NAME¶
cvs - Concurrent Versions System support files
NOTE¶
This documentation may no longer be up to date. Please consult the Cederqvist
(CVS Manual) as specified in
cvs(
1).
SYNOPSIS¶
- $CVSROOT/CVSROOT/commitinfo,v
- $CVSROOT/CVSROOT/cvsignore,v
- $CVSROOT/CVSROOT/cvswrappers,v
- $CVSROOT/CVSROOT/editinfo,v
- $CVSROOT/CVSROOT/history
- $CVSROOT/CVSROOT/loginfo,v
- $CVSROOT/CVSROOT/modules,v
- $CVSROOT/CVSROOT/rcsinfo,v
- $CVSROOT/CVSROOT/taginfo,v
DESCRIPTION¶
cvs is a system for providing source control to hierarchical collections
of source directories. Commands and procedures for using
cvs are
described in
cvs(
1).
cvs manages
source repositories, the directories containing master
copies of the revision-controlled files, by copying particular revisions of
the files to (and modifications back from) developers' private
working
directories. In terms of file structure, each individual source repository
is an immediate subdirectory of
$CVSROOT.
The files described here are supporting files; they do not have to exist for
cvs to operate, but they allow you to make
cvs operation more
flexible.
You can use the `modules' file to define symbolic names for collections of
source maintained with
cvs. If there is no `modules' file, developers
must specify complete path names (absolute, or relative to
$CVSROOT)
for the files they wish to manage with
cvs commands.
You can use the `commitinfo' file to define programs to execute whenever `
cvs commit' is about to execute. These programs are used for
``pre-commit'' checking to verify that the modified, added, and removed files
are really ready to be committed. Some uses for this check might be to turn
off a portion (or all) of the source repository from a particular person or
group. Or, perhaps, to verify that the changed files conform to the site's
standards for coding practice.
You can use the `cvswrappers' file to record
cvs wrapper commands to be
used when checking files into and out of the repository. Wrappers allow the
file or directory to be processed on the way in and out of CVS. The intended
uses are many, one possible use would be to reformat a C file before the file
is checked in, so all of the code in the repository looks the same.
You can use the `loginfo' file to define programs to execute after any
commit, which writes a log entry for changes in the repository. These
logging programs might be used to append the log message to a file. Or send
the log message through electronic mail to a group of developers. Or, perhaps,
post the log message to a particular newsgroup.
You can use the `taginfo' file to define programs to execute after any
tagor
rtag operation. These programs might be used to append a
message to a file listing the new tag name and the programmer who created it,
or send mail to a group of developers, or, perhaps, post a message to a
particular newsgroup.
You can use the `rcsinfo' file to define forms for log messages.
You can use the `editinfo' file to define a program to execute for
editing/validating `
cvs commit' log entries. This is most useful when
used with a `rcsinfo' forms specification, as it can verify that the proper
fields of the form have been filled in by the user committing the change.
You can use the `cvsignore' file to specify the default list of files to ignore
during
update.
You can use the `history' file to record the
cvs commands that affect the
repository. The creation of this file enables history logging.
FILES¶
- modules
- The `modules' file records your definitions of names for
collections of source code. cvs will use these definitions if you
use cvs to check in a file with the right format to `
$CVSROOT/CVSROOT/modules,v'.
The `modules' file may contain blank lines and comments (lines beginning
with ` #') as well as module definitions. Long lines can be
continued on the next line by specifying a backslash (``\'') as the last
character on the line.
A module definition is a single line of the `modules' file, in either
of two formats. In both cases, mname represents the symbolic module
name, and the remainder of the line is its definition.
mname -a aliases...
This represents the simplest way of defining a module mname. The `
-a' flags the definition as a simple alias: cvs will treat
any use of mname (as a command argument) as if the list of names
aliases had been specified instead. aliases may contain
either other module names or paths. When you use paths in aliases,
` cvs checkout' creates all intermediate directories in the working
directory, just as if the path had been specified explicitly in the
cvs arguments.
mname [ options ] dir [ files... ] [ &module... ]
In the simplest case, this form of module definition reduces to ` mname
dir'. This defines all the files in directory dir as module
mname. dir is a relative path (from $CVSROOT) to a
directory of source in one of the source repositories. In this case, on
checkout, a single directory called mname is created as a
working directory; no intermediate directory levels are used by default,
even if dir was a path involving several directory levels.
By explicitly specifying files in the module definition after
dir, you can select particular files from directory dir. The
sample definition for modules is an example of a module defined
with a single file from a particular directory. Here is another example:
m4test unsupported/gnu/m4 foreach.m4 forloop.m4
With this definition, executing ` cvs checkout m4test' will create a
single working directory `m4test' containing the two files listed, which
both come from a common directory several levels deep in the cvs
source repository.
A module definition can refer to other modules by including `
&module' in its definition. checkout creates a
subdirectory for each such module, in your working directory.
