GUI SVN client for Debian Linux [closed]
Asked Answered
L

9

12

Does any one know of a good, free, GUI SVN client for Linux?

Lau answered 17/12, 2009 at 6:47 Comment(0)
A
18

KDESVN A feature-rich client with great history and revision views, annotated code views showing who changed each line of code and when it was changed, and 3D graphical views of branching and merging among trees. Written in C++ with Qt, but using KDE libraries (which are somewhat troublesome to get on Windows).

Unfortunately, the developer of KDESVN stopped the development and is shutting down its track website in summer 2012 (EDIT: he resumed development of maintenance releases in June 2012).

RabbitVCS A Python extension to integrate Subversion functionality into the Nautilus File Manager, basically as a clone of the TortoiseSVN project on Windows. —Wikipedia

Arne answered 17/12, 2009 at 6:52 Comment(0)
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7

RapidSVN is a pretty decent multi-platform client.

Galatea answered 17/12, 2009 at 6:52 Comment(0)
S
5

SmartSVN is very useful. It is shareware, but after 30 days you still can use limited edition and it still remains effective.

Sikko answered 17/12, 2009 at 7:5 Comment(0)
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3

If you consider vim to be visual, then you can get the vcscommand plugin.

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(source: vim.org)

Surfeit answered 17/12, 2009 at 7:12 Comment(0)
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3

Seen a bunch. Officially declare: command line is waaay more effective, and naturally integrates with other GNU utilities. Learn the command line! :) It's free, visual, and very good. And it's simpler than it seems.

Enosis answered 17/12, 2009 at 13:22 Comment(0)
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2

I've used Subcommander, which worked quite well, although nowadays I usually use Subclipse from within Eclipse along with the command-line.

Sanderling answered 17/12, 2009 at 6:52 Comment(0)
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2

And then there's Emacs ;-) Has a number of "visual" clients, or rather, a number of solutions for integrating SVN (and git, hg, bzr, cvs even...).

Singh answered 28/12, 2009 at 21:12 Comment(0)
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1

SVN Workbench is a nice multi-platform tool you should consider. It's written in Python and here's the official homepage: http://pysvn.tigris.org/docs/WorkBench.html

It's available for Linux, Mac and Windows and it's also present in the Ubuntu official repository.

Darell answered 17/4, 2014 at 10:23 Comment(0)
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0

After following through the list of items, I was disappointed with the quality of the solutions available on Linux.

I discovered through more digging on the net that konquorer had built in some very nice subversion integrations several years ago and I'm quite impressed with the quality.

Note that konqueror requires kde, kdesvn and kompare.

The solution still no where near TortoiseSVN for windows but its still very useful for many usecases and a relief for us Windows to *nix desktop converts.

My current distribution is OpenSuse 13 with KDE.

Already answered 30/4, 2014 at 3:43 Comment(0)

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