How do you get notified of your repository's updates?

guerda picture guerda · Feb 17, 2010 · Viewed 16.6k times · Source

I'm working on several repositories at work and would like to be informed, if anything changes in the SVN repositories.

I made a small BAT script (yes, BAT is useful sometimes) that keeps executing an svn log -r BASE:HEAD on my working copy. It shows all submit comments and revision dates. It works really well, but it's not comfortable for different repositories.

How do you keep track of changes in your repositories? Do you use a small program you made for yourself? Do you use software someone else made? I'm interested in every approach to this problem.

I would like to get notifications and more information about the commit. The IDE integrated functions are good, but work only if I request the information.
I don't want to act to get this information.

Platform: Windows, Subversion 1.5 and higher.

Answer

Otherside picture Otherside · Feb 17, 2010

I'm using CommitMonitor; it's from one of the TortoiseSVN developers. You can easily add several SVN URLs to monitor and specify an interval to check for commits. If any updates are found, it shows a little popup windows in the corner of the screen.

There is also SVN Monitor, but that is a bit more complicated to use and setup. Besides giving a message on commits, it can also show you which files you have modified and remind you to commit your changes.