18576028af
and non-unix code has been left out.
825 lines
36 KiB
Plaintext
825 lines
36 KiB
Plaintext
\input texinfo @c -*- texinfo -*-
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@setfilename cvsclient.info
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@include CVSvn.texi
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@node Top
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@top CVS Client/Server
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This document describes the client/server protocol used by CVS. It does
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not describe how to use or administer client/server CVS; see the regular
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CVS manual for that. This is version @value{CVSVN} of the protocol
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specification---@xref{Introduction} for more on what this version number
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means.
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@menu
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* Introduction:: What is CVS and what is the client/server protocol for?
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* Goals:: Basic design decisions, requirements, scope, etc.
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* Notes:: Notes on the current implementation
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* Protocol Notes:: Possible enhancements, limitations, etc. of the protocol
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* Connection and Authentication:: Various ways to connect to the server
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* Protocol:: Complete description of the protocol
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@end menu
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@node Introduction
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@chapter Introduction
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CVS is a version control system (with some additional configuration
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management functionality). It maintains a central @dfn{repository}
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which stores files (often source code), including past versions,
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information about who modified them and when, and so on. People who
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wish to look at or modify those files, known as @dfn{developers}, use
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CVS to @dfn{check out} a @dfn{working directory} from the repository, to
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@dfn{check in} new versions of files to the repository, and other
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operations such as viewing the modification history of a file. If
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developers are connected to the repository by a network, particularly a
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slow or flaky one, the most efficient way to use the network is with the
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CVS-specific protocol described in this document.
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Developers, using the machine on which they store their working
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directory, run the CVS @dfn{client} program. To perform operations
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which cannot be done locally, it connects to the CVS @dfn{server}
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program, which maintains the repository. For more information on how
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to connect see @ref{Connection and Authentication}.
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This document describes the CVS protocol. Unfortunately, it does not
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yet completely document one aspect of the protocol---the detailed
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operation of each CVS command and option---and one must look at the CVS
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user documentation, @file{cvs.texinfo}, for that information. The
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protocol is non-proprietary (anyone who wants to is encouraged to
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implement it) and an implementation, known as CVS, is available under
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the GNU Public License. The CVS distribution, containing this
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implementation, @file{cvs.texinfo}, and a copy (possibly more or less up
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to date than what you are reading now) of this document,
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@file{cvsclient.texi}, can be found at the usual GNU FTP sites, with a
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filename such as @file{cvs-@var{version}.tar.gz}.
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This is version @value{CVSVN} of the protocol specification. This
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version number is intended only to aid in distinguishing different
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versions of this specification. Although the specification is currently
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maintained in conjunction with the CVS implementation, and carries the
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same version number, it also intends to document what is involved with
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interoperating with other implementations (such as other versions of
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CVS); see @xref{Requirements}. This version number should not be used
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by clients or servers to determine what variant of the protocol to
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speak; they should instead use the @code{valid-requests} and
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@code{Valid-responses} mechanism (@pxref{Protocol}), which is more
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flexible.
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@node Goals
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@chapter Goals
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@itemize @bullet
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@item
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Do not assume any access to the repository other than via this protocol.
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It does not depend on NFS, rdist, etc.
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@item
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Providing a reliable transport is outside this protocol. It is expected
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that it runs over TCP, UUCP, etc.
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@item
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Security and authentication are handled outside this protocol (but see
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below about @samp{cvs kserver}).
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@item
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This might be a first step towards adding transactions to CVS (i.e. a
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set of operations is either executed atomically or none of them is
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executed), improving the locking, or other features. The current server
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implementation is a long way from being able to do any of these
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things. The protocol, however, is not known to contain any defects
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which would preclude them.
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@item
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The server never has to have any CVS locks in place while it is waiting
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for communication with the client. This makes things robust in the face
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of flaky networks.
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@item
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Data is transferred in large chunks, which is necessary for good
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performance. In fact, currently the client uploads all the data
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(without waiting for server responses), and then waits for one server
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response (which consists of a massive download of all the data). There
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may be cases in which it is better to have a richer interraction, but
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the need for the server to release all locks whenever it waits for the
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client makes it complicated.
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@end itemize
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@node Notes
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@chapter Notes on the Current Implementation
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The client is built in to the normal @code{cvs} program, triggered by a
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@code{CVSROOT} variable containing a colon, for example
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@code{cygnus.com:/rel/cvsfiles}.
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The client stores what is stored in checked-out directories (including
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@file{CVS}). The way these are stored is totally compatible with
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standard CVS. The server requires no storage other than the repository,
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which also is totally compatible with standard CVS.
