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I am working on a project currently on SVN. I however will not have access to the internet for a few days, and will be working on my project.

Is there any way to make a clone of the repository on my local machine, commit changes to it, and when I gain access to the internet "push" them onto the shared repository? Thinking in terms of Mercurial here, is it worth migrating completely?!

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  • 8
    Because he wants to do offline commits of the changes instead of one big changeset all at the end. Feb 8, 2011 at 14:35
  • because I commit on small changes and hence would need to commit on my repository while travelling ... and hence would need a local repository (probably the cloned one) to commit to.
    – Karan
    Feb 8, 2011 at 14:37

6 Answers 6

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Your problem sounds to me like the use case for git-svn:

  • set up your Git repo: git svn clone http://svn.example.com/project/trunk
  • while being online, commit your changes to SVN
  • before going offline, do a git svn rebase to get your Git repo in sync with the SVN repo
  • while being offline, commit to the Git repo using git commit
  • when getting back online again, do a git svn dcommit to push your changes back to the SVN repo

I'm using this workflow daily!

You get two huge advantages doing so:

  • your complete SVN history is backed up in the Git repo and in every Git repo that gets cloned from that one
  • while being offline, you can view the commit messages, checkout other branches, etc.
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    +1 Yes, this is exactly what git-svn was made for. I started using git for this exact reason, and it works great.
    – sleske
    Mar 30, 2012 at 9:07
  • 6
    What if, say, I have the SVN checked out copy locally. Now I do not have access to the server. Now I want the same thing as above and also create a new branch. Is it possible?
    – karim
    Nov 11, 2013 at 14:14
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Ridiculous answer would be to migrate to another versioning tool, no offence!

I had the exact issue.
Been using SVN on my "real" server where the "real" repository is.
When I went out with my laptop, without internet I would simply duplicate the "real" repository on this laptop (VisualSVN + TortoiseSVN), work on it, change/commit whatever, and when come back simply "sync" the new 'revision' files to the "real" repository.

To be a bit more clear: Have two SVN servers, one locally on your laptop (the clone) and one on your "real" server (obviously). Just sync between the two.

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    This works only as long as on any point in time only one server receives new changesets. This scheme breaks if at the same time when you are offline and commit changes to your clone, someone commits changes to the same paths in the original repo.
    – Rudi
    Feb 9, 2011 at 8:46
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    how do you sync two svn clones? As @Rudi said, what if somone else commits to the original repo?
    – Karan
    Feb 24, 2012 at 11:17
  • 1
    My approach assumes you're the sole committer. Otherwise it could break as Rudi suggests.
    – Poni
    Mar 29, 2012 at 15:10
  • ... and I sync the two svn clones by copying files, simply.
    – Poni
    Mar 29, 2012 at 15:10
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    That sounds like dangerous advice. You are essentially (badly) reimplementing a DVCS on to of Subversion.
    – sleske
    Mar 30, 2012 at 9:08
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I've been using git on a project that uses SVN for the same reason you describe above. There is some getting used to git/mercurial but after a while I really like the new approach. Further I never had any issues with using git-svn, never have tried mercurial and svn..

If you are onto Mercurial and are still looking for a good tutorial with one or two chuckles in between check out this tutorial written by Joel Spolsky. And as mentioned before, surely is a great opportunity to get started with DVCS.

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You can access svn repositories with mercurial.

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Disclaimer: I'm the author of SOS (SVN Offline Support).

I wrote this easy to use command-line tool to solve exactly the problem of working with SVN offline, but it works not only within SVN checkouts, but for any VCS working copy (e.g. Bazaar, Git, fossil), or even in untracked file trees. SOS allows simple commits, branching, switch/update operations, without all the complex semantic background knowledge required by traditional VCS. After coming back online, you can integrate all changes back to your underlying VCS.

Website

Installation requires Python 3, and is handled via pip install -U sos-vcs

Update

While I still use SOS it daily, the code became an unmaintainable mess requiring a major rewrite. The idea is still valid and may serve as inspiration for similar projects.

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  • Hi, the offline website seems to be offline Could you please let us know how it works / how to configure / where to get it (do you have any git public repo?)
    – smilyface
    Dec 30, 2021 at 8:30
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    I updated the link in my post to the Github project.
    – user384018
    Dec 31, 2021 at 9:41
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There's always SVK as well. I haven't used it in years though, so I'm not sure of how well it works anymore.

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