Alright. Let me add a follow-up to this. It appears that the Directory change set is from the verbose log of 'changed paths'. Is this really useful? Maybe it's something that I've never gotten into...but my main concern is the patch from -rREV1:REV2. The actual changes in syntax from one to the other. And it doesn't look like the Affected paths window even works when doing this - it's empty and there have definitely been changes in files.
The only time I've had to worry about changed paths is when someone's merge has gone bad and the svn:mergeinfo property has been affected in a way that the property changes end up living in perpetuity unless you do something drastic to stop it but by the time you see them there, it's too late - they have to be dealt with or the branch just needs to be killed...
So I think what's actually missing here is the file changes over a range of revisions.
dave_mwi wrote:Syncro SVN 12.2 build 2011053115
System: Fedora 15, 2.6.40-4.fc15.x86_64
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I've seen this feature asked for in a variety of ways, but it doesn't really look like it was implemented or not very effectively.
What I would expect:
In the history panel, select an early revision, and a later revision with the control button pushed to get them both highlighted. Right click, Compare. Then see a list of changed files over that range.
What I see:
The affected paths file is empty, and the directory change set has files in it that have not changed over that range but are showing has having changed...It just looks like it's plain wrong. I've been trying to use this client because I tried it out a couple years ago, but sadly it looks like it still suffers from the same problems.
In watching your console, I'm not sure how an svn --log command is really going to get you a proper changelist, especially when you're missing the --stop-on-copy command.
If you would add in an svn diff --summarize -rREV1:REV2 or something a nal agous you would get a simple list of changed files.
You guys are nearly there when it comes to making this client really *work* for quick, effective svn management. Hopefully some of these can quickly get into your cycles...
thanks.