Press Ctrl+Alt+S to open the IDE settings and select Version Control | Subversion.
If necessary, you can opt to delete all credentials stored in the cache for the http, svn and ssh+svn protocols. When an authentication challenge comes from the server, the credentials are sought for in the disk cache if the appropriate credentials are not found, or fail to authenticate, you are prompted to specify your login and password. Upon successful authentication, your credentials are saved on disk, in /.subversion_IDEA on macOS and Windows, and in ~/.subversion/auth/ on Unix systems. When you use Subversion integration in IntelliJ IDEA, you only need to answer the authentication challenge of the server if it is required by the authentication and authorization policies. The Subversion server does not require user authentication on every request.
UBUNTU DOWNLOAD SUBVERSION CLIENT INSTALL
IntelliJ IDEA currently supports integration with Subversion 1.7 and later, and it is required to download and install a command-line svn client (SVNKit is not supported, see blog post for details). For our tests we will use a CentOS 7 server with IP 192.168.0.100. That said, let’s roll up our sleeves and install these tools on a RHEL / CentOS 7, Fedora 22-24, Debian 8/7 and Ubuntu 16.04-15.04 server. With the Subversion integration enabled, you can perform Subversion operations from inside IntelliJ IDEA. Once the download is completed, extract the downloaded file with the following command: tar -xvzf openshift-origin-client-tools-v3.11. Next, change the directory to the extracted directory and copy kubectl and oc binaries to the /usr/local/bin directory. With the help of moddavsvn (Apache’s module for Subversion), you can access a Subversion repository using HTTP and a web server.