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SBACKUP Copyright (c) 1990 by George Kerber 12/23/90
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SHAREWARE SHAREWARE SHAREWARE SHAREWARE SHAREWARE SHAREWARE
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SBACKUP is SHAREWARE. If you try this program and continue to use it for
over 30 days you are required to register your copy and make payment of
$5 for use of the program. Please make payment of $5 to:
George Kerber 19756 E. Linvale Drive
303-693-2890 Aurora, Colorado 80013
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SHAREWARE SHAREWARE SHAREWARE SHAREWARE SHAREWARE SHAREWARE
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Program: SBACKUP.EXE
Programmer: George Kerber
Written: 12/23/90 - 12/24/90
Application: MS-DOS (3.0+) & AmigaDOS (1.2+)
Purpose: Makes backing up your source code files easy
(so you'll do it....).
Requirements: MS-DOS 3.0 or higher.
AmigaDOS 1.2 or higher. (2.0 compatible)
How many times have you modified an existing source code file and
then wished you could remove the changes? Sure, you could manually copy
the source file each time you begin to make changes. But you'd
have to manage a file naming scheme to insure that you could always tell
the generation of the backup files. SBACKUP assists you in this goal.
Simply execute SBACKUP with the name of your source code as it's only
argument. SBACKUP will copy the source file to the same filename with
an extension of .001, and shift up any existing backup filenames by 1.
Once SBACKUP has created at least one backup file, it will make any
more copies of the source code unless the sourcefile has been
modified. See the section below for a complete example.
SBACKUP supports up to 20 backup files. Once you have 20 backup files,
SBACKUP will delete the 20th backup file to make room for the new
backup. See the section below for information on how to change the
maxfiles from 20 to a value of your choice. SBACKUP never modifies
your sourcefile in any way. SBACKUP will backup any textfile, but is
especially written to backup C, BASIC and PASCAL source code files.
SBACKUP doesn't eliminate the need to be religious about doing hard
disk backups, it just makes keeping multiple versions of source code
handy and available.
SYNTAX: SBACKUP [-number_backups] filename [destination_dir]
-------
Installation: MS-DOS: Copy SBACKUP.EXE to a directory in your
------------- current PATH.
AmigaDOS: Copy SBACKUP to your c: directory or any
directory in your current PATH.
Suggested Usage: Create a batch file for each source project you wish
---------------- to create backups for. For example, suppose you had
a "C" source file called program.c. Create a batch
file called SAVE.BAT* which contains the following:
ECHO OFF*
SBACKUP program.c
You can now do a source code backup of your program.c
file by entering 'SAVE' at the DOS prompt. You should
keep this SAVE.BAT* in the directory that your source
code is kept. This way you can have a SAVE.BAT* batch
file in every directory you maintain source code in.
If you have multiple source files for a project, just
add a line calling SBACKUP in the batch file for each
filename or create a separate batch file with a
different name for each sourcefile.
If a number (preceded by a -) is entered on the
command line before the sourcefile name, SBACKUP
will use the new number as the maximum number of
files to retain. The maximum must be between 2-99.
The maxfiles can also be changed by setting an
environmental variable as described below.
If a destination directory is specified after the
filename, all backup files will be written to the
specified directory, instead of the current directory.
A backup directory can be created to store all backup
files to avoid cluttering up your current directory.
-------------------------------------------------------
* AmigaDOS batch files do not use the .BAT extension and
don't need the 'ECHO OFF' statement. The batch file
can be executed by entering:
1> execute batchfile
or just
1> batchfile
if the script bit is set (AmigaDOS 1.3 or higher).
The script protection bit can be set by entering:
1> protect batchfile +s
See your AmigaDOS manual for more information.
Backup Filenames: Standard programming language source code files are
----------------- handled in a special way. If the file extension is
C ("C"), BAS (BASIC), or P (PASCAL), the first
character of the backup extension will be C, B, or P.
