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393 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
393 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
<!-- $Id: cvsup.sgml,v 1.1 1996/12/19 20:23:05 jkh Exp $ -->
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<!-- The FreeBSD Documentation Project -->
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<sect><heading>CVSup<label id="cvsup"></heading>
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<p><em>Contributed by &a.jdp;</em>.
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<sect1><heading>Introduction<label id="cvsup:intro"></heading>
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<p>CVSup is a software package for distributing and updating source
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trees from a master CVS repository on a remote server host. The
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FreeBSD sources are maintained in a CVS repository on a central
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development machine in California. With CVSup, FreeBSD users can
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easily keep their own source trees up to date.
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<p>CVSup uses the so-called "pull" model of updating. Under the pull
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model, each client asks the server for updates, if and when they are
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wanted. The server waits passively for update requests from its
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clients. Thus all updates are instigated by the client. The server
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never sends unsolicited updates. Users must either run the CVSup client
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manually to get an update, or they must set up a cron job to run it
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automatically on a regular basis.
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<p>The term "CVSup", capitalized just so, refers to the entire software
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package. Its main components are the client "cvsup" which runs on each
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user's machine, and the server "cvsupd" which runs at each of the
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FreeBSD mirror sites.
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<p>As you read the FreeBSD documentation and mailing lists, you may
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see references to <ref id="sup">. Sup was the predecessor to CVSup,
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and it served a similar purpose. CVSup is in used in much the same
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way as sup and, in fact, uses configuration files which are
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backward-compatible with sup's. Sup is no longer used in the FreeBSD
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project, however, because CVSup is both faster and more flexible.
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<sect1><heading>Installation<label id="cvsup:install"></heading>
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<p>The easiest way to install CVSup if you are running FreeBSD 2.2 or
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later is to use either <url
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url="ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/FreeBSD-current/ports/net/cvsup/"
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name="the port"> from the FreeBSD <ref id="ports" name="ports
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collection"> or the corresponding <url
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url="ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/packages-2.2/net/cvsup-14.0.tgz"
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name="binary package">, depending on whether you prefer to roll your
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own or not.
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<p>If you are running FreeBSD-2.1.6, you unfortunately cannot use the
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binary package versions due to the fact that it requires a version of
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the C library that did not yet exist in FreeBSD-2.1.6. You can easily
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use <url url="ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/ports-current/net/cvsup/"
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name="the port">, however, just as with FreeBSD 2.2. Simply unpack
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the tar file, cd to the cvsup subdirectory and type "make install"
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<p>Because CVSup is written in <url
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url="http://www.research.digital.com/SRC/modula-3/html/home.html"
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name="Modula-3">, both the package and the port require that the
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Modula-3 runtime libraries be installed. These are available as the
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<url
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url="ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/ports-current/lang/modula-3-lib"
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name="lang/modula-3-lib"> port and the <url
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url="ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/packages-current/lang/modula-3-lib-3.6.tgz"
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name="lang/modula-3-lib-3.6"> package. If you follow the same
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directions as for cvsup, these libraries will be compiled and/or
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installed automatically when you install the CVSup port or package.
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<p>The Modula-3 libraries are rather large, and fetching and compiling
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them is not an instantaneous process. For that reason, a third option
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is provided. You can get <em>statically linked</em> FreeBSD
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executables for CVSup from:
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<itemize>
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<item><url url="ftp://freefall.freebsd.org/pub/CVSup/cvsup-bin-14.0.tar.gz"
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name="ftp://freefall.freebsd.org/pub/CVSup/cvsup-bin-14.0.tar.gz">
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(client).
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<item><url url="ftp://freefall.freebsd.org/pub/CVSup/cvsupd-bin-14.0.tar.gz"
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name="ftp://freefall.freebsd.org/pub/CVSup/cvsupd-bin-14.0.tar.gz">
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(server).
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</itemize>
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<p>Most users will need only the client. These executables are entirely
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self-contained, and they will run on any version of FreeBSD from
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FreeBSD-2.1.0 to FreeBSD-current.
