Question

I recently moved my Eclipse workspace directory and now Subclipse complains every time I open a file, dumping to the console something like:

Path is not a working copy directory

svn: '[original (pre-move) directory path]' is not a working copy

No such file or directory

This also happens when I explicitly try to view the history of a file. This persists across SVN cleanups, closing and re-opening Eclipse, etc.

Update, checkin, checkout and so on all seem to work fine, and Tortoise doesn't complain at all, so clearly it's not the SVN metadata that's screwed up, it's some Subclipse-specific metadata. Can anyone tell me how to blow this broken metadata away?


Edited to add: "Team > Disconnect" followed by "Team > Share" doesn't solve the problem.


Edited again to add: I've grepped through the whole .metadata directory and one of the project directories for a unique element of the old path and can't find it anywhere except in .metadata/.log (the error message itself) and some old Findbugs warnings. Very nice.

Was it helpful?

Solution

I was having the same error message using subclipse with javahl on a project that is out of the workspace directory. Changing to svnKit has resolved my problem.

OTHER TIPS

You need to delete the .syncinfo files. This is easily done (in most cases) by closing and opening Eclipse, however you can also do so manually as in the following:

To delete the cache, close Eclipse. The cache is stored in:

[workspace]/.metadat​a/.plugins/org.eclip​se.core.resources/.p​rojects/PROJECTNAME/​.syncinfo

So you can just find and delete all files named .syncinfo in

[workspace]/.metadat​a/.plugins/org.eclip​se.core.resources/.p​rojects

Quoted from this article: http://subclipse.tigris.org/ds/viewMessage.do?dsForumId=1047&dsMessageId=868799

I just did a "Team -> Cleanup" and this exact error went away! I also got this error because I moved between machines and the path wasn't the same.

Using Eclipse 3.6 and the Subversion 1.6 plugin.

Update in 2016: Still works perfectly with Eclipse 4.5.2 and Subclipse 1.10.

Edited to add: Nope, spoke too soon. This doesn't fix it. Some files just seem not to exhibit the problem.


The following seems to solve the problem:

  1. Team > Disconnect.
  2. Quit Eclipse.
  3. Blow away .metadata/.plugins/org.tigris.subversion.subclipse.*.
  4. Restart Eclipse.
  5. Team > Share.

Not sure how the old path was actually being stored in the plugin prefs, but it must have been in there somehwere. It's kind of pathetic of Subclipse to store absolute paths, but apparently it is.

There's a bug filed on this, or at least on the same error message. No context. Fifty cents says it gets rejected.

I'm sure there are many causes with different solutions, but I found the one that worked for me at Dan Wilson's blog. Simply remove the offending folders from the workspace (probably saving them if they have new content), update (letting Subversion recreate the folders), then move the contents back into the fresh folders in your workspace.

I got the error when I tried to rename a class by changing the case from DAO to Dao in Eclipse.

I had to rename it to something like Dao2 and then was able to rename it to Dao.

What worked for me: Do a "refactor - rename" on the project => after that do it again to rename it back to the original name.

Hard to say without further information.

Did you move the whole workspace or just the content?

Also, you can try creating new workspace from scratch and check out the whole project again.

Alternatively, you may try deleting the .metadata directory and relink the project again using File -> import -> existing project into workspace and then relink the SVN data through Team -> Share projects (with an 's'), or maybe just do this last bit after first disconnecting the project from SVN.

Right click the project folder : Team -> Update to Head

This will bring back the directory. Delete it again and Commit

In my case I had the folders of the projects in the Project Explorer and just had to reopen the project

For me, this error message was caused by an out-of-date installation of Subclipse, and the underlying SVNKit and JahaHL libraries. I have been using TortoiseSVN outside of Eclipse to manage my project directories, and my recent upgrade to the 1.8.x series of (Tortoise)SVN tools broke my working copies for Subclipse.

All I had to do to fix, was go to Help->"Install New Software..." and click "Add..." to add a new update site. I picked the latest update site for the latest release on http://subclipse.tigris.org/servlets/ProjectProcess?pageID=p4wYuA and upgraded Subclipse from there.

Then all my existing projects just worked, and I could reconnect to the one I had already tried disconnecting from without problems.

I have the same problem

I had a new project, added it to SVN. Then everything works as normal, until I try and refactor-rename any java file, I get:

move D:/dev/sk_ws/ge-parent/ge-core/src/main/java/com/skillkash/ge/beans/Skbean.java D:/dev/sk_ws/ge-parent/ge-core/src/main/java/com/skillkash/ge/beans/SkBean.java
    Path is not a working copy directory
svn: Path 'D:\dev\sk_ws\ge-parent\ge-core\src\main\java\com\skillkash\ge\beans\SkBean.java' is not a directory

Now the SVN URL is:

svn://qnap/share/MD0_DATA/svn/sk/ge-core/trunk

and the repository root is:

svn://qnap/share/MD0_DATA/svn/sk

Obviously just sharing the project then trying to move a file using subclipe does not work - it must be a bug. I have to do all my refactoring outside eclipse, and hand edit all the files which are affected.

checkout the whole project to a temp dir, then I copied the first level .svn directory and replaced my working copy .svn folder with this.

http://blog.itopia.de/directory-svn-containing-working-copy-admin-area-is-missing/275

It woks for me.

I had added a png file to my project, but I got this error trying to rename or delete it. Cleaning and refreshing the project didn't do anything.

I went into the svn Team Synchronizing perspective, right clicked on the file and deleted it. That solved my problem.

Sometime ago I had a similar issue. Seems that Subclipse (or Eclipse) stores the absolute path of your working copies. The cleanest solution is to export again your repository to the new path.

If you have non-committed code, then you can copy it on top of the clean export (without the .svn folder)

I too had this issue and I simply deleted the project from the workspace (leaving the files on the files system in tact).

I then imported an svn project into the workspace.

Import->SVN->Checkout Project From SVN.

I used my existing repository location to pull the files in.

This issue was caused when I changed Eclipse editions and used a Subclipse plug-in that was a version ahead of what I should have used.

I uninstalled the newer version and installed the correct older version and all worked well.

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