Is there a way to edit the log message of a certain revision in Subversion? I accidentally wrote the wrong filename in my commit message which could be confusing later.
I've seen How do I edit an incorrect commit message in Git?, but the solution to that question doesn't seem to be similar for Subversion (according to svn help commit
).
"svn info --show-item revision" will give the current revision to which the current directory is updated.
Examples. You can see the log messages for all the paths that changed in your working copy by running svn log from the top: $ svn log ------------------------------------------------------------------------ r20 | harry | 2003-01-17 22:56:19 -0600 (Fri, 17 Jan 2003) | 1 line Tweak.
Revision. Every time you commit a set of changes, you create one new “revision” in the repository. Each revision represents the state of the repository tree at a certain point in its history. If you want to go back in time you can examine the repository as it was at revision N.
Essentially you have to have admin rights (directly or indirectly) to the repository to do this. You can either configure the repository to allow all users to do this, or you can modify the log message directly on the server.
See this part of the Subversion FAQ (emphasis mine):
Log messages are kept in the repository as properties attached to each revision. By default, the log message property (svn:log) cannot be edited once it is committed. That is because changes to revision properties (of which svn:log is one) cause the property's previous value to be permanently discarded, and Subversion tries to prevent you from doing this accidentally. However, there are a couple of ways to get Subversion to change a revision property.
The first way is for the repository administrator to enable revision property modifications. This is done by creating a hook called "pre-revprop-change" (see this section in the Subversion book for more details about how to do this). The "pre-revprop-change" hook has access to the old log message before it is changed, so it can preserve it in some way (for example, by sending an email). Once revision property modifications are enabled, you can change a revision's log message by passing the --revprop switch to svn propedit or svn propset, like either one of these:
$svn propedit -r N --revprop svn:log URL $svn propset -r N --revprop svn:log "new log message" URL
where N is the revision number whose log message you wish to change, and URL is the location of the repository. If you run this command from within a working copy, you can leave off the URL.
The second way of changing a log message is to use svnadmin setlog. This must be done by referring to the repository's location on the filesystem. You cannot modify a remote repository using this command.
$ svnadmin setlog REPOS_PATH -r N FILE
where REPOS_PATH is the repository location, N is the revision number whose log message you wish to change, and FILE is a file containing the new log message. If the "pre-revprop-change" hook is not in place (or you want to bypass the hook script for some reason), you can also use the --bypass-hooks option. However, if you decide to use this option, be very careful. You may be bypassing such things as email notifications of the change, or backup systems that keep track of revision properties.
When you run this command,
svn propedit svn:log --revprop -r NNN
and just in case you see this message:
DAV request failed; it's possible that the repository's pre-revprop-change hook either failed or is non-existent
Its because Subversion doesn’t allow you to modify log messages because they are unversioned and will be lost permanently.
Go to the hooks directory on your Subversion server (replace ~/svn/reponame with the directory of your repository)
cd ~/svn/reponame/hooks
Remove the extension
mv pre-revprop-change.tmpl pre-revprop-change
Make it executable (cannot do chmod +x!)
chmod 755 pre-revprop-change
Source
The template files in the hooks directory cannot be used as they are Unix-specific. You need to copy a Windows batch file pre-revprop-change.bat
to the hooks directory, e.g. the one provided here.
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