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<p>In summary, your options for installing CVSup are:
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<itemize>
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<item>FreeBSD-2.2 or later: static binary, port, or package
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<item>FreeBSD-2.1.6: static binary or port
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<item>FreeBSD-2.1.5 or earlier: static binary
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</itemize>
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<sect1><heading>Configuration<label id="cvsup:config"></heading>
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<p>CVSup's operation is controlled by a configuration file called the
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"supfile". Beginning with FreeBSD-2.2, there are some sample supfiles
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in the directory <url url="file:/usr/share/examples/cvsup"
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name="/usr/share/examples/cvsup">. These examples are also available
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from <url url="ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/FreeBSD-current/src/share/examples/cvsup/" name="ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/FreeBSD-current/src/share/examples/cvsup/"> if you are on a pre-2.2 system.
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<p>The information in a supfile answers the following questions for cvsup:
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<itemize>
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<item><ref id="cvsup:config:files" name="Which files do you want to receive?">
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<item><ref id="cvsup:config:vers" name="Which versions of them do you want?">
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<item><ref id="cvsup:config:where" name="Where do you want to get them from?">
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<item><ref id="cvsup:config:dest" name="Where do you want to put them on your own machine?">
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<item><ref id="cvsup:config:status" name="Where do you want to put your status files?">
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</itemize>
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<p>In the following sections, we will construct a typical supfile by
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answering each of these questions in turn. First, we describe the
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overall structure of a supfile.
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<p>A supfile is a text file. Comments begin with "#" and extend to
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the end of the line. Lines that are blank and lines that contain only
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comments are ignored.
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<p>Each remaining line describes a set of files that the user wishes
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to receive. The line begins with the name of a "collection", a
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logical grouping of files defined by the server. The name of the
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collection tells the server which files you want. After the
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collection name come zero or more fields, separated by white space.
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These fields answer the questions listed above. There are two types
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of fields: flag fields and value fields. A flag field consists of a
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keyword standing alone, e.g., "delete" or "compress". A value field
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also begins with a keyword, but the keyword is followed without
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intervening white space by "=" and a second word. For example,
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"release=cvs" is a value field.
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<p>A supfile typically specifies more than one collection to receive.
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One way to structure a supfile is to specify all of the relevant
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fields explicitly for each collection. However, that tends to make
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the supfile lines quite long, and it is inconvenient because most
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fields are the same for all of the collections in a supfile. CVSup
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provides a defaulting mechanism to avoid these problems. Lines
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beginning with the special pseudo-collection name "*default" can be
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used to set flags and values which will be used as defaults for the
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subsequent collections in the supfile. A default value can be
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overridden for an individual collection, by specifying a different
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value with the collection itself. Defaults can also be changed or
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augmented in mid-supfile by additional "*default" lines.
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<p>With this background, we will now proceed to construct a supfile
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for receiving and updating the main source tree of <ref id="current"
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name="FreeBSD-current">.
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<itemize>
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<item>Which files do you want to receive?<label id="cvsup:config:files">
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<p>As with sup, the files available via CVSup are organized into named
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groups called "collections". The collections making up the FreeBSD
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source tree are described in <ref id="sup:dists" name="the sup
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collections document">. In this example, we wish to receive the
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entire main source tree for the FreeBSD system. There is a single
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large collection "src-all" which will give us all of that, except the
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export-controlled cryptography support. Let us assume for this
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example that we are in the USA or Canada. Then we can get the
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cryptography code with two additional collections, "src-eBones" and
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"src-secure". As a first step toward constructing our supfile, we
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simply list these collections, one per line:
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<verb>
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src-all
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src-eBones
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src-secure
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</verb>
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<p><item>Which version(s) of them do you want?<label id="cvsup:config:vers">
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<p>With CVSup, you can receive virtually any version of the sources
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that ever existed. That is possible because the cvsupd server works
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directly from the CVS repository, which contains all of the versions.
