![]() In addition, I forced g+s on all folders, so that svn group will always be the owner of all new files. The permissions are rwx for user and for group and nothing for others. The repository folder is owned by a user and group I created svn:svn, but maybe this is unsuseful. The prj folder is owned by root:root and others have only rx access to the files, except to those directories that www-data needs to write (file uploads for example). The list of users authorized to the repository is saved in an htpasswd file with the list of users and their MD5 passwords. I use HTTP to connect to repositories with a list of authorized users: I use TortoiseSVN on Windows to checkout/update/commit. When I installed SVN ( apt-get install subversion libapache2-svn), it didn’t create neither the user subversion nor the group subversion. Project folder (a working copy of the repository on the server, in order to access to the project and see the website with a browser - Apache points to this directory as DocumentRoot): /var/projects/prj I’m using Subversion on a Linux server to keep under version control the files of a website project I’m maintaining. Sorry for this “stupid” question but I really can’t find a solution on the internet.
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