Re: [CentOS] Subversion: 400 Bad request error

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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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