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kaklik |
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WHY WebSVN? |
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WebSVN offers a view onto your subversion repositories that's been designed |
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to reflect the Subversion methodology. You can view the log of any file or |
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directory and see a list of all the files changed, added or deleted in any |
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given revision. You can also view the differences between 2 versions of a |
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file so as to see exactly what was changed in a particular revision. |
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WebSVN offers the following features: |
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* Easy to use interface |
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* Highly customisable templating system |
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* Colourisation of file listings |
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* Blame view |
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* Log message searching |
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* Fast browsing thanks to internal caching feature |
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* Apache MultiViews support |
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* RSS feed support |
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Since it's written using PHP, WebSVN is also very portable and easy to install. |
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INSTALLATION |
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Grab the source and stick it somewhere that your server can get to. You |
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obviously need to have PHP installed and working. Also note that WebSVN |
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won't currently work in safe mode, due to the need to call svnlook. |
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You'll also need diff (preferably the GNU version; for Windows users I'd |
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recommend the Cygwin version) and svnlook available. |
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Rename distconfig.inc as config.inc (found in the includes directory)and then |
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edit it as directed in the file itself. |
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If everything has gone well, you should be able to view your projects by |
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pointing your browser at the index.php file. |
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For those of you wishing to customise the look and feel a little, you should |
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read templates.txt, which explains the highly configurable template system. |
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Windows users - note that some of the features offered by WebSVN, when |
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enabled, require the use of various external programs. They can be downloaded |
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from these locations: |
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Diff/Sed/Gzip/Tar: http://www.cygwin.com/ |
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Enscript: http://people.ssh.com/mtr/genscript/ |
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ACCENTED CHARACTERS |
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WebSVN is designed to worked with accented characters. To do this, it uses |
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the iconv function. This may not be installed on your system. If you aren't |
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getting the characters that you expect, make sure that the iconv module is |
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being loaded in php.ini. Windows users will need to copy the appropriate |
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DLLs to the system directory (from the PHP installation directory). |
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CACHING |
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In order to return results with a reasonable speed, WebSVN caches the results |
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of it's requests to svnlook. Under normal usage this works correctly since |
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it's not generally possible to change a revision with subversion. |
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That said, one case that may cause confusion is if someone changes the log |
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message of a given revision. WebSVN will have cached the previous log message |
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and won't know that there's a new one available. There are various solutions |
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to this problem: |
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1) Turn off caching in the config file. This will severely impede the |
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perfomance of WebSVN. |
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2) Change the post-revprop-change hook so that is deletes the contents of the |
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cache after any change to a revision property |
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3) Only allow the administrator to change revision properties. He can then |
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delete the cache by hand should this occur. |
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COLOURISATION |
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You can few files with syntax colouring if you have Enscript 1.6 or higher |
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installed on your system. You'll also need Sed. |
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Simply set the paths in the config file and then uncomment the line: |
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$config->useEnscript(); |
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MULTIVIEWS |
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You may choose to configure access to your repository via Apache's MultiView |
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system. This will enable you to access a respositoy using a url such as: |
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http://servername/wsvn/repname/path/in/repository |
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To do this you must: |
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- Place wsvn.php where you want to. Normally you place it such that it's |
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accessible straight after the servername, as shown above. |
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- Configure the parent directory of wsvn.php to use MultiViews (see Apache |
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docs). |
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- Change config.inc to include the line $config->useMultiViews(); |
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- Change the paths configured at the beginning of the wsvn.php script. |
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Now go to http://servername/wsvn/ and make sure that you get the index page. |
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The repname part of the URL is the name given to it in the config.inc file. |
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For this reason you may wish to avoid putting spaces in the name. |
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MULTIVIEWS EXAMPLE |
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First, you must get the Multiviews option working. In my set up, my Apache |
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directory root is set to a location on my harddrive: |
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DocumentRoot "D:/svnpage" |
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In that directory, I have WebSVN installed in a directory called websvn. |
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Normally WebSVN would be accessed by http://servername/websvn |
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wsvn.php in then copied from the WebSVN installation to the document root |
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directory and the variables at the beginning of the script configured as |
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follows (based on your own directory locations, obviously): |
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// Location of websvn directory via HTTP |
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// |
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// e.g. For http://servername/websvn use /websvn |
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// |
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// Note that wsvn.php need not be in the /websvn directory (and normally isn't). |
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$locwebsvnhttp = "/websvn"; |
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// Physical location of websvn directory |
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$locwebsvnreal = "d:/svnpage/websvn"; |
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Next, turn on Multiviews in the WebSVN config.inc file: |
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$config->useMultiViews(); |
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Finally, Apache needs to know that you want to enable MultiViews for the root |
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directory. This can be done by including this line in the directory's |
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.htaccess file (assuming that the appropriate AllowOverrides directive is set |
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up): |
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Options MultiViews |
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If all has gone well, repositories should now by accessible by |
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http://servername/wsvn/repname |
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Note the index page can be accessed through http://servername/wsvn |
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If you want to view the index page by http://servername/ you need to |
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add another directive to the .htaccess file: |
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DirectoryIndex wsvn.php |
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ACCESS RIGHTS AND AUTHENTICATION |
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You may wish to provide an authentication mechanism for WebSVN. One obvious |
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solution is to protect the entire WebSVN directory with some form of Apache |
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authentication mechanism, but that doesn't allow for per repository |
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authentication. |
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WebSVN provides and access rights mechanism that uses your SVN access file to |
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control read access to the repository. This means that you only have to |
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maintain one file to define both Subversion and WebSVN access rights. |
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For this to work, you need to configure your authentication method to the /WebSVN/ |
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(or /wsvn/) directory. This should be the same authentication as you use for |
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the svn repositories themselves. Here's an example using SSPI: |
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<Location /WebSVN/> |
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AuthType SSPI |
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SSPIAuth On |
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SSPIAuthoritative On |
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SSPIDomain IMAJEMAIL |
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SSPIOfferBasic On |
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Require valid-user |
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</Location> |
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Note the use of the / after /WebSVN/ in the location directive. If you use |
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<Location /WebSVN> then you won't be able to access the index. |
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You should change /WebSVN/ to /wsvn/ if you're using multiviews. |
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Also note that you shouldn't use the AuthzSVNAccessFile command to define the |
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access file. |
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Now that you've defined your authentication, you'll be asked for your user name |
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and password in order to access the WebSVN directory. All that's left is to |
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configure WebSVN to use your Subversion access file to control access. Add this |
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line to your config.inc file: |
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$config->useAuthenticationFile("/path/to/accessfile"); |
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Note that if your access file gives read access to, for example, path /a/b/c/ but |
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not to /a/b/, then the user will be given restricted access to /a/b/ in order to |
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reach /a/b/c/. The user will not be able to see any other files or directories in |
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/a or /a/b/. |
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You should read the Subversion book for information on the access file format. |
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COMMON PROBLEMS |
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1) On a Windows machine, this error is reported: |
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Warning: shell_exec(): Unable to execute |
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If you experience this problem, you need to give IUSR_<machinename> execute |
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permissions on %systemroot%\system32\cmd.exe. Under most systems, the file will |
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be C:\WINDOWS\system32\cmd.exe. |
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Right-click on the file, choose properties, and on the security tab click |
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the "Add" button. Add the IUSR_<machinename> user, and then select the |
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"read" and "read & execute" boxes. |
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LICENCE |
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GNU Public licence. |