On Oct 4, 2010, at 12:51, Tech Geek wrote:
> We use one repository per project. All repository lives in /var/lib/svn/.
>
> Also we use the hooks post-commit and pre-commit for every repository. Right
> now we have to manually copy these two hooks whenever a new repository is
> created.
> For example:
> cd /var/lib/svn/
> cp /path-to-my-hooks/* projectA/hooks
> cp /path-to-my-hooks/* projectB/hooks
> cp /path-to-my-hooks/* projectC/hooks
>
> Is there any way to automate this process?
As Andy said, you can write a script that creates the repository and then
copies the scripts, then make sure you call that script instead of calling
"svnadmin create" directly whenever you want a new repo. My version of this
script creates the repository as the Apache user and symlinks in my common
hooks and conf directories. I symlink instead of copying because I want all my
repositories to always have the same hooks and conf files, and I want changes I
make in them to be reflected in existing repositories. Here's my script:
#!/bin/bash
REPO="/path/to/subversion/repositories/$1"
USER="www"
if [ -e "$REPO" ]; then
echo "Repository \"$1\" already exists." 1>&2
exit 1
fi
sudo -u "$USER" svnadmin create "$REPO" || exit $?
sudo -u "$USER" rm -rf "$REPO"/{conf,hooks} || exit $?
sudo -u "$USER" ln -s ../../conf "$REPO" || exit $?
sudo -u "$USER" ln -s ../../hooks "$REPO" || exit $?