On Thu, Jun 28, 2007 at 04:44:10PM -0600, Chad Perrin wrote: > On Thu, Jun 28, 2007 at 03:10:18PM -0700, Christopher Cowart wrote: > > On Thu, Jun 28, 2007 at 03:45:50PM -0600, Chad Perrin wrote: > > > I'm attempting to connect to a Subversion repository via SSH using a > > > nonstandard port to check out the repository. The names and numbers in > > > the following have been changed to protect the guilty: > > > > > > svn co svn+ssh://[EMAIL PROTECTED]:1234/usr/home/svn-repos/project > > > project > > > > Try: > > > > SVN_SSH="ssh -p 1234" svn co svn+ssh://[EMAIL PROTECTED]/path > > Are you suggesting setting an environment variable? I have more than one > repository checked out on this system, and they do not all use the same > port for access.
This is the only way I know to do it. You don't have to set it in your shell's environment if you use this syntax to prefix the specific command. > > > The result I get is as follows: > > > > > > ssh: 123.45.678.90:1234: hostname nor servname provided, or not known > > > svn: Connection closed unexpectedly > > > > > > Am I having a brainless moment here? What am I missing? > > > > ssh doesn't support the hostname:port syntax. You have to use -p. > > > > Hope that helps, > > I thought that might be the case, but I'm not sure how to specify it in > the svn command string -- which seems to be necessary since making a > universal (to this user account) configuration change would then break > access to other svn repositories. You can also create a "new" tunneling protocol. Look at the "SSH authentication and authorization" section of this part of the handbook: http://svnbook.red-bean.com/en/1.0/ch06s03.html Good luck, -- Chris Cowart Lead Systems Administrator Network Infrastructure, RSSP-IT UC Berkeley
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