RCS
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NAME
rcs - change RCS file attributes
SYNOPSIS
rcs
[ options ]
file ...
DESCRIPTION
Rcs
creates new RCS files or changes attributes of existing ones.
An RCS file contains multiple revisions of text,
an access list, a change log,
descriptive text,
and some control attributes.
For rcs to work, the caller's login name must be on the access list,
except if the access list is empty, the caller is the owner of the file
or the superuser, or
the -i option is present.
Files ending in `,v' are RCS files, all others are working files. If
a working file is given, rcs tries to find the corresponding
RCS file first in directory ./RCS and then in the current directory,
as explained in
co(1L).
- -i
-
creates and initializes a new RCS file, but does not deposit any revision.
If the RCS file has no path prefix, rcs tries to place it
first into the subdirectory ./RCS, and then into the current directory.
If the RCS file
already exists, an error message is printed.
- -alogins
-
appends the login names appearing in the comma-separated list logins
to the access list of the RCS file.
- -Aoldfile
-
appends the access list of oldfile to the access list of the RCS file.
- -e[logins]
-
erases the login names appearing in the comma-separated list logins
from the access list of the RCS file.
If logins is omitted, the entire access list is erased.
- -b[rev]
-
sets the default branch to rev. If rev is omitted, the default
branch is reset to the (dynamically) highest branch on the trunk.
- -cstring
-
sets the comment leader to string. The comment leader
is printed before every log message line generated by the keyword
$Log$ during checkout (see
co(1L)).
This is useful for programming
languages without multi-line comments. During rcs -i or initial
ci, the comment leader is guessed from the suffix of the working file.
- -l[rev]
-
locks the revision with number rev.
If a branch is given, the latest revision on that branch is locked.
If rev is omitted, the latest revision on the default branch is locked.
Locking prevents overlapping changes.
A lock is removed with ci or rcs -u (see below).
- -u[rev]
-
unlocks the revision with number rev.
If a branch is given, the latest revision on that branch is unlocked.
If rev is omitted, the latest lock held by the caller is removed.
Normally, only the locker of a revision may unlock it.
Somebody else unlocking a revision breaks the lock.
This causes a mail message to be sent to the original locker.
The message contains a commentary solicited from the breaker.
The commentary is terminated with a line containing a single `.' or
control-D.
- -L
-
sets locking to strict. Strict locking means that the owner
of an RCS file is not exempt from locking for checkin.
This option should be used for files that are shared.
- -U
-
sets locking to non-strict. Non-strict locking means that the owner of
a file need not lock a revision for checkin.
This option should NOT be used for files that are shared.
The default (-L or -U) is determined by your system administrator.
- -nname[:rev]
-
associates the symbolic name name with the branch or
revision rev.
Rcs prints an error message if name is already associated with
another number.
If rev is omitted, the symbolic name is deleted.
- -Nname[:rev]
-
same as -n, except that it overrides a previous assignment of
name.
- -orange
-
deletes ("outdates") the revisions given by range.
A range consisting of a single revision number means that revision.
A range consisting of a branch number means the latest revision on that
branch.
A range of the form rev1-rev2 means
revisions rev1 to rev2 on the same branch,
-rev means from the beginning of the branch containing
rev up to and including rev, and rev- means
from revision rev to the end of the branch containing rev.
None of the outdated revisions may have branches or locks.
- -q
-
quiet mode; diagnostics are not printed.
- -sstate[:rev]
-
sets the state attribute of the revision rev to state.
If rev is a branch number, the latest revision on that branch is
assumed.
If rev is omitted, the latest revision on the default branch is assumed.
Any identifier is acceptable for state.
A useful set of states
is Exp (for experimental), Stab (for stable), and Rel (for
released).
By default,
ci(1L)
sets the state of a revision to Exp.
- -t[txtfile]
-
writes descriptive text into the RCS file (deletes the existing text).
If txtfile is omitted,
rcs prompts the user for text supplied from the standard input,
terminated with a line containing a single `.' or control-D.
Otherwise, the descriptive text is copied from the file txtfile.
If the -i option is present, descriptive text is requested
even if -t is not given.
The prompt is suppressed if the standard input is not a terminal.
DIAGNOSTICS
The RCS file name and the revisions outdated are written to
the diagnostic output.
The exit status always refers to the last RCS file operated upon,
and is 0 if the operation was successful, 1 otherwise.
FILES
The caller of the command
must have read/write permission for the directory containing
the RCS file and read permission for the RCS file itself.
Rcs
creates a semaphore file in the same directory as the RCS
file to prevent simultaneous update.
For changes, rcs always creates a new file. On successful completion,
rcs deletes the old one and renames the new one.
This strategy makes links to RCS files useless.
IDENTIFICATION
Author: Walter F. Tichy,
Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, 47907.
Revision Number:
1.3
; Release Date:
89/05/02
.
Copyright © 1982, 1988, 1989 by Walter F. Tichy.
SEE ALSO
co(1L), ci(1L), ident(1L), rcsdiff(1L), rcsintro(1L), rcsmerge(1L), rlog(1L),
rcsfile(5L)
Walter F. Tichy, "Design, Implementation, and Evaluation of a Revision Control
System," in Proceedings of the 6th International Conference on Software
Engineering, IEEE, Tokyo, Sept. 1982.
Index
- NAME
-
- SYNOPSIS
-
- DESCRIPTION
-
- DIAGNOSTICS
-
- FILES
-
- IDENTIFICATION
-
- SEE ALSO
-
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