Here are all of the responses to the survey that I received, with minor formatting fixups.
The questions


1. Your name 2. Your email if you don't mind us putting that on the page 3. Whether your repository is public or private 4. A hyperlink to repository if it's public 5. Size of the repository in MB (not your working copy) 6. Approximate date you created the repository 7. Current revision number of HEAD 8. Number of users who use the repository 9. Platform/OS that server is running on 10. Platform/OS that client(s) are using 11. What you are keeping in your Subversion repository (e.g. source code, docs, digital images, Word docs, etc) 12. Any other info you think is relevant
[Received 2002-10-04] [Updated 2003-05-12] 1. The Subversion Development Team 2. dev@subversion.tigris.org 3. public (though read-only for authorized users) 4. http://svn.collab.net/repos/svn 5. 106 MB 6. 2002-08-30 7. 5896 8. 46 read/write users. Over 1000 read-only users. 9. Linux svn.collab.net 2.4.2-2 #1 Sun Apr 8 20:41:30 EDT 2001 i686 unknown 10. Various...you name it, we probably gotz it. 11. Subversion itself, plus a few third-party client tools. 12. You're my hero, Fitz.
[Received 2002-10-04] [Updated 2003-05-13] 1. Ben Collins 2. bcollins@debian.org 3. Public 4. http://www.linux1394.org/viewcvs/ http://www.sparc-boot.org/viewcvs/ 5. 20 MB 6. Around April 1, 2002, but probably sooner. 7. 929 8. 12 9. HP i2000 (ia64, dual cpu) running Linux 2.4.20. 10. Linux, varied platforms. 11. Source code. 12. This repo was converted using cvs2svn from an existing repository (some 300 revs). The existing developers who switched to SVN did so with zero problems and zero learning curve. The Linux1394 Project houses some 5 seperate repositories for not only the kernel drivers, but also supporting userspace libraries. The SILO repository was converted from a sourceforge CVS repo using cvs2svn. Both projects have anonymous svnserve access as well as viewcvs. Developer access is via svnserve over ssh-tunnel.
[Received 2002-10-04] 1. Blair Zajac 2. blair@orcaware.com 3. Public 4. http://www.orcaware.com/svn/ 5. 80MB 6. 2002-06-28 7. 149 8. 2 9. RedHat Linux 7.3. 10. Linux, Solaris, Irix, Windows 2000/XP. 11. Source code and docs. 12. Source code repository for Blair Zajac's Orca project, Perl modules and other utility packages that Blair has written.
[Received 2002-10-04] 1. Eric Gillespie 2. epg@pretzelnet.org 3. public read-only 4. http://pretzelnet.org/svn/ 5. 6MB 6. 2002-04-09 7. 436 8. 3 9. NetBSD/i386 10. NetBSD/{i386,alpha}, GNU/Linux/i386, Mac OS X 11. Source code, documentation, configuration files 12. http://pretzelnet.org/viewsvn/ (not live)
[Received 2002-10-04] 1. Nathan Fiedler 2. nfiedler at bluemarsh dot com 3. public 4. http://www.bluemarsh.com/repos/ 5. 23 6. 2002-04-14 7. 587 8. 1 9. Intel/Linux 10. Any 11. source code, documentation 12. I love Subversion!
[Received 2003-6-29] 1. Ben Collins 2. bcollins@debian.org 3. Public 4. svn://svn.kernel.org/linux-2.4/ svn://svn.kernel.org/linux-2.5/ 5. 323 MB and 664 MB 6. Jun 14, 2003. 7. 3353 and 11383 8. Unknown 9. Dual 1.8ghz, Redi Hat Linux 7.3, 2.4.18-3smp 10. Linux, on varied architectures. 11. Source code. 12. This repo is continuously updated from a CVS repo that mirrors the Linux kernel BitKeeper repo. The bkCVS repo, provided by BitMover, or updated hourly to provide a non-bk interface to the metadata and source from the BitKeeper respository maintained by the primary kernel maintainers (Linus for 2.5, and Marcelo for 2.4). The bkcvs2svn script was specially designed from the stock cvs2svn python script provided by the Subversion tools. This script is specific to the bkCVS repo, and cannot be used to incrementally update other CVS repo's. bkcvs2svn is run hourly opposite the bkCVS scripts to provide Subversion users with a better mirror of the BitKeeper kernel repo's. Since Subversion provides better access to the metadata involved in the kernel revision history, users can get more out of the information. The server that bkSVN runs on is hosted by BitMover themselves.
