As we described in the section called “Revisions”, revision numbers in Subversion are pretty straightforward—integers that keep getting larger as you commit more changes to your versioned data. Still, it doesn't take long before you can no longer remember exactly what happened in each and every revision. Fortunately, the typical Subversion workflow doesn't often demand that you supply arbitrary revisions to the Subversion operations you perform. For operations that do require a revision specifier, you generally supply a revision number that you saw in a commit email, in the output of some other Subversion operation, or in some other context that would give meaning to that particular number.
But occasionally, you need to pinpoint a moment in time for which you don't already have a revision number memorized or handy. So besides the integer revision numbers, svn allows as input some additional forms of revision specifiers: revision keywords and revision dates.
The various forms of Subversion revision specifiers can be
        mixed and matched when used to specify revision ranges.  For
        example, you can use -r
        
        where REV1:REV2REV1 is a revision keyword
        and REV2 is a revision number, or
        where REV1 is a date and
        REV2 is a revision keyword, and so
        on.  The individual revision specifiers are independently
        evaluated, so you can put whatever you want on the opposite
        sides of that colon.
The Subversion client understands a number of revision
        keywords.  These keywords can be used instead of integer
        arguments to the --revision
        (-r) option, and are resolved into specific
        revision numbers by Subversion:
HEADThe latest (or “youngest”) revision in the repository.
BASEThe revision number of an item in a working copy. If the item has been locally modified, this refers to the way the item appears without those local modifications.
COMMITTEDThe most recent revision prior to, or equal to,
              BASE, in which an item changed.
PREVThe revision immediately before
              the last revision in which an item changed.
              Technically, this boils down to
              COMMITTED−1.
As can be derived from their descriptions, the
        PREV, BASE, and
        COMMITTED revision keywords are used only
        when referring to a working copy path—they don't apply
        to repository URLs.  HEAD, on the other
        hand, can be used in conjunction with both of these path
        types.
Here are some examples of revision keywords in action:
$ svn diff -r PREV:COMMITTED foo.c # shows the last change committed to foo.c $ svn log -r HEAD # shows log message for the latest repository commit $ svn diff -r HEAD # compares your working copy (with all of its local changes) to the # latest version of that tree in the repository $ svn diff -r BASE:HEAD foo.c # compares the unmodified version of foo.c with the latest version of # foo.c in the repository $ svn log -r BASE:HEAD # shows all commit logs for the current versioned directory since you # last updated $ svn update -r PREV foo.c # rewinds the last change on foo.c, decreasing foo.c's working revision $ svn diff -r BASE:14 foo.c # compares the unmodified version of foo.c with the way foo.c looked # in revision 14
Revision numbers reveal nothing about the world outside
        the version control system, but sometimes you need to
        correlate a moment in real time with a moment in version
        history.  To facilitate this, the --revision
        (-r) option can also accept as input date
        specifiers wrapped in curly braces ({ and
        }).  Subversion accepts the standard
        ISO-8601 date and time formats, plus a few others.  Here are
        some examples.  (Remember to use quotes around any date that
        contains spaces.)
$ svn checkout -r {2006-02-17}
$ svn checkout -r {15:30}
$ svn checkout -r {15:30:00.200000}
$ svn checkout -r {"2006-02-17 15:30"}
$ svn checkout -r {"2006-02-17 15:30 +0230"}
$ svn checkout -r {2006-02-17T15:30}
$ svn checkout -r {2006-02-17T15:30Z}
$ svn checkout -r {2006-02-17T15:30-04:00}
$ svn checkout -r {20060217T1530}
$ svn checkout -r {20060217T1530Z}
$ svn checkout -r {20060217T1530-0500}
…
When you specify a date, Subversion resolves that date to the most recent revision of the repository as of that date, and then continues to operate against that resolved revision number:
$ svn log -r {2006-11-28}
------------------------------------------------------------------------
r12 | ira | 2006-11-27 12:31:51 -0600 (Mon, 27 Nov 2006) | 6 lines
…
You can also use a range of dates. Subversion will find all revisions between both dates, inclusive:
$ svn log -r {2006-11-20}:{2006-11-29}
…
Since the timestamp of a revision is stored as an unversioned, modifiable property of the revision (see the section called “Properties”), revision timestamps can be changed to represent complete falsifications of true chronology, or even removed altogether. Subversion's ability to correctly convert revision dates into real revision numbers depends on revision datestamps maintaining a sequential ordering—the younger the revision, the younger its timestamp. If this ordering isn't maintained, you will likely find that trying to use dates to specify revision ranges in your repository doesn't always return the data you might have expected.