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I did a checkout from my trunk to a local DIR and made lots of local changes there. Now I don't want to commit it back to the trunk, but I'd rather make a branch from this local version. Is that possible?

Can I just copy the trunk to a branch, and then cd DIR and svn switch to the branch?

UPDATE: Thanks for the answers, it worked! To summarize the steps:

  • cd DIR
  • svn copy . new-branch-URL
  • svn switch new-branch-URL .

(note the dots)

2
  • yes you can. I use tortoiseSVN and you can do it in that.
    – Nick
    Aug 20, 2009 at 21:10
  • I found too many conflict by using svn switch, so I chose to checkout the fresh copy from new-branch-URL after svn copy.
    – fikr4n
    Mar 17, 2013 at 2:41

4 Answers 4

52

The SVN Book (http://svnbook.red-bean.com/en/1.6/svn-book.html#svn.branchmerge.using.create) doesn't recommend creating a branch from the local working copy.

While it's also possible to create a branch by using svn copy to duplicate a directory within the working copy, this technique isn't recommended. It can be quite slow, in fact! Copying a directory on the client side is a linear-time operation, in that it actually has to duplicate every file and subdirectory within that working copy directory on the local disk.

Instead, create the branch first and then use the svn switch command so you can commit your changes. If your working copy is significantly out of date with the trunk then append "@REV" to the source URL where "REV" is the revision of your working copy reported by svn info.

Copying a directory on the server, however, is a constant-time operation, and it's the way most people create branches.

$ svn copy http://svn.example.com/repos/calc/trunk \
           http://svn.example.com/repos/calc/branches/my-calc-branch \
      -m "Creating a private branch of /calc/trunk."
4
  • 2
    Thanks for this answer. This is the better solution as it maintains the revision history.
    – evanflash
    Jan 20, 2012 at 20:43
  • 3
    Does that mean if I had changes in my local working copy, I could do svn copy <trunk-URL> <newBranch-URL> to copy the trunk to a new branch on the svn server, then use svn switch in my working copy to switch to the new branch without losing any changes? Or would the switch kill my uncommitted modified files?
    – Kasapo
    Sep 14, 2012 at 16:22
  • 3
    @Kasapo, yes that's right. and also note if you're out of date with the trunk; if so, add "@REV" to the source URL as I noted so that after you switch to the branch only your local changes show up as differences.
    – Lucas
    Nov 8, 2012 at 4:07
  • Let me just add a very useful link that explains in more detail Lucas' solution: svnbook.red-bean.com/en/1.6/svn.branchmerge.switchwc.html (look at the informative box on the bottom). This is indeed the cleanest and most convenient solution to create a branch from local modifications.
    – Spiros
    Aug 14, 2014 at 13:57
39

According to its command line help svn copy can copy from a directory to a repository URL. So you should be able to copy your working copy to the branch, e.g.:

svn copy working_directory url_to_branch
9

In my SVN client: TortoiseSVN it is enough to:

  • right click on the top directory I want to branch
  • in "To URL" select the branch directory in your repository
  • in the frame "Create copy in the repository from:" select "Working copy"

done :)

It is just like copying local version to specified repository url.

1

Yes, you can do this by SVN commandline as well as tortoiseSVN.

You have to specify your SVN workingcopy as src and your new branch as destination of the

svn copy <file/path/to/working/copy> <URL/TO/REPOSITORY/BRANCH>

command.

In TortoiseSVN just point into your working copy, choose "Branch/tag" from contextmenu and choose "Working copy" in the section "Create copy in the repository from:"

Note that it is not a good idea (for traceability reasons )to create tags in such a way, but for branches it is perfectly fine.

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