[Received 2002-10-04] 1. Karl Fogel 2. kfogel@red-bean.com 3. Public 4. http://sanpietro.red-bean.com:8080/ale/ 5. 13.6 MB 6. August 2002 7. 28 8. 3 or 4 9. Sparc Debian GNU/Linux 10. unknown 11. source code, sample genetic sequence data 12. You might want to have a field for the project licence?
[Received 2002-10-09] 1. Christof Meerwald 2. better use http://cmeerw.org/contact.html instead of my email address 3. Public 4. http://svn.cmeerw.net/repos/ 5. 5.8 MB 6. 2002-05-26 7. 42 8. 1 9. Debian GNU/Linux 3.0 10. Debian GNU/Linux 3.0 11. source code of some small Open Source projects I am working on. 12.
[Received 2003-04-01] 1. John Goerzen 2. jgoerzen@complete.org 3. public 4. http://svn.complete.org/ 5. 135MB 6. July 2002 7. I serve multiple repositories; the highest is at about 400 8. unknown 9. Debian 10. Any platform Subversion supports 11. Source code for OfflineIMAP, Gopher, PyGopherd, and other Free Software projects 12. http://svn.complete.org/ hosts multiple Subversion repositories, and interested Free Software developers may contact me if they need a Subversion repository for their project.
[Received 2003-05-17] 1 Dirk-Willem van Gulik, Volunteer Stichting Wireless Leiden 2 dirkx@webweaving.org 3 public for read, managed for write 4 http://wleiden.webweaving.org:8080/svn/ 5 60Mb 6 October 2002, Operational December 2002 7 Around 300 8 2-4 very regular, 10+ occasionally, 1300+ unique IP's for read only. 9 FreeBSD 10 FreeBSD, MacOSX and some linux 11 Software for the WiFi Nodes of www.wirelessleiden.nl - an cooperative city wide 802.11b network build by volunteers of Leiden for the people of Leiden in the City of Leiden. 12 Subversion is getting there. Keep up the good work.
[Received 2003-09-04] 1. Jens-Uwe Mager and Holger Krekel 2. jum@anubis.han.de and hpk@trillke.net 3. public (readonly, write access for registered users) 4. http://codespeak.net/svn/ 5. 165 MB 6. 2003-02-16 7. 1270 8. 20 read/write 9. Gentoo Linux 10. Linux, Windows, OS X 11. free software projects: PyPy, rlcompleter2, pyrepl, experimental CPython-cvs mirror 12. contact one of persons under 2 if you have interesting (python related) projects that need hosting.
[Received 2003-01-21] 1. Gustavo Niemeyer 2. niemeyer@conectiva.com 3. Private, for now. 4. 5. 7.7G 6. 2002-08-20 7. 23000 8. 20 users, for now. 9. Linux-i386 10. For now, linux on i386 and PPC. 11. Exploded RPM packages (tarballs, patches, specs, etc). 12. More information at http://moin.conectiva.com.br/RepositorySystem
[Received 2002-10-04] 1. Erwin J. van Eijk 2. info@gaijin.nl 3. private 4. 5. Currently: 30M, testing with conversion of 100M+ CVS repos 6. ~ dec 2001 7. 130, but the repos was 'rebuilt' again from a sorta WC after a repos death. 8. 2. :-) 9. Linux 10. Linux, FreeBSD 11. Source code. 12. Waiting for Svn to hit 1.0, so I can *finally* kick CVS out of the building...
[Received 2002-10-04] 1. Jay McCarthy 2. 3. Private 4. 5. 47M 6. 05/16/2002 7. 489 8. 5 9. RedHat 7.2 / Linux 10. Debian Linux, RedHat Linux, Mac OS X 11. Source code, project documentation, and project websites. 12. Never wedged! And never a problem with upgrading!
[Received 2002-10-04] 1. Robert Schiele 2. rschiele@uni-mannheim.de 3. private 4. n/a 5. 140 MB 6. 09/22/2002 7. 30 8. 1 9. i686/Linux 10. i686/Linux 11. All productive data I am working on. 12.
[Received 2002-10-09] 1. Sander Striker 2. striker@apache.org 3. Private 4. 5. 48MB 6. Second week of June 2002 7. 8. 1 9. Linux 10. Windows 2000 11. Source code 12.
