[CentOS] Subversion: 400 Bad request error
John Newbigin
jnewbigin at ict.swin.edu.au
Tue Aug 15 02:09:24 UTC 2006
This sounds like a web proxy issue. As best I know, snv does not work
through web proxies. check your http_proxy environment variable.
John.
Jean Figarella wrote:
> Here is my problem,
> On my network there is a subversion server to which everybody connects
> to and checks in/out code and documents. The workstations on the network
> are all based on Fedora core 3. And everybody's home directory is on a
> nfs share. This nfs share is mounted via the fstab. So no matter to
> which box a user logs in, his/her home dir is gonna be the same.
>
> Again, /home is a nfs mounted dir. Now, if I am on Fedora and I cd into
> /home/jean/dev/ for exmaple, and then I do svn update everything works
> fine. But if I do the same on centos 4.3; cd /home/jean/dev and then svn
> update, it gives me this error:
>
> bash-3.00$ cd ~/dev/sysadmin/
> bash-3.00$ svn update
> svn: REPORT request failed on '/svn/code/!svn/vcc/default'
> svn: REPORT of '/svn/code/!svn/vcc/default': 400 Bad Request
> (https://subversion)
> bash-3.00$
> bash-3.00$ cd /local/new_dev/sysadmin/
> bash-3.00$ svn update
> At revision 30009.
> bash-3.00$
>
> As you can see if I am still on centos and I create a /local on the
> *local drive*, then I can check out code or documents there and do
> everything else. Again, while I am on the nfs mounted dir it does not
> works, once I get out of the nfs dir then it works.
>
> Authentication is done via NIS, so uid and gid is the same under both
> distributions and computers. I also checked nfs access permision on the
> /etc/exports files and both computers or hosts have the same set of
> permissions.
>
> The subversion version on Fedora is 1.2.1 and in centos 4.3 it is 1.1.4.
> I have already tried upgrading to the same subversion version and to
> more recent ones, and that did not work.
>
> I am thinking that maybe this is not a subversion error because I can
> sucessfully use it from fedora 3 anf 5, and debian. I think it has to do
> with CentOS. I was looking to upgrade all of the FC3 boxes in my network
> to CentOS (about 30 of them), but with this problem Ill have to stick
> with Fedora.
>
> Any ideas?
> Thanks,
> Jean
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>
--
John Newbigin
Computer Systems Officer
Faculty of Information and Communication Technologies
Swinburne University of Technology
Melbourne, Australia
http://www.ict.swin.edu.au/staff/jnewbigin
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