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The server is started by @code{cvs server}. There is no particularly
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compelling reason for this rather than making it a separate program
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which shares a lot of sources with cvs.
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The server can also be started by @code{cvs kserver}, in which case it
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does an initial Kerberos authentication on stdin. If the authentication
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succeeds, it subsequently runs identically to @code{cvs server}.
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The current server implementation can use up huge amounts of memory
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when transmitting a lot of data over a slow link (i.e. the network is
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slower than the server can generate the data). There is some
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experimental code (see @code{SERVER_FLOWCONTROL} in options.h) which
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should help significantly.
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@node Protocol Notes
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@chapter Notes on the Protocol
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A number of enhancements are possible:
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@itemize @bullet
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@item
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The @code{Modified} request could be speeded up by sending diffs rather
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than entire files. The client would need some way to keep the version
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of the file which was originally checked out, which would double client
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disk space requirements or require coordination with editors (e.g. maybe
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it could use emacs numbered backups). This would also allow local
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operation of @code{cvs diff} without arguments.
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@item
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Have the client keep a copy of some part of the repository. This allows
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all of @code{cvs diff} and large parts of @code{cvs update} and
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@code{cvs ci} to be local. The local copy could be made consistent with
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the master copy at night (but if the master copy has been updated since
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the latest nightly re-sync, then it would read what it needs to from the
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master).
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@item
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Provide encryption using kerberos.
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@item
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The current procedure for @code{cvs update} is highly sub-optimal if
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there are many modified files. One possible alternative would be to
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have the client send a first request without the contents of every
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modified file, then have the server tell it what files it needs. Note
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the server needs to do the what-needs-to-be-updated check twice (or
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more, if changes in the repository mean it has to ask the client for
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more files), because it can't keep locks open while waiting for the
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network. Perhaps this whole thing is irrelevant if client-side
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repositories are implemented, and the rcsmerge is done by the client.
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@end itemize
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@node Connection and Authentication
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@chapter How to Connect to and Authenticate Oneself to the CVS server
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Connection and authentication occurs before the CVS protocol itself is
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started. There are several ways to connect.
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@table @asis
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@item rsh
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If the client has a way to execute commands on the server, and provide
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input to the commands and output from them, then it can connect that
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way. This could be the usual rsh (port 514) protocol, Kerberos rsh,
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SSH, or any similar mechanism. The client may allow the user to specify
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the name of the server program; the default is @code{cvs}. It is
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invoked with one argument, @code{server}. Once it invokes the server,
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the client proceeds to start the cvs protocol.
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@item kserver
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The kerberized server listens on a port (in the current implementation,
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by having inetd call "cvs kserver") which defaults to 1999. The client
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connects, sends the usual kerberos authentication information, and then
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starts the cvs protocol. Note: port 1999 is officially registered for
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another use, and in any event one cannot register more than one port for
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CVS, so the kerberized client and server should be changed to use port
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2401 (see below), and send a different string in place of @samp{BEGIN
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AUTH REQUEST} to identify the authentication method in use. However,
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noone has yet gotten around to implementing this.
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@item pserver
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The password authenticated server listens on a port (in the current
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implementation, by having inetd call "cvs pserver") which defaults to
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2401 (this port is officially registered). The client
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connects, sends the string @samp{BEGIN AUTH REQUEST}, a linefeed, the
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cvs root, a linefeed, the username, a linefeed, the password trivially
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encoded (see scramble.c in the cvs sources), a linefeed, the string
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@samp{END AUTH REQUEST}, and a linefeed. The server responds with
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@samp{I LOVE YOU} and a linefeed if the authentication is successful or
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@samp{I HATE YOU} and a linefeed if the authentication fails. After
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receiving @samp{I LOVE YOU}, the client proceeds with the cvs protocol.
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If the client wishes to merely authenticate without starting the cvs
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protocol, the procedure is the same, except @samp{BEGIN AUTH REQUEST} is
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replaced with @samp{BEGIN VERIFICATION REQUEST}, @samp{END AUTH REQUEST}
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is replaced with @samp{END VERIFICATION REQUEST}, and upon receipt of
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@samp{I LOVE YOU} the connection is closed rather than continuing.
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@end table
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@node Protocol
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@chapter The CVS client/server protocol
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In the following, @samp{\n} refers to a linefeed and @samp{\t} refers
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to a horizontal tab.
