I have a .bat and inside the .bat i would like to execute a special code if there's some modification inside the svn repository (for example, compile).
5 Answers
For Win 2000 and later, this would assign the last output row from the svn status commmand to the svnOut variable and then test if the variable contains anything:
@echo off
set svnOut=
set svnDir=C:Your\path\to\svn\dir\to\check
for /F "tokens=*" %%I in ('svn status %svnDir%') do set svnOut=%%I
if "%svnOut%"=="" (
echo No changes
) else (
echo Changed files!
)
Why there is a line like this
set svnOut=
you have to figure out yourself. ;-)
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In fact, it doesn't work. For example, svn status returns some line with: ? files M files2 that are local modification or files that are not in the repository. I only want to have see "Changed files" when there s some repository changes.– acemtpOct 3, 2008 at 14:27
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Then I am not sure I understand what you want to do here... Do you want to perform a svn update, and if something has changed in the svn server repository, you want to perform a build with the new code? Or is it if something has been modified locally you want to rebuild? If 1: What about conflicts?– TooonyOct 3, 2008 at 15:24
Have your .bat execute svnversion
(if you're using Subversion) or SvnWCRev.exe
(if you're using TortoiseSVN) against the top-most level of your working copy.
Both output if your working copy has been modified.
svnversion
appends a "M" to its output.
SvnWCRev.exe
will print a line of text that the WC has been modified.
Ok, the solution I found with the help of Tooony:
set vHEAD = 0
set vBASE = 0
set svnDir=<path to local svn directory>
for /F "tokens=1,2" %%I in ('svn info -r HEAD %svnDir%') do if "%%I"=="Revision:" set vHEAD=%%J
for /F "tokens=1,2" %%I in ('svn info -r BASE %svnDir%') do if "%%I"=="Revision:" set vBASE=%%J
if "%vBASE%"=="%vHEAD%" (
echo No changes
) else (
echo Changed files!
)
Are you wanting this to be reactive? Or, on-demand?
For reactive, see hooks. The script will have to be named according to it's purpose: pre-commit.bat, post-commit.bat. The scripts are called as: [script] [repos-path] [revision-number]
For, on-demand:
- Working Copy
- svn log
- svn st
- svn diff
- svn proplist
- Repository
- svnlook author
- svnlook changed
- svnlook date
- svnlook diff
- svnlook history
Example:
svn st "C:\path\to\working\directory\" >> C:\path\to\working\project.log
Every time you run the BAT, it'll add the st output to project.log. Adjust as needed.
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It on demand. I know the svn command (it s easy to find them eveyrwhere). The question is to know how to use that in a .bat script– acemtpOct 3, 2008 at 12:14
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I don't want to put the status into a log file :) I want the code of the .bat that do something like: if(svn_changed()) do this else do that– acemtpOct 3, 2008 at 12:37
This version is based on @tooony's but checks the server for updates instead of the client.
@echo off
set svnOut=
rem Check svn server status of current working directory repository and see if first or second token is an *
for /F "tokens=1" %%I in ('svn status --show-updates') do if "%%I"=="*" set svnOut=%%I
rem echo "%svnOut%"
if "%svnOut%"=="" (
echo No changes
) else (
echo Changed files!
)