vote up 2 vote down star
1

This should be a really simple question but somehow I cannot find the answer to it. My apologies if I have missed something blindingly obvious.

I am writing a script which will add a new project in the repository, based on the name supplied by the user. Part of this involves checking that an url with the same name does not already exist on the repository.

In the repository, all the projects of our team are stored in

https://developernetwork.repo.net/svn/Projects/

Let's say that the user wants to call the project "Calculator" and runs the script. In this case, we need to ensure that the following does not already exist in the repository

https://developernetwork.repo.net/svn/Projects/Calculator/

Is there an svn command which I can use to accomplish that? Unfortunately I cannot see an appropriate command I can use in the svn documentation (http://svnbook.red-bean.com/en/1.0/svn-book.html) at all.

Thank you.

flag

50% accept rate
The documentation you link to is way out of date, for svn 1.0. Read svnbook.red-bean.com/nightly/en/index.html for the latest docs. – wcoenen May 15 at 18:44

2 Answers

vote up 2 vote down check

You can just use

svn ls https://developernetwork.repo.net/svn/Projects/Calculator/

It will tell you if the repository(directory) exist or not.

link|flag
This works. If the directory does not exist I get the following error: svn: URL 'developernetwork.repo.net/svn/Projects/… ' non-existent in that revision. That should be a good enough search string. Just out of interest, is there a better way for the script to analyse the results than searching the text output for a "non-existent in that revision" match? – Andy May 15 at 13:11
As suggested in the other comment, searching for 'non-existent' might not be ideal as the error msg changes from version to version, e.g. svn 1.6.1 has changed the error msg to 'svn: No repository found in 'svn+ssh://'. However, parsing xml is not reliable as of svn 1.6.1, if the repository doesn't exsit, it WILL return an incomplete xml which is not parsable. That would make it worse. The best way I can think probably is just to check if the original repository url you sent in is in the return msg. It seems to be guranteed that it will get returned if something went wrong. – Liwen May 16 at 12:38
Thank you. Having to analyse the text output of commands is one of the least enjoyable aspects of scripting, but it has to be done. I will check for the repository url in the return message then. – Andy May 19 at 14:35
vote up 1 vote down

To receive information about any existing repository (e.g. for possibly enriching an error message) you could also use

svn info https://developernetwork.repo.net/svn/Projects/Calculator/

For a non-existing project it will just return

svn: Could not open the requested SVN filesystem
link|flag
Actually, my version of Slik SVN returned: developernetwork.repo.net/svn/Projects/… : (Not a valid URL) svn: A problem occurred; see other errors for details However, "Not a valid URL" should be good enough search string. Just out of interest, is there a better way for the script to analyse the results than searching the text output for a "Not a valid URL" string? – Andy May 15 at 13:09
Given the different possible error messages different build of svn might give, you should consider to parse the output string for a positive pattern rather than a negative. That is, test for the occurrence of something you won't get when the repo does NOT exist. Here, CollabNet SVN 1.6.1 (Windows) provides the ability to turn on xml output via the --xml parameter. Personally I'd just check for the existence of the UUID element, that should be included in any info data (correct me if not). – AlexH May 15 at 14:27
Thank you. We do not even have server 1.5.0 running yet, so I will note down your comment and put this in the to-do list. – Andy May 15 at 14:56

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.