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@menu
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* Entries Lines::
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* Modes::
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* Filenames:: Conventions regarding filenames
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* Requests::
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* Responses::
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* Example::
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* Requirements::
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@end menu
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@node Entries Lines
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@section Entries Lines
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Entries lines are transmitted as:
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@example
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/ @var{name} / @var{version} / @var{conflict} / @var{options} / @var{tag_or_date}
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@end example
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@var{tag_or_date} is either @samp{T} @var{tag} or @samp{D} @var{date}
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or empty. If it is followed by a slash, anything after the slash
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shall be silently ignored.
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@var{version} can be empty, or start with @samp{0} or @samp{-}, for no
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user file, new user file, or user file to be removed, respectively.
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@var{conflict}, if it starts with @samp{+}, indicates that the file had
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conflicts in it. The rest of @var{conflict} is @samp{=} if the
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timestamp matches the file, or anything else if it doesn't. If
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@var{conflict} does not start with a @samp{+}, it is silently ignored.
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@node Modes
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@section Modes
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A mode is any number of repetitions of
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@example
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@var{mode-type} = @var{data}
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@end example
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separated by @samp{,}.
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@var{mode-type} is an identifier composed of alphanumeric characters.
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Currently specified: @samp{u} for user, @samp{g} for group, @samp{o}
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for other (see below for discussion of whether these have their POSIX
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meaning or are more loose). Unrecognized values of @var{mode-type}
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are silently ignored.
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@var{data} consists of any data not containing @samp{,}, @samp{\0} or
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@samp{\n}. For @samp{u}, @samp{g}, and @samp{o} mode types, data
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consists of alphanumeric characters, where @samp{r} means read, @samp{w}
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means write, @samp{x} means execute, and unrecognized letters are
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silently ignored.
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The two most obvious ways in which the mode matters are: (1) is it
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writeable? This is used by the developer communication features, and
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is implemented even on OS/2 (and could be implemented on DOS), whose
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notion of mode is limited to a readonly bit. (2) is it executable?
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Unix CVS users need CVS to store this setting (for shell scripts and
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the like). The current CVS implementation on unix does a little bit
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more than just maintain these two settings, but it doesn't really have
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a nice general facility to store or version control the mode, even on
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unix, much less across operating systems with diverse protection
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features. So all the ins and outs of what the mode means across
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operating systems haven't really been worked out (e.g. should the VMS
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port use ACLs to get POSIX semantics for groups?).
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@node Filenames
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@section Conventions regarding transmission of file names
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In most contexts, @samp{/} is used to separate directory and file
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names in filenames, and any use of other conventions (for example,
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that the user might type on the command line) is converted to that
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form. The only exceptions might be a few cases in which the server
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provides a magic cookie which the client then repeats verbatim, but as
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the server has not yet been ported beyond unix, the two rules provide
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the same answer (and what to do if future server ports are operating
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on a repository like e:/foo or CVS_ROOT:[FOO.BAR] has not been
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carefully thought out).
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@node Requests
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@section Requests
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File contents (noted below as @var{file transmission}) can be sent in
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one of two forms. The simpler form is a number of bytes, followed by a
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newline, followed by the specified number of bytes of file contents.
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These are the entire contents of the specified file. Second, if both
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client and server support @samp{gzip-file-contents}, a @samp{z} may
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precede the length, and the `file contents' sent are actually compressed
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with @samp{gzip}. The length specified is that of the compressed
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version of the file.
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In neither case are the file content followed by any additional data.
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The transmission of a file will end with a newline iff that file (or its
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compressed form) ends with a newline.
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@table @code
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@item Root @var{pathname} \n
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Response expected: no. Tell the server which @code{CVSROOT} to use.
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@var{pathname} must already exist; if creating a new root, use the
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@code{init} request, not @code{Root}. @var{pathname} does not include
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the hostname of the server, how to access the server, etc.; by the time
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the CVS protocol is in use, connection, authentication, etc., are
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already taken care of.
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@item Valid-responses @var{request-list} \n
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Response expected: no.
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Tell the server what responses the client will accept.
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request-list is a space separated list of tokens.
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@item valid-requests \n
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Response expected: yes.
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Ask the server to send back a @code{Valid-requests} response.
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@item Repository @var{repository} \n
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Response expected: no. Tell the server what repository to use. This
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should be a directory name from a previous server response. Note that
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this both gives a default for @code{Entry } and @code{Modified } and
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also for @code{ci} and the other commands; normal usage is to send a
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@code{Repository } for each directory in which there will be an
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@code{Entry } or @code{Modified }, and then a final @code{Repository }
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for the original directory, then the command.
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@item Directory @var{local-directory} \n
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Additional data: @var{repository} \n. This is like @code{Repository},
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but the local name of the directory may differ from the repository name.
