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Home/ Questions/Q 792941
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T22:04:22+00:00 2026-05-14T22:04:22+00:00

Hey, imagine a plain webapp with a log4j.properties which is under version control. I

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Hey, imagine a plain webapp with a log4j.properties which is under version control. I can’t add it to svn:ignore because its a mandatory file. If i make custom changes for development and i don’t want to commit them, i have to watch out for accidently commits. For one file it’s easy to handle, with 3 or more files it becomes creepy.

Is there a way to disable these files temporary from svn commit? So its easiert to commit? I’m working with svn and subclipse.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T22:04:22+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 10:04 pm

    The typical way to handle situations like this is to do the following:

    1. Make a copy of the file, under a name that indicates that it is a template
    2. Commit the template to your repository
    3. Ignore the original file

    This way, you will have a fresh copy lying around, and during deployment you can copy the file back from the template to the real file.

    This way you don’t risk committing bad changes to this file, and at least for other version control system, you don’t risk someone checking the file out and forgetting the lock.

    There is no way in Subversion to indicate that a file is only-commit-first-time type of thing, so when you added it to your repository, you told Subversion to keep a track of changes in that file. Unless you manually make sure (or write a tool, or change your tools) to never commit changes to this file, Subversion will not help you.

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