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You specify which one of them you want using the "tag=" and "date="
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value fields.
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<p>The "tag=" field names a symbolic tag in the repository. There are
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two kinds of tags, revision tags and branch tags. A revision tag
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refers to a specific revision. Its meaning stays the same from day to
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day. A branch tag, on the other hand, refers to the latest revision
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on a given line of development, at any given time. Because a branch
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tag does not refer to a specific revision, it may mean something
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different tomorrow than it means today.
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<p>Here are the branch tags that users might be interested in:
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<descrip>
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<tag/tag=./
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The main line of development, also known as FreeBSD-current.
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Note: the "." is not punctuation; it's the name of the tag.
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<tag/tag=RELENG_2_2/
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The line of development leading up to FreeBSD-2.2.
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<tag/tag=RELENG_2_1_0/
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The line of development for FreeBSD-2.1.x, also known as
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FreeBSD-stable.
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</descrip>
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<p>Here are the revision tags that users might be interested in:
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<descrip>
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<tag/tag=RELENG_2_1_6_1_RELEASE/
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FreeBSD-2.1.6.1.
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<tag/tag=RELENG_2_1_6_RELEASE/
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FreeBSD-2.1.6.
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<tag/tag=RELENG_2_1_5_RELEASE/
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FreeBSD-2.1.5.
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<tag/tag=RELENG_2_1_0_RELEASE/
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FreeBSD-2.1.0.
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</descrip>
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<p>Be very careful to type the tag name exactly as shown. CVSup cannot
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distinguish between valid and invalid tags. If you misspell the tag,
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CVSup will behave as though you had specified a valid tag which happens
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to refer to no files at all. It will delete your existing sources in
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that case.
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<p>When you specify a branch tag, you normally receive the latest versions
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of the files on that line of development. If you wish to receive some
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past version, you can do so by specifying a date with the "date=" value
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field. The cvsup(1) manual page explains how to do that.
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<p>For our example, we wish to receive FreeBSD-current. We add this line
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at the beginning of our supfile:
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<verb>
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*default tag=.
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</verb>
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<p>There is an important special case that comes into play if you specify
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neither a "tag=" field nor a "date=" field. In that case, you receive
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the actual RCS files directly from the server's CVS repository, rather
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than receiving a particular version. Developers generally prefer this
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mode of operation. By maintaining a copy of the repository itself on
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their systems, they gain the ability to browse the revision histories
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and examine past versions of files. This gain is achieved at a large
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cost in terms of disk space, however.
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<p><item>Where do you want to get them from?<label id="cvsup:config:where">
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<p>This one is easy. We use the "host=" field to tell cvsup to get
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its updates from the primary FreeBSD distribution site,
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"cvsup.FreeBSD.org":
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<verb>
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*default host=cvsup.FreeBSD.org
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</verb>
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<p>On any particular run of cvsup, we can override this setting on the
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command line, with "-h hostname".
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<p><item>Where do you want to put them on your own machine?<label id="cvsup:config:dest">
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<p>The "prefix=" field tells cvsup where to put the files it receives.
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In this example, we'll put the source files directly into our main
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source tree, "/usr/src". The "src" directory is already implicit in the
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collections we've chosen to receive, so this is the correct
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specification:
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<verb>
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*default prefix=/usr
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</verb>
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<p><item>Where should cvsup maintain its status files?<label id="cvsup:config:status">
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<p>The cvsup client maintains certain status files in what is called
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the "base" directory. These files help CVSup to work more
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efficiently, by keeping track of which updates you've already
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received. We will use the standard base directory,
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"/usr/local/etc/cvsup":
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<verb>
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*default base=/usr/local/etc/cvsup
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</verb>
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<p>This setting is used by default if it's not specified in the
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supfile, so we actually don't need the above line.
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<p>If your base directory doesn't already exist, now would be a good
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time to create it. The cvsup client will refuse to run if the base
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directory doesn't exist.
