96

I created a branch of an SVN project called 'features', and now whenever I try to update said project, it brings with it a features folder, which contains another copy of the project from the branch.

Is there a way to remove the branch from the repository completely so that this doesn't happen any more?

0

7 Answers 7

113

Sure: svn rm the unwanted folder, and commit.

To avoid this situation in the future, I would follow the recommended layout for SVN projects:

  • Put your code in the /someproject/trunk folder (or just /trunk if you want to put only one project in the repository)
  • Created branches as /someproject/branches/somebranch
  • Put tags under /someproject/tags

Now when you check out a working copy, be sure to check out only trunk or some individual branch. Don't check everything out in one huge working copy containing all branches.1

1Unless you know what you're doing, in which case you know how to create shallow working copies.

67

For those using TortoiseSVN, you can accomplish this by using the Repository Browser (it's labeled "Repo-browser" in the context menu.)

context menu

Find the branch folder you want to delete, right-click it, and select "Delete."

deleting the folder

Enter your commit message, and you're done.

committing

1
  • Do a SVN Update to remove folders from your disk (if not deleted before removing branch) Apr 30, 2020 at 9:22
60

Assuming this branch isn't an external or a symlink, removing the branch should be as simple as:

svn rm branches/< mybranch >

svn ci -m "message"

If you'd like to do this in the repository then update to remove it from your working copy you can do something like:

svn rm http://< myurl >/< myrepo >/branches/< mybranch >

Then run:

svn update
1
  • 31
    from the book: "Deleting a URL, however, is immediate, so you have to supply a log message [with -m]" so svn rm -m message http://... and no update required
    – rymo
    Aug 30, 2012 at 21:42
14

You can also delete the branch on the remote directly. Having done that, the next update will remove it from your working copy.

svn rm "^/reponame/branches/name_of_branch" -m "cleaning up old branch name_of_branch"

The ^ is short for the URL of the remote, as seen in 'svn info'. The double quotes are necessary on Windows command line, because ^ is a special character.

This command will also work if you have never checked out the branch.

1
  • I used this from a Mac and it worked well! When I tried the top answer I got the response "'/local/path/to/repo/branches/branch-name' is not a working copy" so presumably I'd never managed to check out the branch I made Feb 3, 2020 at 23:45
4

Command to delete a branch is as follows:

svn delete -m "<your message>" <branch url>

If you wish to not fetch/checkout the entire repo, execute the following command on your terminal:

1) get the absolute path of the directory that will contain your working copy
> pwd
2) Start svn code checkout
> svn checkout <branch url> <absolute path from point 1>

The above steps will get you the files inside the branch folder and not the entire folder.

3

You can delete the features folder just like any other in your checkout then commit the change.

To prevent this in the future I suggest you follow the naming conventions for SVN layout.

Either give each project a trunk, branches, tags folder when they are created.

svn
+ project1
  + trunk
    + src
    + etc...
  + branches
    + features
      + src
      + etc...
  + tags
+ project2
  + trunk
  + branches
  + tags
3

From the working copy:

svn rm branches/features
svn commit -m "delete stale feature branch"

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