svn resolve — Resolve conflicts on working copy files or directories.
Resolve “conflicted” state on working
            copy files or directories.  This routine does not
            semantically resolve conflict markers; however, it
            replaces PATH with the version
            specified by the --accept argument and
            then removes conflict-related artifact files.  This allows
            PATH to be committed
            again—that is, it tells Subversion that the
            conflicts have been
            “resolved.”.  You can pass the following
            arguments to the --accept command
            depending on your desired resolution:
baseChoose the file that was the
                  BASE revision before you updated
                  your working copy.  That is, the file that you
                  checked out before you made your latest
                  edits.
workingAssuming that you've manually handled the conflict resolution, choose the version of the file as it currently stands in your working copy.
mine-fullResolve all conflicted files with copies of the files as they stood immediately before you ran svn update.
theirs-fullResolve all conflicted files with copies of the files that were fetched from the server when you ran svn update.
See the section called “Resolve Conflicts (Merging Others' Changes)” for an in-depth look at resolving conflicts.
Here's an example where, after a postponed conflict
            resolution during update, svn resolve
            replaces the all conflicts in
            file foo.c with your edits:
$ svn up
Conflict discovered in 'foo.c'.
Select: (p) postpone, (df) diff-full, (e) edit,
        (h) help for more options: p
C    foo.c
Updated to revision 5.
$ svn resolve --accept mine-full foo.c
Resolved conflicted state of 'foo.c'