svnserve (8) Linux Manual Page
svnserve – Server for the ‘svn’ repository access method
Synopsis
svnserve[options]
Description
svnserve allows access to Subversion repositories using the svn network protocol. It can both run as a standalone server process, or it can run out of inetd. You must choose a mode of operation when you start svnserve. The following options are recognized:
-d,–daemon- Causes
svnserveto run in daemon mode.svnservebackgrounds itself and accepts and serves TCP/IP connections on the svn port (3690, by default).
–listen-port=port- Causes
svnserveto listen on port when run in daemon mode.
–listen-host=host- Causes
svnserveto listen on the interface specified by host, which may be either a hostname or an IP address.
–foreground- When used together with
-d, this option causessvnserveto stay in the foreground. This option is mainly useful for debugging.
-i,–inetd- Causes
svnserveto use the stdin/stdout file descriptors, as is appropriate for a daemon running out of inetd.
-h,–help- Displays a usage summary and exits.
–version- Print
svnserve‘s version and the repository filesystem back-end(s) a particularsvnservesupports.
-rroot,–root=root- Sets the virtual root for repositories served by
svnserve. The pathname in URLs provided by the client will be interpreted relative to this root, and will not be allowed to escape this root.
-R–read-only- Force all write operations through this
svnserveinstance to be forbidden, overriding all other access policy configuration. Do not use this option to set general repository access policy – that is what theconf/svnserve.confrepository configuration file is for. This option should be used only to restrict access via a certain method of invokingsvnserve– for example, to allow write access via SSH, but not via asvnservedaemon, or to create a restricted SSH key which is only capable of read access.
-t,–tunnel- Causes
svnserveto run in tunnel mode, which is just like the inetd mode of operation (serve one connection over stdin/stdout) except that the connection is considered to be pre-authenticated with the username of the current uid. This flag is selected by the client when running over a tunnel agent.
–tunnel-user=username- When combined with
–tunnel, overrides the pre-authenticated username with the supplied username. This is useful in combination with the ssh authorized_key file’s "command" directive to allow a single system account to be used by multiple committers, each having a distinct ssh identity.
-T,–threads- When running in daemon mode, causes
svnserveto spawn a thread instead of a process for each connection. Thesvnserveprocess still backgrounds itself at startup time.
–config-file=filename- When specified,
svnservereads filename once at program startup and caches thesvnserveconfiguration and any passwords and authorization configuration referenced from filename.svnservewill not read any per-repositoryconf/svnserve.conffiles when this option is used. See thesvnserve.conf(5) man page for details of the file format for this option.
–pid-file=filename- When specified,
svnservewill write its process ID to filename.
-X,–listen-once- Causes
svnserveto accept one connection on the svn port, serve it, and exit. This option is mainly useful for debugging.
Unless the –config-file option was specified on the command line, once the client has selected a repository by transmitting its URL, svnserve reads a file named conf/svnserve.conf in the repository directory to determine repository-specific settings such as what authentication database to use and what authorization policies to apply. See the svnserve.conf(5) man page for details of that file format.
