svn status — Print the status of working copy files and directories.
Print the status of working copy files and
directories. With no arguments, it prints only locally
modified items (no repository access). With
--show-updates
, it adds working revision
and server out-of-date information. With
--verbose
, it prints full revision
information on every item.
The first six columns in the output are each one character wide, and each column gives you information about different aspects of each working copy item.
The first column indicates that an item was added, deleted, or otherwise changed.
No modifications.
Item is scheduled for Addition.
Item is scheduled for Deletion.
Item has been modified.
Item has been replaced in your working copy. This means the file was scheduled for deletion, and then a new file with the same name was scheduled for addition in its place.
The contents (as opposed to the properties) of the item conflict with updates received from the repository.
Item is present because of an externals definition.
Item is being ignored (e.g. with the
svn:ignore
property).
Item is not under version control.
Item is missing (e.g. you moved or deleted it without using svn). This also indicates that a directory is incomplete (a checkout or update was interrupted).
Item is versioned as one kind of object (file, directory, link), but has been replaced by different kind of object.
The second column tells the status of a file's or directory's properties.
No modifications.
Properties for this item have been modified.
Properties for this item are in conflict with property updates received from the repository.
The third column is populated only if the working copy directory is locked. (See the section called “Sometimes You Just Need to Clean Up”.)
Item is not locked.
Item is locked.
The fourth column is populated only if the item is scheduled for addition-with-history.
No history scheduled with commit.
History scheduled with commit.
The fifth column is populated only if the item is switched relative to its parent (see the section called “Traversing Branches”).
Item is a child of its parent directory.
Item is switched.
The sixth column is populated with lock information.
When --show-updates
is used,
the file is not locked. If
--show-updates
is
not used, this merely means that
the file is not locked in this working copy.
File is locked in this working copy.
File is locked either by another user or in
another working copy. This only appears when
--show-updates
is used.
File was locked in this working copy, but the
lock has been “stolen” and is invalid.
The file is currently locked in the repository. This
only appears when --show-updates
is
used.
File was locked in this working copy, but the
lock has been “broken” and is invalid.
The file is no longer locked This only appears when
--show-updates
is used.
The out-of-date information appears in the seventh
column (only if you pass the
--show-updates
option).
The item in your working copy is up-to-date.
A newer revision of the item exists on the server.
The remaining fields are variable width and
delimited by spaces. The working revision is the next
field if the --show-updates
or
--verbose
options are passed.
If the --verbose
option is passed,
the last committed revision and last committed author
are displayed next.
The working copy path is always the final field, so it can include spaces.
--show-updates (-u) --verbose (-v) --non-recursive (-N) --quiet (-q) --no-ignore --username USER --password PASS --no-auth-cache --non-interactive --config-dir DIR --ignore-externals
This is the easiest way to find out what changes you have made to your working copy:
$ svn status wc M wc/bar.c A + wc/qax.c
If you want to find out what files in your working
copy are out-of-date, pass the
--show-updates
option (this will
not make any changes to your
working copy). Here you can see that
wc/foo.c
has changed in the
repository since we last updated our working
copy:
$ svn status --show-updates wc M 965 wc/bar.c * 965 wc/foo.c A + 965 wc/qax.c Status against revision: 981
--show-updates
only places an asterisk next to
items that are out of date (that is, items that will be
updated from the repository if you run svn
update). --show-updates
does
not cause the status listing to
reflect the repository's version of the item (although
you can see the revision number in the repository by
passing the --verbose
option).
And finally, the most information you can get out of the status subcommand:
$ svn status --show-updates --verbose wc M 965 938 sally wc/bar.c * 965 922 harry wc/foo.c A + 965 687 harry wc/qax.c 965 687 harry wc/zig.c Head revision: 981
For many more examples of svn status, see the section called “See an overview of your changes”.