'Search in SVN repository for a file name

We have a bulk repository for code contain thousands of folder and sub folder, i want to search under this repositor with file name or with some word.

Root folder
    a\
    b\
    c\
    d\
    e\
    f\ab\
    f\ab\cd.txt

I want to search for cd.txt but dont know where it is in SVN Repository, for that i want to perform a search on the root folder of SVN where i will put the file name cd.txt and run the command, will check in each folder and will display the file details result....

Hope requirement is clear. Can you please help me on this.



Solution 1:[1]

The following works for me (svn version 1.4.6)

svn list -R <URL> | grep "<file_pattern>"

Solution 2:[2]

If the file is in your working copy, then if you are using svn 1.5:

svn list --depth infinity | grep <filename>

or an earlier version of svn:

find . -name <filename> -not -path '*.svn*'

If you need to find the file in history (deleted or moved):

svn log -v | less

and search for it with:

\<filename><return>

Solution 3:[3]

With access to the repo itself use (i.e on your svn host file sytem)

svnlook tree [path_to_repo] | grep [file_name]  

or to search all repos (if you have mulitple repos setup).

for i in \`ls [path_to_repos_dir]`; do echo $i; svnlook tree [path_to_repos_dir]/$i | grep -i [file_or_folder_name]; done 

the option --full-paths will give the full path in repo to the file (if found)

example:

for i in `ls /u01/svn-1.6.17/repos`; do echo $i; svnlook tree --full-paths /u01/svn- 1.6.17/repos/$i | grep -i somefile.txt; done

redirect output to a file if static copy is needed.
assumes using nix OS.

Solution 4:[4]

svn list --depth infinity <your-repo-here> to get a list of files in the repo, and then svn cat to get contents. You can add --xml key to list command to make parsing a bit simpler.

Solution 5:[5]

Recently I've published my utility to list the repository, that's much faster than "svn ls --depth infinity" approach. Here're the benchmarks. It just calls a function that is available in Subversion internal API, but now accessible through a command line.

So you can run

$ svn-crawler <URL> | grep "<file_pattern>"

Solution 6:[6]

If you are using TortoiseSVN you can try this IF you are willing to look Project by Project - works for me:

  1. Create a blank project under your repository top level URL, call it BLANK
  2. Click on the Repo URL on left pane
  3. On the right hand pane select your BLANK project and your desired project - say trunk
  4. Right click to pop up the browser menu and select 'Compare URLs', depending on the size of your repo it may take a minute to load. But you basically get your entire project list in a 'ready-to-search' list.
  5. Enter your file name or other string in the search filter

Solution 7:[7]

VisualSVN Server 4.2 supports finding files by name in the web interface. Try the new feature on the demo server.

You can download VisualSVN Server 4.2.0 at https://www.visualsvn.com/server/download/pre-release/. See the Release Notes at https://www.visualsvn.com/server/download/.

enter image description here

Solution 8:[8]

Not sure that it's a good idea to use additional tools to filter search results like svn+grep. Such tools like grep or svn-crawler might not be available/work on Windows or other OS, you'll need to install/upgrade them.

You may solve this task using 1 single svn command with --search flag that supports glob pattern:

> svn ls -R --search "readme.md"
branches/0.13.x/readme.md
trunk/readme.md

> svn ls -R --search "*.md"
branches/0.13.x/189.md
branches/0.13.x/readme.md
trunk/189.md
trunk/readme.md

More about svn ls --search option:

> svn ls -h                                
list (ls): List directory entries in the repository.
usage: list [TARGET[@REV]...]

  List each TARGET file and the contents of each TARGET directory as
  they exist in the repository.  If TARGET is a working copy path, the
  corresponding repository URL will be used. If specified, REV determines
  in which revision the target is first looked up.

...

Valid options:
  ...
  --search ARG             : use ARG as search pattern (glob syntax, case-
                             and accent-insensitive, may require quotation marks
                             to prevent shell expansion)

Solution 9:[9]

If your's remote repository is not huge, then an easy method is: You can do a "checkout" to get a local repository. If you are in windows machine you use "Search" or Linux machine use "Find" command.

Sources

This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Overflow and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

Source: Stack Overflow

Solution Source
Solution 1 Marios V
Solution 2 lmop
Solution 3
Solution 4 Anton Gogolev
Solution 5 Dmitry Pavlenko
Solution 6 Ben
Solution 7
Solution 8 lazylead
Solution 9 Community