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Home/ Questions/Q 1928126
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 17, 20262026-05-17T06:56:27+00:00 2026-05-17T06:56:27+00:00

I’ve started using subversion to keep track – and be able to reverse –

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I’ve started using subversion to keep track – and be able to reverse – of our website changes related to its development and maintenance. Loving this feeling of security it provides!

I would like to know if there would be a tool / a way to be able to automate the synchronisation between the “live” website and the subversion repository. It would be great to be able to both commit a bug patch to the repository and to the live version (right now i manually upload via ftp the corrected file, then commit it to the subversion repository).

I’m sure this must exist somewhere, but under which name ? What set up does it need?

Thank you for your feedback,
A.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-17T06:56:28+00:00Added an answer on May 17, 2026 at 6:56 am

    You can create a post-commit hook that will export your repository at the latest revision to your webserver directory:

    #!/bin/sh
    
    # Delete Old site
    rm -R /var/www/website
    
    # Export Repository
    svn export --force file:///var/svn/website /var/www/website
    
    # Make sure Apache Owns the website
    chown -R www-data:www-data /var/www/website 
    

    (credits to this forum thread)

    Save this in a file called post-commit, in the hooks directory of your repository, and make it executable.

    If the repository and website are not on the same server, you’ll want to export in a temporary directory, and then push it via ftp or scp

    EDIT: found also this perl module that could do the job: SVN::Notify::Mirror

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