When Subversion modifies your working copy (or any information within .svn), it tries to do so as safely as possible. Before changing the working copy, Subversion writes its intentions to a logfile. Next, it executes the commands in the logfile to apply the requested change, holding a lock on the relevant part of the working copy while it works—to prevent other Subversion clients from accessing the working copy mid-change. Finally, Subversion removes the logfile. Architecturally, this is similar to a journaled filesystem. If a Subversion operation is interrupted (e.g., if the process is killed or if the machine crashes), the logfiles remain on disk. By reexecuting the logfiles, Subversion can complete the previously started operation, and your working copy can get itself back into a consistent state.
And this is exactly what svn
cleanup does: it searches your working copy and runs any leftover
logs, removing working copy locks in the process. If Subversion ever
tells you that some part of your working copy is “locked,”
this is the command that you should run. Also, svn status will display an L
next to locked items:
$ svn status L somedir M somedir/foo.c $ svn cleanup $ svn status M somedir/foo.c
Don’t confuse these working copy locks with the ordinary locks that Subversion users create when using the lock-modify-unlock model of concurrent version control; see the sidebar The Three Meanings of “Lock” for clarification.