[Received 2002-10-15] 1. Jeff Stuart 2. jstuart@computer-city.net 3. private 4. 5. 945 Mb spread out over 20 repositories. 6. 10/2/2002 7. Most Active repository is at rev 38 8. 1 9. Linux 10. Linux 11. Source code to 20 different websites 12. While I had a few problems at first, they were either caused by A) Hardware problems on the repository server or B) My own stupid mistakes like making a backup of a folder BEFORE doing a svn delete of it and then after the delete copying the backup back and then wondering why svn update was failing.
[Received 2002-10-04] 1. Faried Nawaz 2. fn@hungry.org 3. private 4. 5. 1mb (small project, not many checkins yet) 6. aug 9 2002 7. 8 8. 1 (me) 9. i386/FreeBSD 4.7 10. i386/FreeBSD 4.7 11. source code to a 3rd party app which has been patched for local use 12. will add a lot more code (mostly python scripts) soon.
[Received 2002-10-04] 1. Vlad Skvortsov 2. vss@high.net.ru 3. Private yet. 4. 5. I really have several repositories, total about 50Mb. 6. February, 2002. 7. The oldest repositories head is r137. 8. Me alone. :-) 9. FreeBSD/i386 10. FreeBSD/i386 11. Sources, docs. 12. Subversion is used to host production projects that are used in cellular operator environment.
[Received 2002-10-08] 1. Anders Rune Jensen 2. anders@gnulinux.dk 3. public 4. http://www.gnulinux.dk/svn/mms 5. 14MB 6. 1. June 7. 92 8. 1 9. Intel/GNU/Linux 10. GNU/Linux 11. Source code and some pictures that I use with the project. 12. Been using subversion since it was pre-alpha and no data has been lost or otherwise hurt in the process.
[Received 2002-10-13] [Updated 2004-01-23] 1. Branko Čibej 2. brane@hermes.si 3. private 4. 5. 400MB 6. August 2002 7. 1500+ 8. 30+ 9. Linux (Debian Woody x86) 10. Windows, Linux 11. Project documentation, source code and web pages. 12. Initially, the docs (for three development and two support projects) used to live in ClearCase, but we decided we don't want to pay for licences just to put docs on the web. Now several projects use SVN for their main source repository, too.
[Received 2002-17-04] 1. Ross Mellgren 2. dridus@thornhaven.org 3. Private 4. 5. 17mb 6. Beginning of October, 2002 7. 10 (young!) 8. 2 9. SuSE Linux 7.3 10. SuSE Linux 7.3 11. Source code, docs, areas, script code, and configuration files. 12. Thornhaven is a mud (online multiplayer game, text based), a work in progress, based on the Theta MUD engine. For the past two years, the Theta engine hasn't been under version control (as it was just me, it was more effort than it was worth), but recently as the project has been speeding up, I've put it under version control. I first considered CVS, but I'm glad I didn't... svn is quite good, even at this pre-release stage.
[Received 2002-28-04] 1. Tim Moloney 2. moloney@mrsl.com 3. Private 4. N/A 5. 1.4 MB 6. 2002-10-24 7. Many repositories, HEAD ranges from 3 to 7 8. 3 network administrators 9. Red Hat Linux 8.0 10. Red Hat Linux 7.3 and 8.0 11. Network configuration files 12. Since this is slightly out of the ordinary, a description can be read here.
[Received 2002-09-11] 1. Timothee Besset / Id Software contractor 2. ttimo@idsoftware.com 3. One public with no anonymous read (#1), one on a private internal network (#2) 4. https://zerowing.idsoftware.com:666/ 5. #1 8kb. #2 216kb 6. repositories created when svn hit Alpha (summer 2002) 7. #1 9. #2 14 8. only me so far 9. Debian Woody 10. clients are several Linux / win32 11. #1 has some utilities to sync VSS database with a CVS server, and SourceGear's SourceOffsite client source (remote VSS access). Planning on putting the tools as BSD license (and make an SVN version) #2 has ... private stuff
[Received 2002-11-23] 1. David Casti 2. support@neosynapse.net 3. Private, but our open source contributions will soon be in a public one 4. 5. about 100 megs 6. November 6, 2002 7. 30 8. 10 8. Intel/Linux 10. Intel/Linux 11. code, docs, web sites, graphics, etc. 12. svn has many exciting features, but the ability to use switch to create inter-related projects which are developed independently is most impressive
[Received 2002-11-29] 1. Gerald Richter 2. richter@ecos.de 3. private 4. 5. 995MB (multiple repositories, biggest is 216MB) 6. June 2002 7. 730 8. 3 write + 10 read only 9. Linux + Apache + mod_ssl 10. Linux and Windows 11. Sourcecode and Binaries 12. Some of the repositories we use to distribute software, the others are for our internal software developement
[Received 2002-12-18] 1. Alex Spencer 2. 3. private 4. 5. #1: 425.6 MB #2: 1.01 GB 6. Oct 30 2002 (both) 7. #1: 3 #2: 75 8. 1 (both) 9. Mac OS X v10.2.2 10. Mac OS X v10.2.2 11. Source code and templates for web apps 12.
