I'm having problems accessing an SVN repository using TortoiseSVN 1.7.8.
The SVN repository is on a CentOS 6.3 box with openssh 5.3p1:81.el6
and appears to be functioning correctly.
# svnadmin --version
# svnadmin, version 1.6.11 (r934486)
I can access the repository from another CentOS box with this command:
svn list svn+ssh://USER@xxx.xx.xx.xxx/var/svn/joetest
But when I attempt to browse the repository using TortiseSVN from a Win 7 workstation I'm unable to do so using the following path:
svn+ssh://USER@xxx.xx.xx.xxx/var/svn/joetest
I receive the following error from TortoiseSVN:
Unable to connect to a repository at URL 'svn+ssh://USER@xxx.xx.xx.xxx/var/svn/joetest' To better debug SSH connection problems, remove the -q option from 'ssh' in the [tunnels] section of your Subversion configuration file. Network connection closed unexpectedly
I'm able to login via SSH from the workstation using Putty.
The results are the same if I attempt access as root.
I've given ownership of the repository /var/svn/
to USER:USER
and ran
chmod 2700 -R /var/svn/
.
Because I can access the repository via ssh from another Linux box, permissions don't appear to be the problem.
When I watch the log file using tail -fn 2000 /var/log/secure
, I see the following each time TortiseSVN asks for the password:
Sep 26 17:34:31 dev sshd[30361]: Accepted password for USER from xx.xxx.xx.xxx port 59101 ssh2
Sep 26 17:34:31 dev sshd[30361]: pam_unix(sshd:session): session opened for user USER by (uid=0)
Sep 26 17:34:31 dev sshd[30361]: pam_unix(sshd:session): session closed for user USER
I'm actually able to login, but the session is then closed immediately.
It caught my eye that the session is being opened for USER by root (uid=0)
, which may be correct, but I'll mention it in case it has something to do with the problem.
I looked into modifying the svnserve.conf
, but as far as I can tell, it's not used when accessing the repository via svn+ssh
, a private svnserve instance is created for each log in via this method. From the manual:
There's still a third way to invoke svnserve, and that's in “tunnel mode”, with the -t option. This mode assumes that a remote-service program such as RSH or SSH has successfully authenticated a user and is now invoking a private svnserve process as that user. The svnserve program behaves normally (communicating via stdin and stdout), and assumes that the traffic is being automatically redirected over some sort of tunnel back to the client. When svnserve is invoked by a tunnel agent like this, be sure that the authenticated user has full read and write access to the repository database files. (See Servers and Permissions: A Word of Warning.) It's essentially the same as a local user accessing the repository via file:/// URLs.
The only non-default settings in sshd_config
are:
Protocol 2 # to disable Protocol 1
SyslogFacility AUTHPRIV
ChallengeResponseAuthentication no
GSSAPIAuthentication yes
GSSAPICleanupCredentials yes
UsePAM yes
AcceptEnv LANG LC_CTYPE LC_NUMERIC LC_TIME LC_COLLATE LC_MONETARY LC_MESSAGES
AcceptEnv LC_PAPER LC_NAME LC_ADDRESS LC_TELEPHONE LC_MEASUREMENT
AcceptEnv LC_IDENTIFICATION LC_ALL LANGUAGE
AcceptEnv XMODIFIERS
X11Forwarding no
Subsystem sftp /usr/libexec/openssh/sftp-server
Any thoughts?
An old question, but still top of the stack on Google, so I thought I'd share my solution.
Simply, it was because I didn't have a "home" directory for my user on the server. Changing the SSH client to the plink.exe that comes with Putty (right-click on folder | TortoiseSVN | Settings | Network) allowed me to see the error as the windows appeared on screen.
In my case the cause was, that the svnuser hasn't a shell (it was /bin/false).
This isn't visible in the ssh log even with debug ssh -vvv.
When you have this type of problem your debug output will look like this
When the shell is set to /bin/bash the log changes to
Maybe this simple solution will work:
Go to your putty and check whether the saved session name matches with the name (svn saved session name in putty) that you are trying to take checkout with...
E.G.: in svn saved session, the name is saved as
coreSvn
, and the checkout url is:svn+ssh://svnuser@core/COCRETE/branches/R20181121-0.0.2-RELEASE
, this won't work. Change the@core
to@coreSvn
or@coresvn
I had the same issue, and I tried the regedit solution.
In my case the Default Host Name was not to blame, but the regedit showed me a space in the saved session name (%20).
Putty does not care about the session name when you open a connection from there, hence there was no error when connecting from Putty. But the session name is important in your svn+ssh:// url!
In my case the Putty session name was " server", and when I did a svn checkout I used "svn+ssh://server/srv/svn/repo", hence the error.
I finally came across a solution for this. In the TortoiseSVN FAQ of all places:
TortoiseSVN Frequently asked questions
From the FAQ:
SVN+SSH: Connection closed unexpectedly
I didn't try the first approach of editing my registry.
The second approach of editing the bash configuration worked for me.
A note about the bash configuration method:
If you're on shared hosting, your user .bashrc file will likely be loading the global /etc/bashrc file. You won't be able to edit the global file, so you'll need to work around that.
Some possible approaches:
Try adding
mesg n
to your user .bashrc file. I'm not sure if this will work or whether it should be placed before or after the global file is loaded.Don't include the global file and hard code all the settings in your user
.bashrc
file.Remove the
mesg y
setting from the global /etc/bashrc file as it's loading. This question discusses how to do that: Use a grepped file as an included source in bash