An Eclipse Team Provider plug-in providing support for Subversion within the Eclipse IDE. Developed and maintained by Subversion core committers, Subclipse is always in synch with the latest Subversion features and releases. Subclipse includes the CollabNet Merge Client originally developed as part of the. The CollabNet Merge Client provides powerful graphical merge capabilities that leverages the merge tracking functionality that was added as part of the Subversion 1.5 release. Logic pro x cracked windows. Subclipse includes an optional Mylyn connector that enables Mylyn to create automatic changesets based on the tasks you are working on.

It also enables links to tasks when viewing history of Subversion commits. Finally, Subclipse includes a powerful revision graph feature that is built with Eclipse GEF/Draw2D. This allows you to visualize commits and merges across Subversion branches. Need a Subversion server, too? I'm fairly new to Eclipse, but have been using SVN forever. So, one of the first things to do in Eclipse was to attach my SVN repositories. Looks like Subversive is kind of the recommended plugin for that, so I tried it first.The installation of the Subversive plugin was messy; on installation, it claimed that the 'SVN Team Provider 2.0' component wasn't available, 'install anyway?'

I need Subclipse 1.8.x in order to use svn 1.7.x. Ubuntu 10.10 does not have subversion 1.7 packages or libsvn1 1.7 packages. Is there any way to upgrade the libsvn1 package on Ubuntu, possibly by configuring another package repository or installing the package directly? If the latter is possible, where can I find the libsvn1/JavaHL.

Oops, that's the plugin I was going to install, so why not install it even though it claims not to be available?;-) On Eclipse restart, it didn't show the dialog for that other component needed, an SVN connector. Now where do I get that from? The Subversive documentation was vague about that, just saying 'make sure you have at least one connector installed'. This started to become a lengthy project, when all I wanted was to connect Eclipse with my SVN repos.Luckily, the Marketplace came up with Subclipse, albeit ranging #4 there. Oh wait, that's provided by Tigris, the makers of SVN? Hey, why don't you list that one first?Anyway, installed it, restarted Eclipse, and done. Works out of the box.

Subclipse can be found by clicking the Open Perspective icon in the upper right corner of Eclipse. SVN Tortoise users will find some similarities with Subclipse. Nice tool, thanks much, makers of SVN!(This review is for Eclipse Mars on openSuse Linux, and Subclipse 1.10.5, handling SVN 1.8 repositories.). I think Subclipse must be the best Subversion plugin for Eclipse. Custom rom download. It comes from Tigris.org, the Subversion people, so it's no surprise that it's good.I used Subclipse a couple years ago for a WebObjects project. It worked well and I was happy with it.

Later, I started work on some PHP projects, so I installed a new version of Eclipse just for that. (My WebObjects environment seemed delicate and I wanted to keep things separate.) At that time, I decided to try Subversive.

It worked well enough at first and I liked the way it marked changed resources in the navigator views, but as time went on, problems appeared.Annoying things started happening with Subversive. I had to answer the password prompt twice with my first commit each development session, even though I saved my password. Sometimes, my commits would just fail without details about the problem.So I recently decided to try switching my PHP environment in Eclipse to use Subclipse. I miss a couple little things from Subversive, but when I'm using Subclipse, it just works well and every time.

I feel much better. It makes my development so much easier.Thank you, Tigris.org!

Help/Contributing. If you need help, use. If you found a bug, use. If you have an idea, use. There is also a for general discussions or to follow release announcements.

If you want to contribute, fork the project and submit a pull request.Requirements - current master. Eclipse 4.2 (Juno) or later. Java 6 or later. Subversion 1.10 or 1.11 JavaHL client librariesInstallationSubclipse is available in the Eclipse Marketplace and can be installed via the Marketplace Client. It is also available at the following update site URL's.NOTE: These are update site URL's to be entered inside the Eclipse installation dialog, not your web browser.

Latest - 4.3.x - 'latest' site will automatically move on to 4.2.1, 4.3.0, 5.0.0 etc. As those releases are produced. Where as the '4.3.x' site will only pick up new releases in the 4.3.x series such as 4.3.1, 4.3.2 etc.There is also a p2 repository for each specific release. These only contain Subclipse and do not pull in the optional plugins that the primary sites do. These sites are mainly for internal use and third party packagers.If you have problems upgrading from one of the legacy 1.x.y versions, see theAvailable FeaturesThe following features are available on the update site.

Subclipse - this is the main feature and the only one that is absolutely required. However, you will also need the JavaHL and/or SVNKit features installed as these provide the connection to a Subversion API library. Subversion 1.10 JavaHL - (you may need to tell Eclipse to show all versions to see this). This feature includes the JavaHL library AND for Windows it also includes the native DLL libraries. Subversion 1.11 JavaHL - This feature includes the JavaHL library AND for Windows it also includes the native DLL libraries. You can only install one of these two versions. SVNKit Client Adapter - SVNKit is a pure Java reverse-engineered implementation of the Subversion API and is an alternative to using JavaHL.

If you install this adapter, then you must also install the SVNKit library which it uses. This is available on the update site as:. SVNKit Library - the main SVNKit library. JNA Library - used by the SVNKit library to enable some native OS functions it can benefit from using. Subversion Revision Graph - this adds an ability to view the history of an item as a graphical revision graph.