Rename a Subversion Repository
The scenario: You have a folder called code-repo where you keep all your svn repositories (let’s assume it is located in the root c:/ on a Windoze system). You have a repository named xproject. For some reason you need to rename the repository. Let’s say it needs to by yproject. There are 3 steps to rename the repository and retain all the history you have in the repo.
- Create an svn dump file of the xproject repo:
svnadmin dump C:\code-repo\xproject > c:\xproject.dmp - Create the new yproject svn repo:
svnadmin create C:\code-repo\yproject - Load the dump of the old repository into the new one:
svnadmin load C:\code-repo\yproject < C:\xproject.dmp
Sweet.
Who’s down with OPPM
I have struggled for some time now with an expanding workload. I direct a lot of projects for a couple of different business entities. Since I have yet to find a way to disrupt the time space continuum and add more hours to the day I am ever searching for ways to stay focused and cram more into a 24 hour day.
Enter the OPPM.
The OPPM (One Page Project Manager) is the most effective tool I have found yet for project tracking/communication. The real genius of it is its simplicity. It literally is a one page document that can be easily interpreted by the boss, the project stakeholders, the managers, or just about anyone. All you need is about 2-5 minutes to explain it to them once. Where can I get more information you ask?
The OPPM (One Page Project Manager) website is a good start.
Then buy the book and read it. The one I read is the one specifically geared for IT projects. It’s about 125 pages and you can read it (and more importantly digest it) over a weekend. Actually, once you read the first two chapters of the book you’ll be up and running. Although I recommend reading the whole thing to learn the finer points. I found the analysis of team member personalities very interesting (I’m the one with lots of unfinished books on the nightstand).
“But dude”, you say. “I just dropped a wad of cash on MS Project.” Don’t fret my friend. You probably still need it to manage the nitty gritty. And don’t throw out your Outlook task lists. You can still use them. The OPPM is meant to augment standard project management tools and methods. The power of OPPM shines in meetings when people actually UNDERSTAND what is going on with the project without having to be a PMP.
Get it. Use it. You will be glad.
myRev updated
I made a few small updates to myRev, a Dreamweaver extension I wrote for adding a comment header to web pages.
Nike+ Where’s my 1000 Mile T-Shirt?
I’ve been meaning to post this for a couple of weeks. I hit a running milestone on September 15th. I broke the 1000 mile barrier. My first run with Nike+ was December 27, 2006 (I got the running kit for a Christmas gift) so it took me a while to get there.
One thing that sucks is curious to me is that when I broke 500 miles Nike+ offered to sell me a 500 mile achievement t-shirt. At the time I thought I would hold out and get one when I shattered 1000. Unfortunately though, that milestone came and went and I got no offer. Does anyone know if there are Nike+ t-shirts for 1000 miles?
Incidentally I think the Nike+ interface is getting a little dated. It takes forever too long to scroll back to old runs and I’d like to be able to do some more in depth analysis of my run data. Help me out Nike.
Live from AZ for Dawgs vs Sundevils
Pictures are now being posted live to my mobileme galleries rather than here. Check for new pictures from the Arizona trip here.
Arizona Biltmore

Arizona Diamondbacks Restaurant… No kidding.
Taliesin West
Taliesin West
CS4 Beta - Subversion integration does not support file:// protocol
I was really excited to see that CS4 was integrating Subversion. In fact it was the main reason I downloaded the CS4 Beta. At my office I am the only programmer and you’ll have to trust me when I say my only option (for a wide variety of reasons beyond my control) is Subversion on my local machine’s file system and not as a Subversion Server.
Sadly, here is the error message that tipped me off that the file:// protocol was not a possibility:
I’m not the only one hoping for Adobe to add support. Check this post as well. If anyone knows of or hears about this getting changed in future releases please drop me a note.
ColdFusion Idol Worship
When I was a kid I idolized athletes. In college I idolized musicians. As a middle aged dude I idolize superior programmers.
Today I achieved something I am very excited about. I got a couple of lines (and one of those is a comment) of code included in one of Ray Camden’s projects at RIAForge. The project is GoogleCal. It’s a ColdFusion CFC for interacting with Google’s Calendar service. My tiny, wee contribution: helping to submit an “all day” event. It is such a small, small, small, small, small (keep going), miniscule piece of Ray’s project, but just to be able to contribute ANYthing to someone who gives so much to the CF community is freaking AWESOME.
