One might say that svn://
or svn+ssh://
provide far better performance and speed than plain HTTP or secure HTTPS when accessing Subversion repositories, but this is not true nowadays. While svn://
or svn+ssh://
are faster than HTTP(S), the difference is not that large as it was with SVN 1.6 or older versions.
There are no major performance problems with HTTP(S) and up-to-date Subversion 1.7+ clients and servers.
HTTP(S) access with Subversion 1.7 became much more performant and especially on high-latency network connections thanks to HTTPv2 (do not confuse with HTTP/2!). Subversion 1.8 switched from libneon
to libserf
for HTTP(S) access and libserf
provides better performance than libneon
.
If there is some problem which you think is related to performance of HTTP(S) or Subversion working over HTTP(S), you should investigate whether there are any services on your network that make HTTP(S) slow. The root cause could be an antivirus, active firewall or proxy. Not to mention a misconfigured network settings. And don't forget to use up-to-date Subversion clients and servers!
Thinking of example of network misconfiguration, it seems that there is a pretty common problem which affects client computers working on disconnected networks that have no access to Windows Update site (http://ctldl.windowsupdate.com/). This is a critical problem that affects a wide range of system services, but end users notice and report it when using Subversion clients over HTTPS. The problem looks like it is related to performance, but it is not. Read this StackOverflow thread for more information: https://stackoverflow.com/a/38499619/761095.