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I've decided that modifying files directly in notepad is probably dangerous and it was about time to have some proper source control (I am quite new to source control). I have installed VisualSVN server on my server and TortoiseSVN on my client machine. I can create new folders fine, check them our etc. However, on my server, I have an existing folder structure in place for IIS and there are links based on this location everywhere. How can I make the entire folder work with SVN without moving the files?

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Don't you want to backup those files as well? (The ones that are beyond the links) – Laurent' Oct 6 '11 at 11:30

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up vote 1 down vote accepted

There is a simple solution for checking in an existing directory structure:

  1. Open the repository browser of TortoiseSVN and create a new directory for the project you want to check-in.
  2. Check-out this newly created empty directory from SVN somewhere
  3. Open the checked-out directory and move the contained hidden .svn directory into the root directory of your project. This enables the context menues from TortoiseSVN for all files and sub-folders.
  4. Add every file and folder you want to check-in (context menu command Add...)
  5. Execute SVN Commit... on the project root folder
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