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If the client uses this request, it affects the way the server returns
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pathnames; see @ref{Responses}. @var{local-directory} is relative to
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the top level at which the command is occurring (i.e. the last
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@code{Directory} or @code{Repository} which is sent before the command).
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@item Max-dotdot @var{level} \n
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Tell the server that @var{level} levels of directories above the
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directory which @code{Directory} requests are relative to will be
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needed. For example, if the client is planning to use a
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@code{Directory} request for @file{../../foo}, it must send a
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@code{Max-dotdot} request with a @var{level} of at least 2.
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@code{Max-dotdot} must be sent before the first @code{Directory}
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request.
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@item Static-directory \n
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Response expected: no. Tell the server that the directory most recently
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specified with @code{Repository} or @code{Directory} should not have
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additional files checked out unless explicitly requested. The client
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sends this if the @code{Entries.Static} flag is set, which is controlled
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by the @code{Set-static-directory} and @code{Clear-static-directory}
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responses.
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@item Sticky @var{tagspec} \n
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Response expected: no. Tell the server that the directory most recently
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specified with @code{Repository} has a sticky tag or date @var{tagspec}.
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The first character of @var{tagspec} is @samp{T} for a tag, or @samp{D}
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for a date. The remainder of @var{tagspec} contains the actual tag or
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date.
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@item Checkin-prog @var{program} \n
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Response expected: no. Tell the server that the directory most recently
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specified with @code{Directory} has a checkin program @var{program}.
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Such a program would have been previously set with the
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@code{Set-checkin-prog} response.
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@item Update-prog @var{program} \n
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Response expected: no. Tell the server that the directory most recently
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specified with @code{Directory} has an update program @var{program}.
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Such a program would have been previously set with the
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@code{Set-update-prog} response.
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@item Entry @var{entry-line} \n
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Response expected: no. Tell the server what version of a file is on the
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local machine. The name in @var{entry-line} is a name relative to the
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directory most recently specified with @code{Repository}. If the user
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is operating on only some files in a directory, @code{Entry} requests
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for only those files need be included. If an @code{Entry} request is
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sent without @code{Modified}, @code{Unchanged}, or @code{Lost} for that
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file the meaning depends on whether @code{UseUnchanged} has been sent;
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if it has been it means the file is lost, if not it means the file is
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unchanged.
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@item Modified @var{filename} \n
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Response expected: no. Additional data: mode, \n, file transmission.
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Send the server a copy of one locally modified file. @var{filename} is
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relative to the most recent repository sent with @code{Repository}. If
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the user is operating on only some files in a directory, only those
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files need to be included. This can also be sent without @code{Entry},
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if there is no entry for the file.
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@item Lost @var{filename} \n
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Response expected: no. Tell the server that @var{filename} no longer
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exists. The name is relative to the most recent repository sent with
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@code{Repository}. This is used for any case in which @code{Entry} is
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being sent but the file no longer exists. If the client has issued the
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@code{UseUnchanged} request, then this request is not used.
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@item Unchanged @var{filename} \n
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Response expected: no. Tell the server that @var{filename} has not been
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modified in the checked out directory. The name is relative to the most
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recent repository sent with @code{Repository}. This request can only be
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issued if @code{UseUnchanged} has been sent.
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@item UseUnchanged \n
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Response expected: no. Tell the server that the client will be
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indicating unmodified files with @code{Unchanged}, and that files for
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which no information is sent are nonexistent on the client side, not
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unchanged. This is necessary for correct behavior since only the server
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knows what possible files may exist, and thus what files are
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nonexistent.
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@item Notify @var{filename} \n
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Tell the server that a @code{edit} or @code{unedit} command has taken
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place. The server needs to send a @code{Notified} response, but such
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response is deferred until the next time that the server is sending
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responses. Response expected: no. Additional data:
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@example
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@var{notification-type} \t @var{time} \t @var{clienthost} \t
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@var{working-dir} \t @var{watches} \n
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@end example
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where @var{notification-type} is @samp{E} for edit or @samp{U} for
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unedit, @var{time} is the time at which the edit or unedit took place,
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@var{clienthost} is the name of the host on which the edit or unedit
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took place, and @var{working-dir} is the pathname of the working
|
|
directory where the edit or unedit took place. @var{watches} are the
|
|
temporary watches to set; if it is followed by \t then the tab and the
|
|
rest of the line are ignored.
|
|
|
|
@item Questionable @var{filename} \n
|
|
Response expected: no. Additional data: no. Tell the server to check
|
|
whether @var{filename} should be ignored, and if not, next time the
|
|
server sends responses, send (in a @code{M} response) @samp{?} followed
|
|
by the directory and filename.
