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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 22, 20262026-05-22T15:39:59+00:00 2026-05-22T15:39:59+00:00

We’re experimenting with Subversion as a possible replacement of our current Starteam 2005 SCM

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We’re experimenting with Subversion as a possible replacement of our current Starteam 2005 SCM, (so our SVN knowledge is limited at the moment :-)).

I’ve been experimenting with the switch command (using the TortoiseSVN client) and was surprised that, after I switched my local trunk folder to a certain branch there is no way to see which branch I switched to last. Or at least I can’t find a way to ascertain that.

Am I doing something wrong here by switching a local trunk folder to a branch? How can I see which branch the current local trunk-folder is referring to?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-22T15:40:00+00:00Added an answer on May 22, 2026 at 3:40 pm

    Though a couple of correct answers have already been provided, I want to point out that there are several more techniques one may use to see where you are in Subversion. Here is the complete list:

    1. Windows Explorer — Windows Explorer has the flexibility to add columns from a large set of choices beyond the standard name, size, type, and modified date.
      Right click on the column headers bar, select More from the context menu, then scroll down to the SVN choice. SVN short URL is the best choice for this question since it begins the path with either trunk or branches. Requires TortoiseSVN installed. Caveat: Available in Windows XP but not later ones (Windows Vista, Windows 7, etc.). Sigh…

    SVN location from Windows Explorer

    1. TortoiseSVN Revision Graph — The revision graph is apparently not well known but is a great visual tool for answering many questions, including this one. You have to enable the display of the current revision with the indicated button in the tool bar. Once you do that, TortoiseSVN adds a bold line around the current version of the object you are examining, whether on the trunk or a branch.
      Caveat: TortoiseSVN does not always find the current version. As I was preparing this illustration, it did not highlight anything in the graph when I was on the branch.

    SVN location from Revision Graph

    1. TortoiseSVN Repo-Browser — Open the repo browser on a file or folder and examine either the URL at the top or the path in the left hand navigation pane. (Any other TortoiseSVN dialogs displaying a URL will show the information similarly as pointed out by @fsonmezay.)
      SVN location from Repo Browser

    2. File properties — From Windows Explorer or equivalent, open the standard file properties dialog–not the TortoiseSVN properties! Then select the Subversion tab to see all the information available from the command line, including the URL that indicates trunk or branch in the path. It requires TortoiseSVN to be installed (previously mentioned by @Cedric).

    SVN location from file properties

    1. Command-line — svn info or svn info filename provides details of your current directory or specified file, respectively, including the URL that indicates trunk or branch in the path (previously mentioned by @Cedric).

    SVN location from command line

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