Jens-Uwe Mager has prepared some installation files which should help you to install subversion on your computer.
If you're just getting started with subversion, here's a simple how-to. For complete information, you can go read the subversion guide.
Download and install the appropriate installation file of subversion above.
For linux:
download the tarball. unzip and untar it. Then type ./configure. Then, as root, make followed by make install. Voila ... a subversion client.
For Debian users:
$ apt-get install subversion-tools
People using Debian stable first need to add the following line to /etc/apt/sources.list (thanks backports!):
deb http://fs.cs.fhm.edu/mirror/backports.org/debian stable subversion
Note that you can always go look at the files online with your browser, located at: http://codespeak.net/svn/pypy/dist But, you'll want to check out your own local copies to work on.
There are currently two directories you'll want to check out: /src and /doc In order to get the sourcecode and docs downloaded onto your drive, open a shell or commandline and type:
$ svn co http://codespeak.net/svn/pypy/dist $ svn co http://codespeak.net/svn/pypy/extradoc
If you are behind a dump proxy this may or may not work; see below.
Once you've got the files checked out to your own system, you can use your favorite text editor to change to files. Be sure to read the coding-guide and other documentation files before doing a lot of work on the source code. Before doing any work, make sure you're using the most recent update with:
$ svn up
this will update whichever subdirectory you're in (doc or src).
When you're ready to check in a file,
cd to your local checked out sourcecode directory, and if necessary, copy the file over from wherever you worked on it:
$ cp ~/mydir/filename.ext filename.ext
If you're adding a brand-new file:
$ svn add filename.ext
Then, to commit it:
$ svn ci -m "your comments about what changes your committing" $ your password: (this may not be necessary)
You'll see something like the following:
Adding goals/stringcomp.py Transmitting file data . Committed revision 578.
or:
Sending coding-guide.txt Transmitting file data . Committed revision 631.
Check online on the svn-commit archives and you'll see your revision. Feel free to add a documentation file on any major changes you've made!
Be sure to remember ``svn`` in the commandline in the following commands.
Some proxies don't let extended HTTP commands through. If you have an error complaining about a bad request, you should use https: instead of http: in the subversion URL. This will make use of SSL encryption, which cannot be intercepted by proxies.
Alternatively, if you want to change your proxy configuration, see the subversion FAQ: http://subversion.tigris.org/faq.html#proxy
We will assume that whenever you create a .txt or a .py file, you would like other people to be able to read it with the line endings their OS prefers, even if that is different from the one your OS likes. This could occasionally be wrong -- say when you are specifically testing that code you are writing handles line endings properly -- but this is what you want by default. Binary files, on the other hand, should be stored exactly as is. This has to be set on every client. Here is how:
In your home directory edit .subversion/config and comment in
[miscellany] enable-auto-props = yes [auto-props] *.txt = svn:eol-style=native *.py = svn:eol-style=native