The date and time of the backup will be written to the
end of the back up file as a remark in the standard
syntax of the language. For example:
SBACKUP SOURCE.C -> SOURCE.C01 ...
/* SBACKUP mm/dd/yy hh:mm:ss */
SBACKUP SOURCE.BAS -> SOURCE.B01 ...
REM SBACKUP mm/dd/yy hh:mm:ss
SBACKUP SOURCE.PAS -> SOURCE.P01 ...
(* SBACKUP mm/dd/yy hh:mm:ss *)
SBACKUP SOURCE.DOC -> SOURCE.D01 ...
n/a
SBACKUP SOURCE.TXT -> SOURCE.T01 ...
n/a
SBACKUP SOURCE.readme -> SOURCE.001 ...
n/a
Change # Backups: SBACKUP will retain the last 20 backups. This value
----------------- can be changed by the user by setting the SBACKUP
environmental variable with the desired value or via
a command line option as described above.
MS-DOS: c> set SBACKUP=n
-------
AmigaDOS: 1> setenv SBACKUP=n
---------
Where 'n' = the number of backups you desire to be
kept. The value must be between 2-99.
The set/setenv command can be set on the DOS command
line or in your autoexec.bat file/startup-sequence
file.
AmigaDOS Notes: SBACKUP will actually use the AmigaDOS 'COPY' command
--------------- to copy the files if it can be found in the current
PATH. If 'COPY' cannot be located, SBACKUP will
copy the files itself, but the copy will be slower.
SBACKUP can use the AmigaDOS and ARP COPY commands
with no problems.
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MS-DOS Example: Suppose you had a directory where you kept the "C" source
code and documentation for a program named widget. The program used the
following files:
MAIN.C
FUNCTIONS.C
OTHER.C
MATH.C
WIDGET.DOC
Create this batch file named SAVE.BAT to keep the source and documents
backed up to a directory named C:\SOURCE\BACKUP.
ECHO OFF
CLS
SBACKUP MAIN.C C:\SOURCE\BACKUP : save up to 20 versions
SBACKUP FUNCTIONS.C C:\SOURCE\BACKUP
SBACKUP OTHER.C C:\SOURCE\BACKUP
SBACKUP MATH.C C:\SOURCE\BACKUP
SBACKUP -5 WIDGET.DOC C:\SOURCE\BACKUP : save only 5 versions
Now whenever you execute the SAVE.BAT batch file, SBACKUP will check if
the current backup is current and if not, it will copy the files to the
C:\SOURCE\BACKUP directory with the correct extension.
The first time you use SAVE.BAT the following files will be created:
C:\SOURCE\BACKUP\MAIN.C01
C:\SOURCE\BACKUP\FUNCTIONS.C01
C:\SOURCE\BACKUP\OTHER.C01
C:\SOURCE\BACKUP\MATH.C01
C:\SOURCE\BACKUP\WIDGET.D01
If you execute SAVE.BAT again, SBACKUP will inform you that all files are
UP-TO-DATE. SBACKUP will only do another copy if the file has been changed.
Suppose you modified MATH.C, and then executed SAVE.BAT again. SBACKUP
would inform you that all other files were UP-TO-DATE. SBACKUP would
rename C:\SOURCE\BACKUP\MATH.C01 to C:\SOURCE\BACKUP\MATH.C02 and then
copy MATH.C to C:\SOURCE\BACKUP\MATH.C01.
The latest version of all backups will always have the lowest extension.
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SHAREWARE SHAREWARE SHAREWARE SHAREWARE SHAREWARE SHAREWARE
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
SBACKUP is SHAREWARE. You have permission to use this program for a period
of 30 days. After 30 days you must send the author $5 for the use of the
program and to register your copy. I assume no responsibility for the use
of this program or it's operation (I hate responsibility).
George Kerber
19756 E. Linvale Drive
Aurora, Colorado 80013
(303) 693-2890
Compuserve: 74010,2132
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