The folks at Google wrote this:
"If the repository was accessible in your browser and not via the svn
client, I'll bet that the AV program just didn't understand DAV HTTP
traffic."
Once I upgraded Kaspersky AV to its latest version, the issue went away
so it looks like some other Kaspersky must've had this issue before me.
I'm just happy to be able to grab the code.
Thanks Karl,
Rey....
Karl Swedberg wrote:
Hey Rey,
taking a wild guess here, but maybe they use a slightly different port
than other svn repos, and maybe your AV program was blocking traffic
through that port? Kind of like how some AV / firewall programs block
ports used for BitTorrent?
Anyway, really glad you got it worked out!
--Karl
_________________
Karl Swedberg
www.englishrules.com
www.learningjquery.com
On May 23, 2007, at 2:23 PM, Rey Bango wrote:
No prob. Hopefully it won't happen to anyone else but at least there's
a solution. I plan on contacting Kasperky on this.
I'm just curious as to why this only effects Googles SVN repos.
Rey
Brandon Aaron wrote:
Glad you were able to get it worked out. Thanks for sharing the solution.
--
Brandon Aaron
On 5/23/07, Rey Bango <[EMAIL PROTECTED] <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>>
wrote:
Hi guys,
Well, I figured it out and it was Kasperky AV. Here's what I had to do.
In the Anti-Spy section, I had to uncheck "Enable Anti-Phishing"
In the Web Anti-Virus section, I had to uncheck "Scan HTTP traffic"
I'm not quite sure why these two options were interfering with SVN
checkout from Google and again, this is only an issue on code hosted on
Google's SVN servers.
At least I'm able to checkout code again.
Rey...
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