[Received 2003-02-14] 1. Jostein Christoffer Andersen 2. jostein at josander dot net 3. private 4. 5. 12 MB 6. 2002-09-30 7. 496 8. 3 9. Linux: Dell Dimension 8200 P4-1800 10. Mostly Linux, but also some Windows 11. Source code and images (Web, CGI and friends) 12. The repository was moved from CVS to Subversion without any trouble
[Received 2003-02-25] 1. Art Haas 2. ahaas@airmail.net 3. Public 4. http://subversion.pythoncad.org:9000/svn/pythoncad/ 5. 5 MB. 6. July 2002 7. 308 8. 1 9. Linux 10. Linux 11. Python source code, web pages and PNG images 12. PythonCAD Home Page: http://www.pythoncad.org/
[Received 2003-07-06] 1. Chia-liang Kao 2. clkao@clkao.org 3. public 4. http://svn.clkao.org/sympa 5. 103MB 6. 2003/05/16 7. 2191 8. 1 9. FreeBSD RELENG_4 10. FreeBSD, Mac OS X 11. sympa mailing list system source and document 12. created with vcp from cvs, /clkao/trunk is a branch that was imported from another repository, previously being worked on with manual vendor import from cvs
[Received 2003-03-16] 1. Milcis Studios 2. seb@cine7.net 3. private 4. 5. 227 MB 6. 2002-12-03 7. 288 8. 10 9. GNU/Linux (Gentoo) 10. GNU/Linux (Gentoo), Windows 11. Source code, docs (html, LaTeX), program binaries, images, 3D models, and all what makes a game 12. Dream come true for teamwork, no matter the format of the files, or the platform the developers use.
[Received 2003-04-15] 1. Joerg Hessdoerfer 2. Joerg.Hessdoerfer@sea-gmbh.com 3. private 4. - 5. 500MB 6. March 2003 7. 214 8. 5 9. Debian linux woody i386 10. Win NT/2K/XP, Linux 11. Source code, mostly binary (LabVIEW), docs (MS Word etc.)
[Received 2003-05-02] 1. Daniel Patterson 2. 3. private 4. 5. 1738MB 6. 15th Feb, 2003 7. 782 8. 17 9. i386/Debian GNU/Linux 10. 20% Linux, 80% Win32 (2000 and XP) 11. Source code, documents, presentations, images (i.e. everything)
[Received 2003-05-02] 1. Edmund Horner 2. subversion@chrysophylax.cjb.net 3. private 4. - 5. 137 6. 2003-03-10 7. 209 8. 1 9. Intel/Win32 10. Intel/Win32 11. Code and docs from programming (work, hobby and studies) in Pascal, C, C++, Java, etc. TeX and PDF for university assignments. External web page. My "intranet" (local server, local client!), including PHP scripts for database access, file system searching, and Subversion repository browsing. Apache configuration. Sources and output for POV-Ray. Various revisions of my Curriculum Vitae from the last 10 years. Lots of other personal documents. 12. Even at 0.20, Subversion is already doing wonders for my document management! It is also a very nice architecture, and I have had a lot of fun creating a small PHP script for browsing the repository.
[Received 2003-05-07] 1. Tuukka Lehtonen 2. - 3. private 4. - 5. 200M 6. In use since 0.12 release 7. 1019 8. 6 9. x86 Linux 2.4.20 10. Linux, Windows 11. Source code, www-pages. 12. Linux side has worked very much to our satisfaction. The merge (diff) crashes on the Windows client were a big annoyance until they got fixed.
[Received 2003-06-17] 1. John Peacock 2. zenop@speakeasy.org 3. currently private 4. N/A 5. 541M 6. 6/3/2003 7. ~16000 8. 1 9. Mandrake Linux 9.0 10. Ditto 11. All Perl Changes repository from Perl 5.004 (mirrors p4 repository) 12. Used apc2svn to populate the repository (took ~18 hours)
A blank form to fill out. :) 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12.