SVN Repository Search [closed]

混江龙づ霸主 提交于 2019-11-26 23:38:55
phil_w

If you're searching only for the filename, use:

svn list -R file:///subversion/repository | grep filename

Windows:

svn list -R file:///subversion/repository | findstr filename

Otherwise checkout and do filesystem search:

egrep -r _code_ .
Elmar Weber

There is sourceforge.net/projects/svn-search.

There is also a Windows application directly from the SVN home called SvnQuery available at http://svnquery.tigris.org

Beginning with Subversion 1.8, you can use --search option with svn log command. Note that the command does not perform full-text search inside a repository, it considers the following data only:

  • revision's author (svn:author unversioned property),
  • date (svn:date unversioned property),
  • log message text (svn:log unversioned property),
  • list of changed paths (i.e. paths affected by the particular revision).

Here is the help page about these new search options:

 If the --search option is used, log messages are displayed only if the
 provided search pattern matches any of the author, date, log message
 text (unless --quiet is used), or, if the --verbose option is also
 provided, a changed path.
 The search pattern may include "glob syntax" wildcards:
     ?      matches any single character
     *      matches a sequence of arbitrary characters
     [abc]  matches any of the characters listed inside the brackets
 If multiple --search options are provided, a log message is shown if
 it matches any of the provided search patterns. If the --search-and
 option is used, that option's argument is combined with the pattern
 from the previous --search or --search-and option, and a log message
 is shown only if it matches the combined search pattern.
 If --limit is used in combination with --search, --limit restricts the
 number of log messages searched, rather than restricting the output
 to a particular number of matching log messages.
  1. Create git-svn mirror of that repository.
  2. Search for added or removed strings inside git: git log -S'my line of code' or the same in gitk

The advantage is that you can do many searches locally, without loading the server and network connection.

This example pipes the complete contents of the repository to a file, which you can then quickly search for filenames within an editor:

svn list -R svn://svn > filelist.txt

This is useful if the repository is relatively static and you want to do rapid searches without having to repeatedly load everything from the SVN server.

I do like TRAC - this plugin might be helpful for your task: http://trac-hacks.org/wiki/RepoSearchPlugin

Just a note, FishEye (and a lot of other Atlassian products) have a $10 Starter Editions, which in the case of FishEye gives you 5 repositories and access for up to 10 committers. The money goes to charity in this case.

www.atlassian.com/starter

Painfully slow (and crudely implemented) but a combination of svn log and svn cat works if you are searching the history of single files or small repositories:

svn log filetosearch |
    grep '^r' |
    cut -f1 -d' ' |
    xargs -i bash -c "echo '{}'; svn cat filetosearch -'{}'" 

will output each revision number where file changed and the file. You could always cat each revision into a different file and then grep for changes.

PS. Massive upvotes to anyone that shows me how to do this properly!

If you're really desperate, do a dump of the repo (look at "svnadmin dump") and then grep through it. It's not pretty, but you can look around the search results to find the metadata that indicates the file and revision, then check it out for a better look.

Not a good solution, to be sure, but it is free :) SVN provides no feature for searching past checkins (or even past log files, AFAIK).

A lot of SVN repos are "simply" HTTP sites, so you might consider looking at some off the shelf "web crawling" search app that you can point at the SVN root and it will give you basic functionality. Updating it will probably be a bit of a trick, perhaps some SVN check in hackery can tickle the index to discard or reindex changes as you go.

Just thinking out loud.

theres krugle and koders but both are expensive. Both have ide plugins for eclipse.

I started using this tool

http://www.supose.org/wiki/supose

It works fine just lacking a visual UI, but is fast and somewhat maintained

// Edit: Tool was already mentioned in another answer, so give all credits to Kuryaki.

Just found SupoSE which is a java based command line tool which scans a repository to create an index and afterwards is able to answer certain kinds of queries. We're still evaluating the tool but it looks promising. It's worth to mention that it makes a full index of all revisions including source code files and common office formats.

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