27

I've got a couple large checkouts where the .svn folder has become damaged so I'm getting and error, "Cleanup failed to process the following path.." And I can no longer commit or update files in that directory.

I'd just delete and do the checkout again but the whole directory is over a gig.

Is there a tool that will restore the .svn folders for specific folders without having to download everything?

I understand that it's going to have to download all the files in that one folder so that it can determine if they've been changed..but subdirectories with valid .svn folders should be fine.

Oh.. I'm a big fan of TortoiseSVN or the command line for linux.

Thoughts?

7 Answers 7

23

In case you have changes to the files, and cannot delete them, you can use the Subversion 1.5 feature that allows you to 'checkout with obstructions'.

Just delete the .svn directory in this directory and:
(you don't need to delete inside directories when using --depth files, thanks Eric)

In case the broken directory was the top directory of the working copy:

svn checkout --depth files --force REPOS WC

And if the directory above the broken one is still versioned run:

svn update --depth files --force WC

in that directory.
In both samples REPOS is the url in the repository that matches the broken directory, and WC is the path to the directory.

Files that were originally modified will be in the modified state after this.

1
  • I was able to avoid deleting the .svn folder in subdirectories by adding the "--depth files" siwtch to the checkout command. Could you edit the post to reflect that and maybe clarify the REPOS and WC text. Thanks! Sep 18, 2008 at 20:52
6

If you know which folder has the damaged .svn directory, you can just delete that one directory and run an svn update again. You may have to delete the whole directory including its current contents. Of course, if the folder with the damaged .svn directory is the one containing a gigabyte, then you're back where you started.

1
  • If you have subversion <1.5 I think this might be the only option.
    – nedned
    Nov 18, 2009 at 7:18
3

Make a backup of the folder that has the missing .svn

Then delete the folder

If it is the root of the checkout, you will have to re-checkout

If it is not the root, just run an update from a directory above.

Then move the backup folder on top of it. (Ideally do not move back the .svn folders)

Continue working and be sure to update/commit!

2

I've hit this in the past and found no working solution except the "nuclear option" (i.e. delete the directory and re-checkout).

Not sure if this is your problem, but my corruption was being caused by an on-access virus scanner on the same machine as SVN server.

1
  • I just did that with Tortoise. Make sure to update the repository url to match the path of your folder, since you are probably not going to be in root doing this.
    – Alex
    Apr 20, 2011 at 16:00
1

If the subdirectories and OK and it's the subdirectories that are large, you could try a non-recursive fresh checkout.

1

The selected solution worked for me to restore the top-level .svn folder, but it doesn't recognize the child objects, so everything seems foreign to SVN at this point, despite versioning being intact in subfolders.

0

I encountered the same error today. It happened when I tried to switch branches and fail to delete one of the file that is not in svn repository. After that, the folder was locked and I can't use any command to get it work again.

I basically deleted what I had and redo the checkout. It is time consuming, but I really want to make sure svn is clear before I can start working again. Thanks!

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.