Konstantin Kolinko wrote on Tue, Apr 03, 2012 at 03:17:12 +0400: > 2012/4/2 Daniel Shahaf <d...@daniel.shahaf.name>: > > s...@apache.org wrote on Mon, Apr 02, 2012 at 09:53:06 -0000: > >> Author: stsp > >> Date: Mon Apr 2 09:53:05 2012 > >> New Revision: 1308276 > >> > >> URL: http://svn.apache.org/viewvc?rev=1308276&view=rev > >> Log: > >> * site/publish/faq.html > >> (hidden-log): Mention the ^/ URL short cut here. > >> > >> Modified: > >> subversion/site/publish/faq.html > >> > >> Modified: subversion/site/publish/faq.html > >> URL: > >> http://svn.apache.org/viewvc/subversion/site/publish/faq.html?rev=1308276&r1=1308275&r2=1308276&view=diff > >> ============================================================================== > >> --- subversion/site/publish/faq.html (original) > >> +++ subversion/site/publish/faq.html Mon Apr 2 09:53:05 2012 > >> @@ -3508,7 +3508,12 @@ is still at r7, you do not see the log i > >> > >> <ol> > >> <li>Run '<tt>svn log -rHEAD</tt>'.</li> > >> -<li>Run '<tt>svn log URL</tt>', where URL is the repository > >> URL.</li> > >> +<li>Run '<tt>svn log URL</tt>', where URL is the repository URL. > >> + If the current directory is a working copy you can use <tt>^/</tt> > >> + as the URL to save some typing: <tt>svn log ^/</tt></li> > >> +<li>Run '<tt>svn log URL</tt>', where URL is the URL of the > >> + subdirectory you want to see the log for, for example: > > Two minor notes: > > 1. "^" serves as escape symbol in Windows command-line so there it > needs to be quoted. E.g. this works: svn log "^/" >
Let's just link to the book section that explains this. It covers escaping. > 2. I think it would be a good idea to always add "--limit N" to the log > command. +1