Subversion Repositories Projects

Rev

Details | Last modification | View Log | RSS feed

Rev Author Line No. Line
871 - 1
#!/bin/sh
2
 
3
# POST-UNLOCK HOOK
4
#
5
# The post-unlock hook runs after a path is unlocked.  Subversion runs
6
# this hook by invoking a program (script, executable, binary, etc.)
7
# named 'post-unlock' (for which this file is a template) with the
8
# following ordered arguments:
9
#
10
#   [1] REPOS-PATH   (the path to this repository)
11
#   [2] USER         (the user who destroyed the lock)
12
#
13
# The paths that were just unlocked are passed to the hook via STDIN
14
# (as of Subversion 1.2, only one path is passed per invocation, but
15
# the plan is to pass all unlocked paths at once, so the hook program
16
# should be written accordingly).
17
#
18
# The default working directory for the invocation is undefined, so
19
# the program should set one explicitly if it cares.
20
#
21
# Because the lock has already been destroyed and cannot be undone,
22
# the exit code of the hook program is ignored.
23
#
24
# On a Unix system, the normal procedure is to have 'post-unlock'
25
# invoke other programs to do the real work, though it may do the
26
# work itself too.
27
#
28
# Note that 'post-unlock' must be executable by the user(s) who will
29
# invoke it (typically the user httpd runs as), and that user must
30
# have filesystem-level permission to access the repository.
31
#
32
# On a Windows system, you should name the hook program
33
# 'post-unlock.bat' or 'post-unlock.exe',
34
# but the basic idea is the same.
35
#
36
# Here is an example hook script, for a Unix /bin/sh interpreter:
37
 
38
REPOS="$1"
39
USER="$2"
40
 
41
# Send email to interested parties, let them know a lock was removed:
42
mailer.py unlock "$REPOS" "$USER" /path/to/mailer.conf