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@echo off | |
rem Copyright (C): 2010 Voyagerfan5761 | |
rem http://technobabbl.es/ | |
set USERPROFILE=%~dp0 | |
set HOMEDRIVE=%~d0 | |
set HOMEPATH=%~p0 | |
set HOME=%~dp0 | |
set HISTFILE=%USERPROFILE%.bash_history | |
rem set BASHRC=%USERPROFILE%.bashrc | |
git-bash.bat |
It'll be some time before I get a chance to actually install Subversion and do some experiments. Meanwhile, can you try defining your %APPDATA% directory?
I don't use SVN (obviously? :-) so I haven't had occasion to poke around its directory layout.
What SVN package are you using? Specifically, like 32- or 64-bit, an unpacked archive or an installer, etc. I'd like to replicate your setup.
Hey dgw,
I don't like SVN either, but I need to push to a SVN repo on occasion and I'm trying to run an automated script which uses SVN commands.
I've decided to try another portable setup. This time using a portable bash script and adding whatever I need (SVN, Git) that way.
The awesome script I'm using is by @prabirshrestha:
http://blog.prabir.me/post/Portable-Bash-%28msys-mingw%29.aspx
From what I've tested so far, settings are self-contained automatically in a subdirectory (/home/portable), which is great!
Me again! Just wanted to update you on my progress.
Looks like the script by Prabir was just using a simple tweak in /etc/profile.
So I mirrored a few of his changes into /etc/profile et voila! SVN works fine.
If you're interested, another dev (@markashleybell) figured it out as well and detailed it on his blog:
http://markashleybell.com/articles/portable-git-windows-setting-home-environment-variable
I added:
set PATH=%PATH%; c:\absolute-path\for-testing\svn\bin
to your git-bash-portable.bat
When I open bash and test SVN by typing:
svn help
I get this error:
svn: can't determine the user's config path
If you could take a look, that would be swell!