svn resolved — Remove “conflicted” state on working copy files or directories.
This command has been deprecated in favor of running
svn resolve --accept working
. See “svn resolve” in the preceding section for
details.PATH
Remove “conflicted” state on working copy files
or directories. This routine does not semantically resolve conflict
markers; it merely removes conflict-related artifact files and
allows PATH
to be committed again; that
is, it tells Subversion that the conflicts have been
“resolved.” See Resolve Conflicts (Merging Others’ Changes) for an in-depth look at
resolving conflicts.
If you get a conflict on an update, your working copy will sprout three new files:
$ svn update C foo.c Updated to revision 31. $ ls foo.c foo.c.mine foo.c.r30 foo.c.r31
Once you’ve resolved the conflict and foo.c is ready to be committed, run svn resolved to let your working copy know you’ve taken care of everything.
You can just remove the conflict files and commit, but svn resolved fixes up some bookkeeping data in the working copy administrative area in addition to removing the conflict files, so we recommend that you use this command.