Provided by: libsvn-hooks-perl_1.23-2_all bug

NAME

       SVN::Hooks::DenyFilenames - Deny some file names.

VERSION

       version 1.23

SYNOPSIS

       This SVN::Hooks plugin is used to disallow the addition of some file names.

       It's active in the "pre-commit" hook.

       It's configured by the following directives.

   DENY_FILENAMES(REGEXP, [REGEXP => MESSAGE], ...)
       This directive denies the addition of new files matching the Regexps passed as arguments.
       If any file or directory added in the commit matches one of the specified Regexps the
       commit is aborted with an error message telling about every denied file.

       The arguments may be compiled Regexps or two-element arrays consisting of a compiled
       Regexp and a specific error message. If a file matches one of the lone Regexps an error
       message like this is produced:

               DENY_FILENAMES: filename not allowed: filename

       If a file matches a Regexp associated with an error message, the specified error message
       is substituted for the 'filename not allowed' default.

       Note that this directive specifies a default restriction. If there are any
       DENY_FILENAMES_PER_PATH directives (see below) being used, this one is only used for files
       that don't match any specific rules there.

       Example:

               DENY_FILENAMES(
                   qr/\.(doc|xls|ppt)$/i, # ODF only, please
                   [qr/\.(exe|zip|jar)/i => 'No binaries, please!'],
               );

   DENY_FILENAMES_PER_PATH(REGEXP => REGEXP, REGEXP => [REGEXP => MESSAGE], ...)
       This directive is more specific than the DENY_FILENAMES, because it allows one to specify
       different restrictions in different regions of the repository tree.

       Its arguments are a sequence of rules, each one consisting of a pair. The first element of
       each pair is a regular expression specifying where in the repository this rule applies. It
       applies if any file being added matches the regexp. The second element specifies the
       restrictions that should be imposed, just like the arguments to DENY_FILENAMES.

       The first rule matching an added file is used to check it. The following rules aren't
       tried.

       Only if no rules match a particular file will the restrictions defined by DENY_FILENAMES
       be imposed.

       Example:

               DENY_FILENAMES_PER_PATH(
                   qr:/src/:   => [qr/[^\w.-]/ => 'source files must be strict'],
                   qr:/doc/:   => qr/[^\w\s.-]/i, # document files allow spaces too.
                   qr:/notes/: => qr/^$/,         # notes directory allows anything.
               );

AUTHOR

       Gustavo L. de M. Chaves <gnustavo@cpan.org>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

       This software is copyright (c) 2013 by CPqD.

       This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as
       the Perl 5 programming language system itself.