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I've always found checkin mails to be very useful for keeping track of what work other people are doing in the codebase. How do I set up SVN to email a distribution list on each checkin?

Edit: I'm running clients on Windows and the server on Linux. The answers below for various platforms will likely be useful to other people though.

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10 Answers

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You use the post-commit hooks. Here's a guide: http://builddeploy.blogspot.com/2008/01/implementing-subversion-post-commit.html

Here's a sample script that sends an email after each commit: commit-email.rb

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You'll want to familiarize yourself with repository hooks, particularly the post-commit hook

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What platform?

On Mac OS X I have installed msmtp and created a post-commit script under hooks in the repository. A .msmtprc file needs to be setup for the svn (or www) user.

REPOS="`echo $1 | sed 's/\/{root of repository}//g'` "
REV="$2"
MSG=`/usr/local/bin/svn log -v -r HEAD https://localhost$REPOS`

/usr/local/bin/msmtp {list of recipents} <<EOF
Subject: SVN-Commit $REPOS#$REV
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8Bit

$MSG
EOF

Make {root of repository} and {list of recipents} specific for your needs. Note I have used UTF8 because we have some special characters here in sweden (åäö)

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There is a (large) example written in Perl included in the Subversion source (it can be viewed here).

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Have a look at Subversion Notify (Windows only)

http://sourceforge.net/projects/svn-notify/

http://www.subversionnotify.com/

It can do emailing on commit and also much more!

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There's a related question here on post-commit hooks. Personally, I prefer to send a message to something I can get an RSS feed from, as an email-per-commit would overload my inbox pretty quickly.

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Seconding @Matt Miller on RSS feeds.

There's a useful tool called WebSVN that offers RSS feeds of every repository and individual branches/tags/folders with full commit messages. It's also a great web interface for quickly looking at file histories and commits/diffs without having to run an update and open your editor of choice.

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As someone else said, 'what platform'. On Windows I've used 'blat', which is a freebie command line SMTP mailer to do this, along with a post-commit and another batch file.

The post commit looks like this: (Just calls another batch file)

 call d:\subversion\repos\rts\hooks\mail %1 %2

And mail.bat looked like this:

copy d:\subversion\repos\RTS\hooks\Commitmsg.txt %temp%\commit.txt
copy d:\subversion\repos\RTS\hooks\subjbase.txt %temp%\subject.txt
svnlook info -r %2 %1 >> %temp%\commit.txt
echo Revision %2 >> %temp%\commit.txt
svnlook changed -r %2 %1 >> %temp%\commit.txt
svnlook author -r %2 %1 >> %temp%\subject.txt
c:\utils\blat %temp%\commit.txt -t <me@my.email.com> -sf %temp%\subject.txt -server ServerName -f "SVN Admin <svn@my.email.com>" -noh2

The biggest gotcha in writing SVN hooks is that you might have basically NO environment set-up - no exe path, no temp path, etc. Though maybe that's improved in more recent SVN builds.

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I use a post-commit script similar to this one

It's sends a nice HTML email. I updated it some where it highlights code that was removed in red and highlights code that was added in blue.

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You could use buildbot. It's a tool that can take arbitrary action whenever a check-in occurs. It's a full featured continuous integration system but if you just want emails it can certainly handle that. It has plug-ins for a variety of SCMs including SVN.

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