vote up -4 vote down star

Hi All,

Changed the question here ... I have the Five huge repositories of approximate size of 5 GB each in Subversion 1.4.6 We should migrate the Repository to Visual SVN 1.6.4 in windows.

But we don't have enough space in windows to keep huge repositories.

So we are loading only last 200 revisions from all the old Repsotories 1.4.6 to Repositories to 1.6.4. The Repositories will be used by many people so the size will grow faster.

Is there any way , so that in the Repositories of Visual SVN 1.6.4 to store only last updated 100 revisions history always so that the size of repository will not increase faster.

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Why not just buy a new drive so you can use the source control the way it's meant to be used? – 280Z28 Sep 1 at 7:09
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I have to say, this sounds like an absolutely terrible idea. Discarding part of the history when migrating isn't good, though it's sort of understandable. But planning on keeping only 100 revisions as an ongoing process seems like a recipe for disaster. If you've got a significant number of files that are changed independently then you're unlikely to have even a single delta for lots of those files. Seriously, can't you just buy a bigger disk? 25 GB of repository doesn't sound that big. – therefromhere Sep 1 at 7:26
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Also, please don't change your question to something completely different - just ask a new one. – therefromhere Sep 1 at 7:27

5 Answers

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Have a look at the Visual SVN version history

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vote up 2 vote down

I'm not sure what those versions represent (they don't seem to represent VisualSVN's versions), but:

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vote up 2 vote down

VisualSVN's version history should be of help.

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vote up -1 vote down

This starts to be a little of a "stupid" question as all you need to do is RTM! in other words, the version history of both VisualSVN and off course Subversion itself, witch as you probably know - well, it is logical - it's the main source where all SVN Clients base their applications.

Regarding the Advantages and Disadvantages... this is kind'a: Can you do my homework, as I wrote above... all you need to do is RTM!

hope it clears what you really need to do :)

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Just because the answer is obvious doesn't mean you need to insult the person... – RCIX Sep 1 at 6:40
there is no insult what so ever ... just a point to Read the manual! – balexandre Sep 1 at 6:56
removed the F letter... hope it is better now. – balexandre Sep 1 at 7:19
Better, removed downvote. Still a little insulting with calling it a "stupid" question and such, 3 other people managed to phrase it nicely. – RCIX Sep 1 at 7:34
it had quotes :) so it's to be read more as silly than stupid. – balexandre Sep 1 at 12:45
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At the current $/GB ratio, even asking this question here might be a waste of money. For heaven's sake, buy a new drive, or three if you must, and be done. That can't take much so longer than asking here, and it surely takes longer than every scheme you or anyone else might come up to do what you want.

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