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RespondidaTF10128 - Path contains more than the allowed 259 characters.

  • lunes, 22 de octubre de 2007 20:22scott_m Medallas del usuarioMedallas del usuarioMedallas del usuarioMedallas del usuarioMedallas del usuario
     

    In Orcase Beta2, I tried to do a check out today from Team Foundation Source Control Explorer and encountered this error:

     

    TF10128 - Path contains more than the allowed 259 characters.

     

     

    We try to use the Microsoft assembly naming conventions so a given assembly might be have a lengthy path like

     

    $(RootPath)

    CT.Clients (Container)

    CT.Clients.Query.Hierarchal (Container)
               CT.Clients.Query.Hiercharchal.Exporters.Print (Project)

     

    I assumed that TFS / Orcas used unicode paths so this would never been an issue.   Java can have lengthy packages/namespaces so shouldn't TFS / .NET be able to as well?

     

    What is the best way way to address this issue?

     

    thanks!

     

    scottm

Respuestas

  • martes, 23 de octubre de 2007 0:38Eugene Zakhareyev Medallas del usuarioMedallas del usuarioMedallas del usuarioMedallas del usuarioMedallas del usuario
     Respondida
    Unfortunately, as far as I know the limitation is not going away in Orcas.

    And the best way to address that would be to use shorter path (at the repository planning stage). Also you need to take care how you name your branches (as it might easily overstep the 260 boundary).

     

    By the way, what do you mean by Microsoft assembly naming convention? I thought usually the idea is to make the folders according to the namespace:

     

    $(RootPath) = CT

    Clients

    HierarchicalQuery

    Exporters

    Print

     

     

    Cheers, Eugene

Todas las respuestas

  • martes, 23 de octubre de 2007 0:38Eugene Zakhareyev Medallas del usuarioMedallas del usuarioMedallas del usuarioMedallas del usuarioMedallas del usuario
     Respondida
    Unfortunately, as far as I know the limitation is not going away in Orcas.

    And the best way to address that would be to use shorter path (at the repository planning stage). Also you need to take care how you name your branches (as it might easily overstep the 260 boundary).

     

    By the way, what do you mean by Microsoft assembly naming convention? I thought usually the idea is to make the folders according to the namespace:

     

    $(RootPath) = CT

    Clients

    HierarchicalQuery

    Exporters

    Print

     

     

    Cheers, Eugene
  • martes, 23 de octubre de 2007 1:52scott_m Medallas del usuarioMedallas del usuarioMedallas del usuarioMedallas del usuarioMedallas del usuario
     

     

    Thanks for the info.  I guess its just frustrating as we never had this problem back in the old SVN / CVS - Java days.
  • miércoles, 24 de octubre de 2007 16:43scott_m Medallas del usuarioMedallas del usuarioMedallas del usuarioMedallas del usuarioMedallas del usuario
     

     

    The tough thing is that TFS tries to create a new folder in the TFS tree using the full project name.  So if you have a long project/assembly name, you get a long folder name in TFS as well.  You have to override this TFS naming behavior using the advanced button during initial checkin.

     

     

  • miércoles, 24 de octubre de 2007 16:46Eugene Zakhareyev Medallas del usuarioMedallas del usuarioMedallas del usuarioMedallas del usuarioMedallas del usuario
     

    Overall, I would not use the naming schema you have outlined in your first post (even without repository issue). I'd say it is over-informative - one does not need the whole namespace at every single level of the hierarchy.

     

    Cheers, Eugene