I'm developing with many people.
I check out remote repository, get 3 file. After edit, run:
svn status
It shows:
M file_1
M file_2
M file_3
Now, I want to commit only two file: file_1, file_2, but not file_3.
How to do it?
I dont' want to use
svn revert file_3
before commit.
Explain: I edit file_1, file_2 for shared project, file_3 for running on only my local machine.
How about:
$ svn commit file_1 file_2
Expanding upon zoul's answer.. to develop your list of files use:
svn stat | grep -v ignore.file | perl -ne 'chop; s/^.\s+//; print "$_ "'
Or if you have file names with spaces use:
svn stat | grep -v ignore.file | perl -ne 'chop; s/^.\s+//; print "\"$_\" "'
one line for bash:
svn ci $(svn stat | grep -v exclude.file)
Just append the paths of the files to commit to the svn commit command:
svn commit file_1 file_2
See http://svnbook.red-bean.com/en/1.7/svn.ref.svn.c.commit.html
I wound up making a script containing the following:
svn ci $(svn diff --summarize | \
grep -v exclude.file1 | \
grep -v exclude.file2 | \
...
grep -v exclude.fileN \
)
I'm sure someone can make it even more flexible by making this script read a file which would contain a list of files to be excluded from the commit.
Here's a windows powershell version that commits only files that aren't in a changelist. Create a changelist called ignore-on-commit (which Tortoise SVN will understand anyway) and put the files you don't want to commit into it.
# get list of changed files into targets
[XML]$svnStatus = svn st -q --xml C:\SourceCode\Monad
# select the nodes that aren't in a changelist
$fileList = $svnStatus.SelectNodes('/status/target/entry[wc-status/@item != "unversioned"]') | Foreach-Object {$_.path};
# create a temp file of targets
$fileListPath = [IO.Path]::GetTempFileName();
$fileList | out-file $fileListPath -Encoding ASCII
# do the commit
svn commit --targets $fileListPath -m "Publish $version" --keep-changelists
# remove the temp file
Remove-Item $filelistPath
maybe you can use this command.
svn ci `svn st | grep -e "^[A|M]" | grep -v "test.js" | grep -ve "conf\.js$" | awk '{print $2}' | tr "\\n" " "`