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1,215 bytes added ,  14:09, 21 October 2008
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It would also be nice - and probably only possible if the repos were stored in a true i-bay - to be able to point a sub-domain at the SVN repose, e.g. http://svn.mydomain.com/repo-name That would be another way to keep the namespaces apart.
 
It would also be nice - and probably only possible if the repos were stored in a true i-bay - to be able to point a sub-domain at the SVN repose, e.g. http://svn.mydomain.com/repo-name That would be another way to keep the namespaces apart.
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== Group Permissions Problem ==
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--[[User:Judgej|Judgej]] 13:09, 21 October 2008 (UTC)
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Something else I think is an issue here: setting group permissions. The i-bays include the groups 'Everyone' and 'Admin' when setting their permissions. There are no such groups in the subversion control panel. How, for example, would you set up a repository that allows read-only access to 'Everyone' but write access only to specific groups (requiring usernames and passwords for user in that group).
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Playing around with the permissions at the monent, it seems to be a very blunt instrument - you can either access it or not, and I suspect it could be because 'Everyone' is automatically given read-only access to repository once it is opened to the WAN. I'm not sure this is a sensible approach. As a user of a repository, I may want to access it from both inside the network and outside, but I may not want anybody who has not given a valid login to be able to view the contents of a repository.
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Of course, it maybe that I just haven't found the documentation yet, and so am completely misunderstanding the way this contributino works. If there is any documentation, I would love to see it, but I haven't located it yet.
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