I often update code by adding files in a bunch of directories and then need to add all thosefiles to the svn repository. Here is the command line one-liner to get that done and an explanation:
svn stat | grep "^?" | awk '{print $2}' | xargs svn add
svn stat
tells you the status of all the files in the directory with a question mark at the beginning of the line for any files that svn doesn't currently know about (i.e. that aren't under revision control).
- The next step is to pipe that to a
grep
command that looks for lines beginning with a question mark so that we can add only those items to svn.
- Next, since the output of svn stat is a two column listing split by whitespace with the status indicator first and the full path to the file second, we use a simple
awk
pattern to print out just filename
- Finally, we use the xargs command to take the input and pass it on to the
svn add
command which schedules the files to be added to the repository.
I will typically run svn stat | less
first and review the output to make sure that the command is only going to add things I want. I do the same thing just before any commit. If you need to undo the addition of some file prior to the commit, simply svn revert filename
or use the recursive flag like svn revert --recursive path/to/directory/
if you are dealing with a directory.
Once you're happy with the changes, all you need to do is an actual svn commit
so that the files will be permanently added to the repository.