Enter the address of your repo in the Repository URL field. In the Add to Subversion window, you will probably want to keep the Project Name the same as the solution name (the field will be automatically populated for you) but go ahead and change it if you need to. I’ll assume that you already have a Visual Studio solution that you would like to upload to your svn repo, so go ahead any open your solution with Visual Studio.With the solution open, right-click the solution node in the Solution Explorer window and select Add Solution to Subversion. Tortoise is handy when you need to get at the repo outside of Visual Studio.The rest of the article describes how to work with your repo from within Visual Studio and the AnkhSVN plug-in, with a diversion to the command line client at the end. However, it is much easier to do this sort of thing directly from Visual Studio. This would download all of the project’s files to a local directory on your PC and you could then open them with Visual Studio. The repo browser window will now appear and you can look at the files in your repo, show the change history of any file, and perform any other Subversion function you want with the repo.To “manually” pull down a repo you could right-click the trunk directory in the example shown in the screen-shot to the right, then select the Checkout command. The URL may point to a remote repo (starting with ) or to a local file system repo (starting with file:// ). Enter the URL of one of your repos in the URL field, then click the OK button. With that done, close the Settings then bring up the Tortoise repo browser (again, right-click a blank area in any directory listing pane in Windows Explorer and use the Tortoise menu).
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