Whichever type of repository you use, it is vitally important that you maintain regular backups, and that you verify the backup. If the server fails, you may be able to access a recent version of your files, but without the repository all your history is lost forever.
The simplest (but not recommended) way is just to copy the repository folder onto the backup medium. However, you have to be absolutely sure that no process is accessing the data. In this context, access means any access at all. A BDB repository is written to even when the operation only appears to require reading, such as getting status. If your repository is accessed at all during the copy, (web browser left open, WebSVN, etc.) the backup will be worthless.
The recommended method is to run
svnadmin hotcopy path/to/repository path/to/backup --clean-logs
to create a copy of your repository in a safe manner. Then backup
the copy. The --clean-logs
option is not
required, but removes any redundant log files when you backup
a BDB repository, which may save some space.
The svnadmin
tool is installed automatically
when you install the Subversion command line client. The easiest
way to get this is to check the option to include the command
line tools when installing TortoiseSVN, but if you prefer you can
download the latest version of command line tools directly from the
Subversion
website.