|
|
|
|
@item Case \n
|
|
Tell the server that filenames should be matched against ignore patterns
|
|
in a case-insensitive fashion. Note that this does not apply to other
|
|
comparisons---for example the filenames given in @code{Entry} and
|
|
@code{Modified} requests for the same file must match in case regardless
|
|
of whether the @code{Case} request is sent.
|
|
|
|
@item Argument @var{text} \n
|
|
Response expected: no.
|
|
Save argument for use in a subsequent command. Arguments
|
|
accumulate until an argument-using command is given, at which point
|
|
they are forgotten.
|
|
|
|
@item Argumentx @var{text} \n
|
|
Response expected: no. Append \n followed by text to the current
|
|
argument being saved.
|
|
|
|
@item Global_option @var{option} \n
|
|
Transmit one of the global options @samp{-q}, @samp{-Q}, @samp{-l},
|
|
@samp{-t}, @samp{-r}, or @samp{-n}. @var{option} must be one of those
|
|
strings, no variations (such as combining of options) are allowed. For
|
|
graceful handling of @code{valid-requests}, it is probably better to
|
|
make new global options separate requests, rather than trying to add
|
|
them to this request.
|
|
|
|
@item Set @var{variable}=@var{value} \n
|
|
Set a user variable @var{variable} to @var{value}.
|
|
|
|
@item expand-modules \n
|
|
Response expected: yes. Expand the modules which are specified in the
|
|
arguments. Returns the data in @code{Module-expansion} responses. Note
|
|
that the server can assume that this is checkout or export, not rtag or
|
|
rdiff; the latter do not access the working directory and thus have no
|
|
need to expand modules on the client side.
|
|
|
|
@item co \n
|
|
@itemx ci \n
|
|
@itemx diff \n
|
|
@itemx tag \n
|
|
@itemx status \n
|
|
@itemx log \n
|
|
@itemx add \n
|
|
@itemx remove \n
|
|
@itemx rdiff \n
|
|
@itemx rtag \n
|
|
@itemx admin \n
|
|
@itemx export \n
|
|
@itemx history \n
|
|
@itemx watchers \n
|
|
@itemx editors \n
|
|
@itemx annotate \n
|
|
Response expected: yes. Actually do a cvs command. This uses any
|
|
previous @code{Argument}, @code{Repository}, @code{Entry},
|
|
@code{Modified}, or @code{Lost} requests, if they have been sent. The
|
|
last @code{Repository} sent specifies the working directory at the time
|
|
of the operation. No provision is made for any input from the user.
|
|
This means that @code{ci} must use a @code{-m} argument if it wants to
|
|
specify a log message.
|
|
|
|
@itemx init @var{root-name} \n
|
|
Response expected: yes. If it doesn't already exist, create a @sc{cvs}
|
|
repository @var{root-name}. The @code{Root} request need not have been
|
|
previously sent.
|
|
|
|
@itemx update \n
|
|
Response expected: yes. Actually do a @code{cvs update} command. This
|
|
uses any previous @code{Argument}, @code{Repository}, @code{Entry},
|
|
@code{Modified}, or @code{Lost} requests, if they have been sent. The
|
|
last @code{Repository} sent specifies the working directory at the time
|
|
of the operation. The @code{-I} option is not used--files which the
|
|
client can decide whether to ignore are not mentioned and the client
|
|
sends the @code{Questionable} request for others.
|
|
|
|
@item import \n
|
|
Response expected: yes. Actually do a @code{cvs import} command. This
|
|
uses any previous @code{Argument}, @code{Repository}, @code{Entry},
|
|
@code{Modified}, or @code{Lost} requests, if they have been sent. The
|
|
last @code{Repository} sent specifies the working directory at the time
|
|
of the operation. The files to be imported are sent in @code{Modified}
|
|
requests (files which the client knows should be ignored are not sent;
|
|
the server must still process the CVSROOT/cvsignore file unless -I ! is
|
|
sent). A log message must have been specified with a @code{-m}
|
|
argument.
|
|
|
|
@item watch-on \n
|
|
@itemx watch-off \n
|
|
@itemx watch-add \n
|
|
@itemx watch-remove \n
|
|
Response expected: yes. Actually do the @code{cvs watch on}, @code{cvs
|
|
watch off}, @code{cvs watch add}, and @code{cvs watch remove} commands,
|
|
respectively. This uses any previous @code{Argument},
|
|
@code{Repository}, @code{Entry}, @code{Modified}, or @code{Lost}
|
|
requests, if they have been sent. The last @code{Repository} sent
|
|
specifies the working directory at the time of the operation.
