diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'conf')
-rw-r--r-- | conf/authz | 32 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | conf/passwd | 8 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | conf/svnserve.conf | 47 |
3 files changed, 0 insertions, 87 deletions
diff --git a/conf/authz b/conf/authz deleted file mode 100644 index 90d883888..000000000 --- a/conf/authz +++ /dev/null @@ -1,32 +0,0 @@ -### This file is an example authorization file for svnserve.
-### Its format is identical to that of mod_authz_svn authorization
-### files.
-### As shown below each section defines authorizations for the path and
-### (optional) repository specified by the section name.
-### The authorizations follow. An authorization line can refer to:
-### - a single user,
-### - a group of users defined in a special [groups] section,
-### - an alias defined in a special [aliases] section,
-### - all authenticated users, using the '$authenticated' token,
-### - only anonymous users, using the '$anonymous' token,
-### - anyone, using the '*' wildcard.
-###
-### A match can be inverted by prefixing the rule with '~'. Rules can
-### grant read ('r') access, read-write ('rw') access, or no access
-### ('').
-
-[aliases]
-# joe = /C=XZ/ST=Dessert/L=Snake City/O=Snake Oil, Ltd./OU=Research Institute/CN=Joe Average
-
-[groups]
-# harry_and_sally = harry,sally
-# harry_sally_and_joe = harry,sally,&joe
-
-# [/foo/bar]
-# harry = rw
-# &joe = r
-# * =
-
-# [repository:/baz/fuz]
-# @harry_and_sally = rw
-# * = r
diff --git a/conf/passwd b/conf/passwd deleted file mode 100644 index d22bafc5b..000000000 --- a/conf/passwd +++ /dev/null @@ -1,8 +0,0 @@ -### This file is an example password file for svnserve.
-### Its format is similar to that of svnserve.conf. As shown in the
-### example below it contains one section labelled [users].
-### The name and password for each user follow, one account per line.
-
-[users]
-# harry = harryssecret
-# sally = sallyssecret
diff --git a/conf/svnserve.conf b/conf/svnserve.conf deleted file mode 100644 index 97c199e2e..000000000 --- a/conf/svnserve.conf +++ /dev/null @@ -1,47 +0,0 @@ -### This file controls the configuration of the svnserve daemon, if you
-### use it to allow access to this repository. (If you only allow
-### access through http: and/or file: URLs, then this file is
-### irrelevant.)
-
-### Visit http://subversion.tigris.org/ for more information.
-
-[general]
-### These options control access to the repository for unauthenticated
-### and authenticated users. Valid values are "write", "read",
-### and "none". The sample settings below are the defaults.
-# anon-access = read
-# auth-access = write
-### The password-db option controls the location of the password
-### database file. Unless you specify a path starting with a /,
-### the file's location is relative to the directory containing
-### this configuration file.
-### If SASL is enabled (see below), this file will NOT be used.
-### Uncomment the line below to use the default password file.
-# password-db = passwd
-### The authz-db option controls the location of the authorization
-### rules for path-based access control. Unless you specify a path
-### starting with a /, the file's location is relative to the the
-### directory containing this file. If you don't specify an
-### authz-db, no path-based access control is done.
-### Uncomment the line below to use the default authorization file.
-# authz-db = authz
-### This option specifies the authentication realm of the repository.
-### If two repositories have the same authentication realm, they should
-### have the same password database, and vice versa. The default realm
-### is repository's uuid.
-# realm = My First Repository
-
-[sasl]
-### This option specifies whether you want to use the Cyrus SASL
-### library for authentication. Default is false.
-### This section will be ignored if svnserve is not built with Cyrus
-### SASL support; to check, run 'svnserve --version' and look for a line
-### reading 'Cyrus SASL authentication is available.'
-# use-sasl = true
-### These options specify the desired strength of the security layer
-### that you want SASL to provide. 0 means no encryption, 1 means
-### integrity-checking only, values larger than 1 are correlated
-### to the effective key length for encryption (e.g. 128 means 128-bit
-### encryption). The values below are the defaults.
-# min-encryption = 0
-# max-encryption = 256
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