15

Using VisualSVN and TortoiseSVN here.

I've renamed my file. I notice it say add and delete which to me means history may be erased?

What is the best way to rename a file without losing history in Subversion?

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  • You didn't indicate wether you want to rename it using VisualSvn (ie within Visual Studio) or TortoiseSvn Feb 3, 2010 at 22:42

6 Answers 6

27

The history won't be erased, but you will lose history tracing, as it would seem to be two unrelated files.

From TortoiseSVN docs:

If you want to do a simple in-place rename of a file or folder, use Context Menu → Rename... Enter the new name for the item and you're done.

Repairing File Renames

Sometimes your friendly IDE will rename files for you as part of a refactoring exercise, and of course it doesn't tell Subversion. If you try to commit your changes, Subversion will see the old filename as missing and the new one as an unversioned file. You could just check the new filename to get it added in, but you would then lose the history tracing, as Subversion does not know the files are related.

A better way is to notify Subversion that this change is actually a rename, and you can do this within the Commit and Check for Modifications dialogs. Simply select both the old name (missing) and the new name (unversioned) and use Context Menu → Repair Move to pair the two files as a rename.

Many other cases are covered.

Update

The history is lost when Subversion doesn't know it's a rename, like this:

  • the old file name is aa.txt, and it's renamed by hand to bb.txt
  • the new file name bb.txt is added to subversion
  • in the commit dialog, aa.txt appears as missing and can be marked as deleted, and bb.txt appears as added
  • the result is that history is lost, SVN show log from the contextual menu will show only bb.txt

To preserve file history, you need to use the Rename option from the contextual menu (or from the command line). IF you already renamed the file then:

  • the old file name cc.txt will appear as missing
  • check the Show unversioned files option to see the new file name dd.txt, which is marked as non-versioned
  • select both file names and choose Repair move from the contextual menu, which results in cc.txt being marked as deleted and dd.txt being marked as added (+)
  • after commit, history will be preserved, and in the log you will see both file names if you uncheck the Stop on copy/rename option.

So, to resume, in the commit dialog added (+) means that history will be preserved, and added means loosing the the history. In both cases, the old file name will appear as deleted.

Update 2

When I say that history is lost, please understand that the previous information still exists, but it won't be present in the log of the current file name, and you must manually track it (which is not quite a pleasant thing to do).

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  • 3
    An even better way is to use a Subversion-aware IDE which will rename the files correctly...
    – JesperE
    Feb 3, 2010 at 21:15
  • An even better way is to use Git or Mercurial :D but sometimes you won't have a choice about the IDE and the other tools used.
    – alexandrul
    Feb 3, 2010 at 21:31
  • @JesperE: he mentions he's using a Subversion-aware IDE plugin. Feb 3, 2010 at 22:49
  • 1
    @Sander Rijken : unless the history is preserved and then you see deleted and added (+) in the commit dialog
    – alexandrul
    Feb 4, 2010 at 10:12
  • 1
    It was that dang "Stop on copy/rename" Checkbox Option after Right-Clicking and selecting "Show Log" History on the File. Once I Unchecked it, it finally showed me the entire History of the file. Was going crazy because I Renamed it using the Context-Menus and thought it still wasn't working. Thank you so much!
    – MikeTeeVee
    Aug 12, 2020 at 22:38
10

Right Click on the file > TortoiseSVN > Rename.

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  • 2
    visualsvn tag and the question might indicate that he already renamed with visualsvn, if that's the case it's correctly added (with history )/deleted (that's what a Subversion rename is) Feb 3, 2010 at 22:48
5

The history is not erased by doing a rename from the TortoiseSVN Context Menu. If you want to see the changes from before the rename, make sure you don't use the --stop-on-copy flag when looking at the change log:

svn log -v -r 0:N --limit 100 [--stop-on-copy] PATH
  or
svn log -v -r M:N [--stop-on-copy] PATH

see here for reference: http://tortoisesvn.net/docs/release/TortoiseSVN_en/tsvn-cli-main.html

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  • Thank you @Mike! We had a case where our root was renamed a couple of times, so it seemed that manual diff-by-url would be the only solution. (Blame is a bit painful for long files.) Ensuring in TortoiseSvn that stop on copy was unchecked worked like a charm. Then one can choose start/end revisions in Show Log, Compare Revisions, See the list of files, and Double-click to diff. May 1, 2012 at 17:16
3

The file's history will not be erased. Previous commits won't be affected. However, you can use svn move to properly move the file.

1

For file operations like moving and renaming I normally prefer to use the TortoiseSVN Repo Browser, followed by a local SVN Update. Of course that's only appropriate if you want your operation to be committed to the repository straight away.

0

A delete and add with history is the expected thing to happen when renaming a file in Subversion. History is not lost.

VisualSvn and AnkhSvn both capture the events from Visual Studio that a file is being renamed, and do the right thing.

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