aa134866ad
few more memory leaks and cleaned up getopt usage. These were done shortly after the last one I imported. Very little has changed other than that. (except for some doc updates) Obtained from: cyclic.com
183 lines
7.2 KiB
Plaintext
183 lines
7.2 KiB
Plaintext
It would be nice for the RCS file format (which is implemented by a
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great many tools, both free and non-free, both by calling GNU RCS and
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by reimplementing access to RCS files) were documented in some
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standard separate from any one tool. But as far as I know no such
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standard exists. Hence this file.
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The place to start is the rcsfile.5 manpage in the GNU RCS 5.7
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distribution. Then look at the diff at the end of this file (which
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contains a few fixes and clarifications to that manpage).
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If you are interested in MKS RCS, src/ci.c in GNU RCS 5.7 has a
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comment about their date format. However, as far as we know there
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isn't really any document describing MKS's changes to the RCS file
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format.
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The rcsfile.5 manpage does not document what goes in the "text" field
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for each revision. The answer is that the head revision contains the
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contents of that revision and every other revision contain a bunch of
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edits to produce that revision ("a" and "d" lines). The GNU diff
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manual (the version I looked at was for GNU diff 2.4) documents this
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format somewhat (as the "RCS output format"), but the presentation is
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a bit confusing as it is all tangled up with the documentation of
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several other output formats. If you just want some source code to
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look at, the part of CVS which applies these is RCS_deltas in
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src/rcs.c.
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The first time I read rcsfile.5 I didn't really notice the part about
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the order of the revisions. This order _is_ important and CVS relies
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on it. It is documented but it would be clearer if the example in
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rcsfile.5 also showed the order of the revisions (and the "next" and
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"branch" fields and anything else where it would be useful to have an
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example of how a revision tree is represented in an RCS file).
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There is one case where CVS uses CVS-specific, non-compatible changes
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to the RCS file format, and this is magic branches. See cvs.texinfo
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for more information on them. CVS also sets the RCS state to "dead"
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to indicate that a file does not exist in a given revision (this is
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stored just as any other RCS state is).
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The RCS file format allows quite a variety of extensions to be added
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in a compatible manner by use of the "newphrase" feature documented in
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rcsfile.5. We won't try to document extensions not used by CVS in any
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detail, but we will briefly list them. Each occurrence of a newphrase
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begins with an identifier, which is what we list here. Future
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designers of extensions are strongly encouraged to pick
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non-conflicting identifiers. Note that newphrase occurs several
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places in the RCS grammar, and a given extension may not be legal in
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all locations. However, it seems better to reserve a particular
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identifier for all locations, to avoid confusion and complicated
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rules.
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Identifier Used by
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---------- -------
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namespace RCS library done at Silicon Graphics Inc. (SGI) in 1996
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(a modified RCS 5.7--not sure it has any other name).
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The rules regarding keyword expansion are not documented along with
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the rest of the RCS file format; they are documented in the co(1)
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manpage in the RCS 5.7 distribution. See also the "Keyword
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substitution" chapter of cvs.texinfo. The co(1) manpage refers to
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special behavior if the log prefix for the $Log keyword is /* or (*.
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RCS 5.7 produces a warning whenever it behaves that way, and current
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versions of CVS do not handle this case in a special way (CVS 1.9 and
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earlier invoke RCS to perform keyword expansion).
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Note that the "comment {string};" syntax from rcsfile.5 specifies a
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comment leader, which affects expansion of the $Log keyword for old
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versions of RCS. The comment leader is not used by RCS 5.7 or current
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versions of CVS.
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Both RCS 5.7 and current versions of CVS handle the $Log keyword in a
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different way if the log message starts with "checked in with -k by ".
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I don't think this behavior is documented anywhere.
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One common concern about the RCS file format is the fact that to get
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the head of a branch, one must apply deltas from the head of the trunk
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to the branchpoint, and then from the branchpoint to the head of the
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branch. While more detailed analyses might be worth doing, we will
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note:
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* The performance bottleneck for CVS generally is figuring out which
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files to operate on and that sort of thing, not applying deltas.
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* Here is one quick test (probably not a very good test; a better test
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would use a normally sized file (say 50-200K) instead of a small one):
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I just did a quick test with a small file (on a Sun Ultra 1/170E
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running Solaris 5.5.1), with 1000 revisions on the main branch and
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1000 revisions on branch that forked at the root (i.e., RCS revisions
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1.1, 1.2, ..., 1.1000, and branch revisions 1.1.1.1, 1.1.1.2, ...,
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1.1.1.1000). It took about 0.15 seconds real time to check in the
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first revision, and about 0.6 seconds to check in and 0.3 seconds to
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retrieve revision 1.1.1.1000 (the worst case).
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* Any attempt to "fix" this problem should be careful not to interfere
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with other features, such as lightweight creation of branches
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(particularly using CVS magic branches).
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Diff follows:
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(Note that in the following diff the old value for the Id keyword was:
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Id: rcsfile.5in,v 5.6 1995/06/05 08:28:35 eggert Exp
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and the new one was:
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Id: rcsfile.5in,v 5.7 1996/12/09 17:31:44 eggert Exp
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but since this file itself might be subject to keyword expansion I
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haven't included a diff for that fact).
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===================================================================
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RCS file: RCS/rcsfile.5in,v
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retrieving revision 5.6
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retrieving revision 5.7
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diff -u -r5.6 -r5.7
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--- rcsfile.5in 1995/06/05 08:28:35 5.6
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+++ rcsfile.5in 1996/12/09 17:31:44 5.7
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@@ -85,7 +85,8 @@
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.LP
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\f2sym\fP ::= {\f2digit\fP}* \f2idchar\fP {\f2idchar\fP | \f2digit\fP}*
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.LP
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-\f2idchar\fP ::= any visible graphic character except \f2special\fP
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+\f2idchar\fP ::= any visible graphic character,
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+ except \f2digit\fP or \f2special\fP
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.LP
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\f2special\fP ::= \f3$\fP | \f3,\fP | \f3.\fP | \f3:\fP | \f3;\fP | \f3@\fP
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.LP
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@@ -119,12 +120,23 @@
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the minute (00\-59),
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and
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.I ss
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-the second (00\-60).
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+the second (00\-59).
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+If
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.I Y
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-contains just the last two digits of the year
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-for years from 1900 through 1999,
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-and all the digits of years thereafter.
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-Dates use the Gregorian calendar; times use UTC.
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+contains exactly two digits,
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+they are the last two digits of a year from 1900 through 1999;
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+otherwise,
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+.I Y
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+contains all the digits of the year.
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+Dates use the Gregorian calendar.
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+Times use UTC, except that for portability's sake leap seconds are not allowed;
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+implementations that support leap seconds should output
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+.B 59
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+for
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+.I ss
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+during an inserted leap second, and should accept
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+.B 59
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+for a deleted leap second.
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.PP
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The
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.I newphrase
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@@ -144,16 +156,23 @@
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field in order of decreasing numbers.
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The
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.B head
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-field in the
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-.I admin
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-node points to the head of that sequence (i.e., contains
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+field points to the head of that sequence (i.e., contains
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the highest pair).
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The
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.B branch
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-node in the admin node indicates the default
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+field indicates the default
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branch (or revision) for most \*r operations.
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If empty, the default
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branch is the highest branch on the trunk.
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+The
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+.B symbols
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+field associates symbolic names with revisions.
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+For example, if the file contains
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+.B "symbols rr:1.1;"
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+then
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+.B rr
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+is a name for revision
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+.BR 1.1 .
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.PP
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All
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.I delta
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