At the risk of sounding obnoxious I'll just be the guy who says: the command-line client. It was in fact designed to be one's sole interface to the tool. It works the same on every platform, so you won't be putting effort into learning a GUI. Download SVN client for Mac OS. Sources are closed.
Mac Svn Tool
Today I went hunting around for a good, and free, svn client for Mac that would allow me to actually view/edit my svn repositories. I am getting a hang of the terminal commands for svn, but I wanted something to make it easy to browse what is in my svn directories. I found that and more in a program calledFree Svn Client For Mac
svnX.svnX
allows you to easily view multiple svn directories, use checkout/check in features, browse past revisions, etc. Best of all: totally free.
Here is a screen grab of
Here is a screen grab of
allows you to easily view multiple svn directories, use checkout/check in features, browse past revisions, etc. Best of all: totally free.
Here is a screen grab of svnX connect to my svn repository on my school's server:
When I first opened the program, I got a small error message because the default is to assume your svn binary files are located in usr/local/bin. However, if you installed and run
Here is a screen grab of svnX connect to my svn repository on my school's server:
(svn repository browser, organized by revision number)
When I first opened the program, I got a small error message because the default is to assume your svn binary files are located in usr/local/bin. However, if you installed and run