wiki:SVN_Basics

Version 3 (modified by Anna Tomanek, 13 years ago) (diff)

Text enhancement and proof-reading. Links updated.

SVN Basics

Subversion (SVN) is a version control system. It is designed to be distributed, concurrent, and expandable.

Version Control with Subversion is a wonderful book to help you take the first steps into the world of Subversion. You may also ready it online.

SVN Client

To work on the CKEditor SVN, you need an SVN client software. There are two options that we recommend:

Checkout the CKEditor Trunk

Checkout is the act of downloading the CKEditor code from our SVN server into a local folder on your computer. This folder is called a "local copy".

With TortoiseSVN

  1. Create an empty folder, which will be your local copy root. You may give it any name you wish, like ckeditor.
  1. Right-click the new folder and select SVN Checkout.
  1. In the URL field for the repository paste the following URL:
http://svn.ckeditor.com/CKEditor/trunk/

With SVN

  1. In the command line go to the folder where you want your local copy to reside in.
  1. Type the following to checkout the trunk:
svn checkout http://svn.ckeditor.com/CKEditor/trunk/ ckeditor

Your local copy will be found in the ckeditor folder.

Updating your Local Copy

At any moment you may update your local copy to grab the code changes introduced in the repository since the checkout or the last update call.

With TortoiseSVN

  1. Right-click your local copy folder.
  1. Select SVN Update.

With SVN

  1. In the command line go to your local copy folder.
  1. Type:
svn update

Creating Patches

Suppose you are working to provide a fix for a ticket, for example ticket number 240. The first thing to check is that your local copy is fresh, so start with updating it (see above).

Then start coding inside your local copy. You can do any kind of change. All the changes will be done locally on your computer and nothing will automatically end up in the SVN server. This means that you can safely play with the code.

Once you have completed your code and properly tested your changes you may return your changes back to the SVN, so they will be available to everybody. At that point you create a patch file to attach to the ticket.

With TortoiseSVN

  1. Right-click your local copy folder.
  1. Select Create patch.
  1. TortoiseSVN will list all files that have been changed. You may select the files that are relevant to the patch. Remember that each patch must be relative to a single ticket or feature. Do not mix ticket fixes or several different features.
  1. Click "OK" to save the patch file with the appropriate name. If the patch is supposed to fix a ticket, just use the ticket number for it, like 240.patch.

The patch file is now ready to be attached to the ticket.

With SVN

  1. In the command line go to your local copy folder.
  1. Type the following (suppose you are creating a patch file for ticket 240):
svn diff > 240.patch

The patch file is now ready to be attached to the ticket.

Applying Patches

Suppose you have a fresh local copy of the CKEditor trunk repository and you want to apply a patch found in one of our tickets.

With TortoiseSVN

  1. Right-click your local copy folder.
  1. Select Apply patch.
  1. Select the patch file. You will be presented with the "Diff" tool, so you can review all changes.
  1. In the "File patches" window list, right-click and select "Patch all".

With SVN

The official SVN program does not include a built-in command to apply patches. To do that, you can use the regular patch Unix utility:

patch -p0 < patch_file

You may also find a Windows port for the patch program.

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