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I'm having trouble trying to checkout a repo using the following syntax on a Windows 7 workstation with TortoiseSvn:

svn co svn+ssh://user@ip/repo .

What I've done to test this issue:

  • Modified the network settings of TortoiseSvn to point to ..\TortoisePlink.exe
  • Successfully established an ssh connection to the target machine with no issues
  • Successfully checked out repos from workstations running Ubuntu with OpenSsh

When I try to do the above syntax from the command line on the Windows 7 workstation I get the error:

svn: E720087: Unable to connect to a repository at URL 'svn+ssh:///user@ip/repo'
svn: E720087: Can't create tunnel:The parameter is incorrect.

Interestingly, if I use the tortoise gui to browse to the repo I can successfully open and check out the repo. But I need to do it from the command line for scripting purposes.

Any suggestions?

5 Answers 5

46

For svn+ssh to work with Tortoise, make sure %SVN_SSH% is set to your ssh client (probably plink.exe from Tortoise or Putty) and the path must be written either with forward slashes / or with escaped backslashes \\.

Try to set %SVN_SSH% with the absolute path of plink while escaping the backslashes, something like C:\\Program Files\\TortoiseSVN\\bin\\TortoisePlink.exe instead of ..\TortoisePlink.exe

2
  • I confirm this worked for me. Still, it's pretty stupid that with a normal path it's not working.
    – klodoma
    Mar 31, 2015 at 12:15
  • 3
    Thanks! svn+ssh broke for me in PhpStorm with upgrade to svn 1.8. The double-\ slashes in %SVN_SSH% did the trick for me on Win 10. Now working with loaded putty key both from cli and phpstorm. Dec 15, 2015 at 15:19
4

Check that the path to TortoisePlink is not corrupted in your Tortoise SVN config...

  1. Start > Program Files > Tortoise SVN > Settings
  2. Under General Settings, "Subversion configuration file:" click "Edit"
  3. This will open the config file in Notepad
  4. Scroll down to the [tunnels] section and check the value for ssh which should be uncommented, use double slashes etc - I had problems as there seemed to be a Unicode control code at the beginning of the path.
### On Windows, if you are specifying a full path to a command,
### use a forward slash (/) or a paired backslash (\\) as the
### path separator.  A single backslash will be treated as an
### escape for the following character. 
ssh = C\:\\Program Files\\TortoiseSVN\\bin\\TortoisePlink.exe
1
  • I do it and I could not access SVN anymore :(
    – Dong Thang
    Jan 21, 2019 at 3:54
3
  • Connect to server, using Plink, by hand. Define needed and correct (for you) startup-options of plink
  • Add this line (use tortoiseplink as windowless-plink) into %APPDATA%config file, [tunnels] section
1
  • Settings that I change in this file do not seem to affect the way the application work.
    – nullByteMe
    Apr 26, 2013 at 11:36
1

It also turns out the the line in the Tunnels section of the config file is case sensitive.

For example: sh = $SVN_SSH "C:/path/putty/plink.exe" -2 -C -i "C:/path/username/serversvn.ppk" might work

and

sh = $SVN_SSH "C:/path/PuTTY/plink.exe" -2 -C -i "C:/path/username/serversvn.ppk" won't work

1

I had a similar, but slightly different issue.

I tried connecting to our SSH+SVN server through Pycharm and it hung. Tried the regular way through windows right click, tortoiseSVN and got this same "Can't create tunnel" issue.

I believe this issue was created because I tried to connect to my repo via pycharm, which automatically created a tunnel line in the tortoise SVN config file.

I followed Kevin Sadler's answer, but just commented out the ssh line, and it was back to normal. Checkouts and commits were working again.

Kevin's answer:

Check that the path to TortoisePlink is not corrupted in your Tortoise SVN config...

  1. Start > Program Files > Tortoise SVN > Settings
  2. Under General Settings, "Subversion configuration file:" click "Edit"
  3. This will open the config file in Notepad
  4. Scroll down to the [tunnels] sections. Comment out the SSH line.

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