Thanks Friends.
As Bret said, I am not able to identify the size of the Commit.
Checking all the files one by one and verify size of the files is not what
I expect.
So, thinking to drop the plan for identify the Commit Size and restrict.
Instead of that I can change Apache Configuration to res
On Wed, Jul 13, 2016 at 10:13 PM, Greg Stein wrote:
>> From: Siva
>> Sent: woensdag 13 juli 2016 16:07
>> To: subversion-users
>> Subject: Commit Size Restriction
>>
>> Hi All,
>>
>> My Subversion Edge is installed in Windows Server.
>>
>> Is it possible to restrict commit size by repository or wh
The simplest mechanism to avoid large (new) files from getting
committed into your repository is to use the "LimitRequestBody"
directive in your Apache configuration. This is the mechanism that
we use on svn.apache.org
Cheers,
-g
On Wed, Jul 13, 2016 at 09:18:05PM +0200, b...@qqmail.nl wrote:
> H
How do you define ‘commit size’?
With delta compression, re-use on copies of files and directory trees, etc. it
is very hard to define what size a commit would be.
And as we have pluggable filesystem backends we don’t know what amount of disk
space would be used after a commit.
Personally I wo
Hi Sivaram,
Hi All,
My Subversion Edge is installed in Windows Server.
Is it possible to restrict commit size by repository or whole server?
Haven't done that myself yet, but I take it a way to do so is to add a
pre-commit hook in combination with some perl script verifying the size
of the co