Using Dreamweaver to work with .cfmail files
I had a BIG problem recently at a hosting company for a project I work on. They had “something go wrong” during an upgrade to ColdFusion 8 and they lost our site’s settings from ColdFusion 7. Rather than wasting valuable time trying to get them to restore a backup and redo the upgrade I forged on trying to set everything right.
One of the problems I came across was that the hosting company set the mail server to be a different one than what we had for CF7. Why did this matter? Well, there were about 300 messages sitting in the “Undelivr” folder that needed to go out. In each of those messages was the old (now incorrect) mail server info. Since I was under the gun to get the mail out I pulled them all down via FTP to parse through them with Dreamweaver.
I used this article to configure Dreamweaver to edit my extensions.txt file to be able to open and perform search and replace on .cfmail files:
http://kb.adobe.com/selfservice/viewContent.do?externalId=tn_16410
Here is a what the extensions.txt file looks like:
Once I got all of the .cfmail files updated, I FTP’d them back into the spool folder for re-processing. No dice. ColdFusion moved it all back to the “Undelivr” folder with a cryptic error:
The ColdFusion Mail Spool Encountered An Invalid Spool File In The Spool Directory. The invalid file MailXXXXXX.cfmail was moved to the undeliverable directory.
The next step… Hot Fix. Read about it here.
After the Hot Fix I again dropped the .cfmail files back into the spool folder for re-processing. This time… Sweet Success.
iPhone Cannot Restore Error (6) disaster averted
I was excited to download the iPhone 2.0.1 software tonight hoping it would stabilize my recently buggy iPhone 3G. What I ended up with was this.
My iPhone hurled and was plunged into a limbo of cannot restore but cannot function. I endured 3 failed attempts to restore. Each ended with the dreaded “iPhone Cannot Restore Error (6)”. I was using the machine I always sync it with, my iMac (iTunes 7.7.1) but I decided to roll the dice and plug it into my Macbook Air (iTunes 7.7). I had to re-download the 250 MB update and restore to factory settings from the Air. After that I plugged into the iMac and loaded my most recent backup.
Then I did a touchdown dance and spiked my iPhone. Ok, not really. Disaster averted.
To be clear I have a plain ole G3 with no jailbreak tomfoolery.
Enabling SSL on the ColdFusion 8 built-in web server
This tutorial assumes default install location for ColdFusion 8 on Windows XP.
The first thing you need to do is to create a keystore. This can be done with the keytool utility. I used the one that is part of ColdFusion 8.
Open a command prompt.
Execute the following command:
cd C:\ColdFusion8\runtime\jre\bin
Create the keystore with this command:
keytool -genkey -dname "cn=127.0.0.1, ou=CF, o=cfchimp, L=Decatur, ST=GA, C=US" -keyalg rsa -keystore mykey
If you have previously configured a keystore you might run into this error:
keytool error: java.lang.Exception: Key pair not generated, alias already exists
If you got the “already exists” error run this command to list the keystores:
keytool -list -v | more
If you got the “already exists” error run this command to delete the keystore:
keytool -delete -alias mykey
If you got the “already exists” error re-run the command to create the keystore.
Enter in a password when prompted (2 times)
Move the keystore file (mykey) to C:\ColdFusion8\runtime\lib\
Edit the config file C:\ColdFusion8\runtime\servers\coldfusion\SERVER-INF\jrun.xml with an xml editor of choice. This file is VERY sensitive so be sure to not screw up the syntax of it. You should probably make a copy of it before you edit it.
<!-- Uncomment this service to use SSL with the JRun Web Server
Note that you MUST create your own keystore before using this service -->
<service class="jrun.servlet.http.SSLService" name="SSLService">
<attribute name="enabled">true </attribute>
<attribute name="interface">* </attribute>
<attribute name="port">9100 </attribute>
<attribute name="keyStore">{jrun.rootdir}/lib/mykey </attribute>
<attribute name="keyStorePassword">turkula1 </attribute>
<attribute name="trustStore">{jrun.rootdir}/lib/trustStore </attribute>
<attribute name="socketFactoryName">jrun.servlet.http.JRunSSLServerSocketFactory </attribute>
</service>
Restart the ColdFusion8 application service.
Create a test page in the ColdFusion 8 wwwroot and opening it in a web browser using: https://127.0.0.1:9100/testpage.cfm
You should be good to go.
REFERENCES:
For some keytool commands: http://www.instantssl.com/ssl-certificate-support/server_faq/ssl-server-certificate-java.html
Adobe instructions: http://www.adobe.com/support/coldfusion/using/ssl_with_cf_web_server/ssl_with_cf_web_server03.html