|
|
|
|
@item release \n
|
|
Response expected: yes. Note that a @code{cvs release} command has
|
|
taken place and update the history file accordingly.
|
|
|
|
@item noop \n
|
|
Response expected: yes. This request is a null command in the sense
|
|
that it doesn't do anything, but merely (as with any other requests
|
|
expecting a response) sends back any responses pertaining to pending
|
|
errors, pending @code{Notified} responses, etc.
|
|
|
|
@item update-patches \n
|
|
This request does not actually do anything. It is used as a signal that
|
|
the server is able to generate patches when given an @code{update}
|
|
request. The client must issue the @code{-u} argument to @code{update}
|
|
in order to receive patches.
|
|
|
|
@item gzip-file-contents @var{level} \n
|
|
This request asks the server to filter files it sends to the client
|
|
through the @samp{gzip} program, using the specified level of
|
|
compression. If this request is not made, the server must not do any
|
|
compression.
|
|
|
|
This is only a hint to the server. It may still decide (for example, in
|
|
the case of very small files, or files that already appear to be
|
|
compressed) not to do the compression. Compression is indicated by a
|
|
@samp{z} preceding the file length.
|
|
|
|
Availability of this request in the server indicates to the client that
|
|
it may compress files sent to the server, regardless of whether the
|
|
client actually uses this request.
|
|
|
|
@item @var{other-request} @var{text} \n
|
|
Response expected: yes.
|
|
Any unrecognized request expects a response, and does not
|
|
contain any additional data. The response will normally be something like
|
|
@samp{error unrecognized request}, but it could be a different error if
|
|
a previous command which doesn't expect a response produced an error.
|
|
@end table
|
|
|
|
When the client is done, it drops the connection.
|
|
|
|
@node Responses
|
|
@section Responses
|
|
|
|
After a command which expects a response, the server sends however many
|
|
of the following responses are appropriate. Pathnames are of the actual
|
|
files operated on (i.e. they do not contain @samp{,v} endings), and are
|
|
suitable for use in a subsequent @code{Repository} request. However, if
|
|
the client has used the @code{Directory} request, then it is instead a
|
|
local directory name relative to the directory in which the command was
|
|
given (i.e. the last @code{Directory} before the command). Then a
|
|
newline and a repository name (the pathname which is sent if
|
|
@code{Directory} is not used). Then the slash and the filename. For
|
|
example, for a file @file{i386.mh} which is in the local directory
|
|
@file{gas.clean/config} and for which the repository is
|
|
@file{/rel/cvsfiles/devo/gas/config}:
|
|
|
|
@example
|
|
gas.clean/config/
|
|
/rel/cvsfiles/devo/gas/config/i386.mh
|
|
@end example
|
|
|
|
Any response always ends with @samp{error} or @samp{ok}. This indicates
|
|
that the response is over.
|
|
|
|
@table @code
|
|
@item Valid-requests @var{request-list} \n
|
|
Indicate what requests the server will accept. @var{request-list}
|
|
is a space separated list of tokens. If the server supports sending
|
|
patches, it will include @samp{update-patches} in this list. The
|
|
@samp{update-patches} request does not actually do anything.
|
|
|
|
@item Checked-in @var{pathname} \n
|
|
Additional data: New Entries line, \n. This means a file @var{pathname}
|
|
has been successfully operated on (checked in, added, etc.). name in
|
|
the Entries line is the same as the last component of @var{pathname}.
|
|
|
|
@item New-entry @var{pathname} \n
|
|
Additional data: New Entries line, \n. Like @code{Checked-in}, but the
|
|
file is not up to date.
|
|
|
|
@item Updated @var{pathname} \n
|
|
Additional data: New Entries line, \n, mode, \n, file transmission. A
|
|
new copy of the file is enclosed. This is used for a new revision of an
|
|
existing file, or for a new file, or for any other case in which the
|
|
local (client-side) copy of the file needs to be updated, and after
|
|
being updated it will be up to date. If any directory in pathname does
|
|
not exist, create it.
|
|
|
|
@item Merged @var{pathname} \n
|
|
This is just like @code{Updated} and takes the same additional data,
|
|
with the one difference that after the new copy of the file is enclosed,
|
|
it will still not be up to date. Used for the results of a merge, with
|
|
or without conflicts.
|
|
|
|
@item Patched @var{pathname} \n
|
|
This is just like @code{Updated} and takes the same additional data,
|
|
with the one difference that instead of sending a new copy of the file,
|
|
the server sends a patch produced by @samp{diff -u}. This client must
|
|
apply this patch, using the @samp{patch} program, to the existing file.
