the site to completely fail if you were depending on something in another file that was out of date.
    – Matt
    Oct 11, 2009 at 16:45
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If you only want to export your personal changes to your own server then you should develop on a seperate branch to the other developers. You export that branch to your local server and then merge the branches when you are ready to share your changes.

However, I would encourage you to all work on the same branch if it's feasible because the longer you put off merging the more of a pain it is.

Does that answer your question?

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I would use CruiseControl to build your project. You can have your SVN trunk and a branch for production. When someone checks in to trunk, you can have it automagically build a dev.domain.com site, and then when you check into the production branch, have it automatically build that site as well. It also gives you an easy way to roll back if you have issues on production.

http://cruisecontrol.sourceforge.net/

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