New in cvs 1.3; avoid this feature if sharing module
definitions with older versions of cvs.
Finally, you can use one or more of the following options in module
definitions:
` -d name', to name the working directory something other than
the module name.
New in cvs 1.3; avoid this feature if sharing module
definitions with older versions of cvs.
` -i prog' allows you to specify a program prog to run
whenever files in a module are committed. prog runs with a single
argument, the full pathname of the affected directory in a source
repository. The `commitinfo', `loginfo', and `editinfo' files provide
other ways to call a program on commit.
` -o prog' allows you to specify a program prog to run
whenever files in a module are checked out. prog runs with a single
argument, the module name.
` -e prog' allows you to specify a program prog to run
whenever files in a module are exported. prog runs with a single
argument, the module name.
` -t prog' allows you to specify a program prog to run
whenever files in a module are tagged. prog runs with two
arguments: the module name and the symbolic tag specified to rtag.
` -u prog' allows you to specify a program prog to run
whenever ` cvs update' is executed from the top-level directory of
the checked-out module. prog runs with a single argument, the full
path to the source repository for this module.
- commitinfo, loginfo, rcsinfo,
editinfo
- These files all specify programs to call at different
points in the ` cvs commit' process. They have a common structure.
Each line is a pair of fields: a regular expression, separated by
whitespace from a filename or command-line template. Whenever one of the
regular expression matches a directory name in the repository, the rest of
the line is used. If the line begins with a # character, the entire
line is considered a comment and is ignored. Whitespace between the fields
is also ignored.
For `loginfo', the rest of the line is a command-line template to execute.
The templates can include not only a program name, but whatever list of
arguments you wish. If you write ` %s' somewhere on the argument
list, cvs supplies, at that point, the list of files affected by
the commit. The first entry in the list is the relative path within
the source repository where the change is being made. The remaining
arguments list the files that are being modified, added, or removed by
this commit invocation.
For `taginfo', the rest of the line is a command-line template to execute.
The arguments passed to the command are, in order, the tagname ,
operation (i.e. add for `tag', mov for `tag -F', and
del for `tag -d`), repository , and any remaining are pairs
of filename revision . A non-zero exit of the filter program will
cause the tag to be aborted.
For `commitinfo', the rest of the line is a command-line template to
execute. The template can include not only a program name, but whatever
list of arguments you wish. The full path to the current source repository
is appended to the template, followed by the file names of any files
involved in the commit (added, removed, and modified files).
For `rcsinfo', the rest of the line is the full path to a file that should
be loaded into the log message template.
For `editinfo', the rest of the line is a command-line template to execute.
The template can include not only a program name, but whatever list of
arguments you wish. The full path to the current log message template file
is appended to the template.
You can use one of two special strings instead of a regular expression: `
ALL' specifies a command line template that must always be
executed, and ` DEFAULT' specifies a command line template to use
if no regular expression is a match.
The `commitinfo' file contains commands to execute before any other
commit activity, to allow you to check any conditions that must be
satisfied before commit can proceed. The rest of the commit
will execute only if all selected commands from this file exit with exit
status 0.
The `rcsinfo' file allows you to specify log templates for the
commit logging session; you can use this to provide a form to edit
when filling out the commit log. The field after the regular
expression, in this file, contains filenames (of files containing the
logging forms) rather than command templates.
The `editinfo' file allows you to execute a script before the
commit starts, but after the log information is recorded. These
"edit" scripts can verify information recorded in the log file.
If the edit script exits with a non-zero exit status, the commit is
aborted.
The `loginfo' file contains commands to execute at the end of a
commit. The text specified as a commit log message is piped through the
command; typical uses include sending mail, filing an article in a
newsgroup, or appending to a central file.
- cvsignore, .cvsignore
- The default list of files (or sh(1) file name
patterns) to ignore during ` cvs update'. At startup time,
cvs loads the compiled in default list of file name patterns (see
cvs(1)). Then the per-repository list included in
$CVSROOT/CVSROOT/cvsignore is loaded, if it exists. Then the
per-user list is loaded from `$HOME/.cvsignore'. Finally, as cvs
traverses through your directories, it will load any per-directory
`.cvsignore' files whenever it finds one. These per-directory files are
only valid for exactly the directory that contains them, not for any
sub-directories.
- history
- Create this file in $CVSROOT/CVSROOT to enable
history logging (see the description of ` cvs history').
SEE ALSO¶
cvs(
1),
COPYING¶
Copyright © 1992 Cygnus Support, Brian Berliner, and Jeff Polk
Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this manual
provided the copyright notice and this permission notice are preserved on all
copies.
Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this manual
under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided that the entire resulting
derived work is distributed under the terms of a permission notice identical
to this one.
Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this manual into
another language, under the above conditions for modified versions, except
that this permission notice may be included in translations approved by the
Free Software Foundation instead of in the original English.