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<p><item>Miscellaneous supfile settings:
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<p>There is one more line of boiler plate that normally needs to be
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present in the supfile:
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<verb>
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*default release=cvs delete use-rel-suffix compress
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</verb>
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<p>"release=cvs" indicates that the server should get its information
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out of the main FreeBSD CVS repository. This is virtually always the
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case, but there are other possibilities which are beyond the scope of
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this discussion.
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<p>"delete" gives CVSup permission to delete files. You should always
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specify this, so that CVSup can keep your source tree fully up to
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date. CVSup is careful to delete only those files for which it is
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responsible. Any extra files you happen to have will be left strictly
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alone.
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<p>"use-rel-suffix" is ... arcane. If you really want to know about
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it, see the cvsup(1) manual page. Otherwise, just specify it and
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don't worry about it.
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<p>"compress" enables the use of gzip-style compression on the
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communication channel. If your network link is T1 speed or faster,
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you probably shouldn't use compression. Otherwise, it helps
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substantially.
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<p><item>Putting it all together:
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<p>Here is the entire supfile for our example:
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<verb>
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*default tag=.
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*default host=cvsup.FreeBSD.org
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*default prefix=/usr
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*default base=/usr/local/etc/cvsup
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*default release=cvs delete use-rel-suffix compress
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src-all
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src-eBones
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src-secure
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</verb>
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</itemize>
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<sect1><heading>Running CVSup</heading>
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<p>You are now ready to try an update. The command line for doing this is
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quite simple:
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<verb>
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cvsup supfile
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</verb>
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<p>where "supfile" is of course the name of the supfile you've just created.
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Assuming you are running under X11, cvsup will display a GUI window with
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some buttons to do the usual things. Press the "go" button, and watch
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it run.
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<p>Since you are updating your actual "/usr/src" tree in this example, you
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will need to run the program as root so that cvsup has the permissions
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it needs to update your files. Having just created your configuration
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file, and having never used this program before, that might
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understandably make you nervous. There is an easy way to do a trial run
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without touching your precious files. Just create an empty directory
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somewhere convenient, and name it as an extra argument on the command
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line:
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<verb>
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mkdir /var/tmp/dest
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cvsup supfile /var/tmp/dest
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</verb>
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<p>The directory you specify will be used as the destination directory
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for all file updates. CVSup will examine your usual files in
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"/usr/src", but it will not modify or delete any of them. Any file
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updates will instead land in "/var/tmp/dest/usr/src". CVSup will also
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leave its base directory status files untouched when run this way.
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The new versions of those files will be written into the specified
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directory. As long as you have read access to "/usr/src", you don't
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even need to be root to perform this kind of trial run.
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<p>If you are not running X11 or if you just don't like GUIs, you
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should add a couple of options to the command line when you run cvsup:
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<verb>
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cvsup -g -L 2 supfile
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</verb>
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<p>The "-g" tells cvsup not to use its GUI. This is automatic if you are
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not running X11, but otherwise you have to specify it.
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<p>The "-L 2" tells cvsup to print out the details of all the file updates
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it is doing. There are three levels of verbosity, from "-L 0" to "-L 2".
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The default is 0, which means total silence except for error messages.
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<p>There are plenty of other options available. For a brief list of them,
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type "cvsup -H". For more detailed descriptions, see the manual page.
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<p>Once you are satisfied with the way updates are working, you can arrange
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for regular runs of cvsup using cron(8). Obviously, you shouldn't let
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cvsup use its GUI when running it from cron.
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<sect1><heading>Announcements, Questions, and Bug Reports</heading>
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<p>Most FreeBSD-related discussion of CVSup takes place on the
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&a.hackers;. New versions of the software are announced there, as
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well as on the &a.announce;.
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<p>Questions and bug reports should be addressed to the author of the
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program at <url url="mailto:cvsup-bugs@polstra.com"
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name="cvsup-bugs@polstra.com">.
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