|
|
This will only be used when the client has an exact copy of an earlier
|
|
revision of a file. This response is only used if the @code{update}
|
|
command is given the @samp{-u} argument.
|
|
|
|
@item Mode @var{mode} \n
|
|
This @var{mode} applies to the next file mentioned in
|
|
@code{Checked-in}. It does not apply to any request which follows a
|
|
@code{Checked-in}, @code{New-entry}, @code{Updated}, @code{Merged}, or
|
|
@code{Patched} response.
|
|
|
|
@item Checksum @var{checksum}\n
|
|
The @var{checksum} applies to the next file sent over via
|
|
@code{Updated}, @code{Merged}, or @code{Patched}. In the case of
|
|
@code{Patched}, the checksum applies to the file after being patched,
|
|
not to the patch itself. The client should compute the checksum itself,
|
|
after receiving the file or patch, and signal an error if the checksums
|
|
do not match. The checksum is the 128 bit MD5 checksum represented as
|
|
32 hex digits. This response is optional, and is only used if the
|
|
client supports it (as judged by the @code{Valid-responses} request).
|
|
|
|
@item Copy-file @var{pathname} \n
|
|
Additional data: @var{newname} \n. Copy file @var{pathname} to
|
|
@var{newname} in the same directory where it already is. This does not
|
|
affect @code{CVS/Entries}.
|
|
|
|
@item Removed @var{pathname} \n
|
|
The file has been removed from the repository (this is the case where
|
|
cvs prints @samp{file foobar.c is no longer pertinent}).
|
|
|
|
@item Remove-entry @var{pathname} \n
|
|
The file needs its entry removed from @code{CVS/Entries}, but the file
|
|
itself is already gone (this happens in response to a @code{ci} request
|
|
which involves committing the removal of a file).
|
|
|
|
@item Set-static-directory @var{pathname} \n
|
|
This instructs the client to set the @code{Entries.Static} flag, which
|
|
it should then send back to the server in a @code{Static-directory}
|
|
request whenever the directory is operated on. @var{pathname} ends in a
|
|
slash; its purpose is to specify a directory, not a file within a
|
|
directory.
|
|
|
|
@item Clear-static-directory @var{pathname} \n
|
|
Like @code{Set-static-directory}, but clear, not set, the flag.
|
|
|
|
@item Set-sticky @var{pathname} \n
|
|
Additional data: @var{tagspec} \n. Tell the client to set a sticky tag
|
|
or date, which should be supplied with the @code{Sticky} request for
|
|
future operations. @var{pathname} ends in a slash; its purpose is to
|
|
specify a directory, not a file within a directory. The first character
|
|
of @var{tagspec} is @samp{T} for a tag, or @samp{D} for a date. The
|
|
remainder of @var{tagspec} contains the actual tag or date.
|
|
|
|
@item Clear-sticky @var{pathname} \n
|
|
Clear any sticky tag or date set by @code{Set-sticky}.
|
|
|
|
@item Template @var{pathname} \n
|
|
Additional data: file transmission (note: compressed file transmissions
|
|
are not supported). @var{pathname} ends in a slash; its purpose is to
|
|
specify a directory, not a file within a directory. Tell the client to
|
|
store the file transmission as the template log message, and then use
|
|
that template in the future when prompting the user for a log message.
|
|
|
|
@item Set-checkin-prog @var{dir} \n
|
|
Additional data: @var{prog} \n. Tell the client to set a checkin
|
|
program, which should be supplied with the @code{Checkin-prog} request
|
|
for future operations.
|
|
|
|
@item Set-update-prog @var{dir} \n
|
|
Additional data: @var{prog} \n. Tell the client to set an update
|
|
program, which should be supplied with the @code{Update-prog} request
|
|
for future operations.
|
|
|
|
@item Notified @var{pathname} \n
|
|
Indicate to the client that the notification for @var{pathname} has been
|
|
done. There should be one such response for every @code{Notify}
|
|
request; if there are several @code{Notify} requests for a single file,
|
|
the requests should be processed in order; the first @code{Notified}
|
|
response pertains to the first @code{Notify} request, etc.
|
|
|
|
@item Module-expansion @var{pathname} \n Return a file or directory
|
|
which is included in a particular module. @var{pathname} is relative
|
|
to cvsroot, unlike most pathnames in responses. @var{pathname} should
|
|
be used to look and see whether some or all of the module exists on
|
|
the client side; it is not necessarily suitable for passing as an
|
|
argument to a @code{co} request (for example, if the modules file
|
|
contains the @samp{-d} option, it will be the directory specified with
|
|
@samp{-d}, not the name of the module).
|
|
|
|
@item M @var{text} \n
|
|
A one-line message for the user.
|
|
|
|
@item E @var{text} \n
|
|
Same as @code{M} but send to stderr not stdout.
|
|
|
|
@item error @var{errno-code} @samp{ } @var{text} \n
|
|
The command completed with an error. @var{errno-code} is a symbolic
|
|
error code (e.g. @code{ENOENT}); if the server doesn't support this
|
|
feature, or if it's not appropriate for this particular message, it just
|
|
omits the errno-code (in that case there are two spaces after
|
|
@samp{error}). Text is an error message such as that provided by
|
|
strerror(), or any other message the server wants to use.
|
|
|
|
@item ok \n
|
|
The command completed successfully.
|
|
@end table
|
|
|
|
@node Example
|
|
@section Example
|
|
|
|
Lines beginning with @samp{c>} are sent by the client; lines beginning
|
|
with @samp{s>} are sent by the server; lines beginning with @samp{#} are
|
|
not part of the actual exchange.
|
|
|
|
@example
|
|
c> Root /rel/cvsfiles
|
|
# In actual practice the lists of valid responses and requests would
|
|
# be longer
|
|
c> Valid-responses Updated Checked-in M ok error
|
|
c> valid-requests
|
|
s> Valid-requests Root co Modified Entry Repository ci Argument Argumentx
|
|
s> ok
|
|
# cvs co devo/foo
|
|
c> Argument devo/foo
|
|
c> co
|
|
s> Updated /rel/cvsfiles/devo/foo/foo.c
|
|
s> /foo.c/1.4/Mon Apr 19 15:36:47 1993 Mon Apr 19 15:36:47 1993//
|
|
s> 26
|
|
s> int mein () @{ abort (); @}
|
|
s> Updated /rel/cvsfiles/devo/foo/Makefile
|
|
s> /Makefile/1.2/Mon Apr 19 15:36:47 1993 Mon Apr 19 15:36:47 1993//
|
|
s> 28
|
|
s> foo: foo.c
|
|
s> $(CC) -o foo $<
|
|
s> ok
|
|
# In actual practice the next part would be a separate connection.
|
|
# Here it is shown as part of the same one.
|
|
c> Repository /rel/cvsfiles/devo/foo
|
|
# foo.c relative to devo/foo just set as Repository.
|
|
c> Entry /foo.c/1.4/Mon Apr 19 15:36:47 1993 Mon Apr 19 15:36:47 1993//
|
|
c> Entry /Makefile/1.2/Mon Apr 19 15:36:47 1993 Mon Apr 19 15:36:47 1993//
|
|
c> Modified foo.c
|
|
c> 26
|
|
c> int main () @{ abort (); @}
|
|
# cvs ci -m <log message> foo.c
|
|
c> Argument -m
|
|
c> Argument Well, you see, it took me hours and hours to find this typo and I
|
|
c> Argumentx searched and searched and eventually had to ask John for help.
|
|
c> Argument foo.c
|
|
c> ci
|
|
s> Checked-in /rel/cvsfiles/devo/foo/foo.c
|
|
s> /foo.c/1.5/ Mon Apr 19 15:54:22 CDT 1993//
|
|
s> M Checking in foo.c;
|
|
s> M /cygint/rel/cvsfiles/devo/foo/foo.c,v <-- foo.c
|
|
s> M new revision: 1.5; previous revision: 1.4
|
|
s> M done
|
|
s> ok
|
|
@end example
|
|
|
|
@node Requirements
|
|
@section Required versus optional parts of the protocol
|
|
|
|
The following are part of every known implementation of the CVS
|
|
protocol and it is considered reasonable behavior to completely fail
|
|
to work if you are connected with an implementation which attempts to
|
|
not support them. Requests: Root, Valid-responses, valid-requests,
|
|
Repository, Entry, Modified, Argument, Argumentx, ci, co, update.
|
|
Responses: ok, error, Valid-requests, Checked-in, Updated, Merged,
|
|
Removed, M, E.
|
|
|
|
Failure to support the Directory, UseUnchanged, and Unchanged requests
|
|
is deprecated. CVS 1.5 and later have supported these requests and in
|
|
the future it will be considered reasonable behavior to completely
|
|
fail to work with an implementation which attempts to not support
|
|
them. Support for the Repository and Lost requests is deprecated; CVS
|
|
clients 1.5 and later will not use them if communicating with a server
|
|
which supports Directory and UseUnchanged.
|
|
|
|
@bye
|