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.\"	$OpenBSD: rcs.1,v 1.54 2007/05/31 21:56:03 jmc Exp $
.\"
.\" Copyright (c) 2005 Jean-Francois Brousseau <jfb@openbsd.org>
.\" Copyright (c) 2005 Xavier Santolaria <xsa@openbsd.org>
.\" All rights reserved.
.\"
.\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
.\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
.\" are met:
.\"
.\" 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
.\"    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
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.\"    derived from this software without specific prior written permission.
.\"
.\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES,
.\" INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY
.\" AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL
.\" THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL,
.\" EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL  DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO,
.\" PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS;
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.Dd $Mdocdate: May 31 2007 $
.Dt RCS 1
.Os
.Sh NAME
.Nm rcs
.Nd RCS file management program
.Sh SYNOPSIS
.Nm
.Op Fl IiLqTUV
.Op Fl A Ns Ar oldfile
.Op Fl a Ns Ar users
.Op Fl b Ns Op Ar rev
.Op Fl c Ns Ar string
.Op Fl e Ns Op Ar users
.Op Fl k Ns Ar mode
.Op Fl l Ns Op Ar rev
.Oo Fl m Ns Ar rev :
.Ar msg Oc
.Op Fl o Ns Ar rev
.Op Fl t Ns Ar str
.Op Fl u Ns Op Ar rev
.Op Fl x Ns Ar suffixes
.Ar
.Sh DESCRIPTION
Revision Control System (RCS) is a software tool which lets people
manage multiple revisions of text that is revised frequently, such as
source code or documentation.
.Pp
The
.Nm
program is used to create RCS files or manipulate the contents of existing
files.
A set of helper tools is also available:
specific revisions of files may be checked in or out, using
.Xr ci 1
and
.Xr co 1 ;
differences between revisions viewed or merged, using
.Xr rcsdiff 1
and
.Xr rcsmerge 1 ;
and information about RCS files and keyword strings displayed using
.Xr rlog 1
and
.Xr ident 1 .
See the respective manual pages for more information
about these utilities.
.Pp
The following options are supported:
.Bl -tag -width "-e usersXX"
.It Fl A Ns Ar oldfile
Append the access list of
.Ar oldfile
to the access list of the RCS files.
.It Fl a Ns Ar users
Add the usernames specified in the comma-separated list
.Ar users
to the access list of the RCS files.
.It Fl b Ns Op Ar rev
Set the default branch (see below) to
.Ar rev .
If no argument is specified,
the default branch is set to the highest numbered branch.
.It Fl c Ns Ar string
Set comment leader to
.Ar string .
The comment leader specifies the comment character(s) for a file.
This option is useful for compatibility with older RCS implementations
only.
.It Fl e Ns Op Ar users
Remove the usernames specified in the comma-separated list
.Ar users
from the access list of the RCS files.
If
.Ar users
is not specified, all users are removed from the access list.
.It Fl I
Interactive mode.
.It Fl i
Create and initialize a new RCS file.
If the RCS file has no path prefix, try to first create it in the
.Pa ./RCS
subdirectory or, if that fails, in the current directory.
Files created this way contain no revision.
.It Fl k Ns Ar mode
Specify the keyword substitution mode (see below).
.It Fl L
Enable strict locking on the RCS files.
.It Fl l Ns Op Ar rev
Lock revision
.Ar rev
on the RCS files.
.It Fl m Ns Ar rev : Ns Ar msg
Replace revision
.Ar rev Ns 's
log message with
.Ar msg .
.It Fl o Ns Ar rev
Delete one or more revisions.
The specifications of the values or revisions are as follows:
.Bl -tag -width Ds
.It rev
Specific revision.
.It rev1:rev2
Delete all revisions of a branch between
.Ar rev1
and
.Ar rev2 .
.It rev1::rev2
Delete all revisions of a branch between
.Ar rev1
and
.Ar rev2
without deleting revisions
.Ar rev1
and
.Ar rev2 .
.It :rev
Delete all revisions of the branch until revision
.Ar rev .
.It rev:
Delete all revisions of the branch from revision
.Ar rev
until the last revision of the branch.
.El
.It Fl q
Be quiet about reporting.
.It Fl T
Preserve the modification time of RCS files.
.It Fl t Ns Ar str
Change the descriptive text.
The argument
.Ar str
is interpreted as the name of a file containing
the descriptive text or,
if prefixed with a
.Sq - ,
the actual descriptive text itself.
If no argument is used, the descriptive text is taken from standard input
terminated by end-of-file or by a line containing the
.Sq \&.
character by itself.
.It Fl U
Disable strict locking on the RCS files.
.It Fl u Ns Op Ar rev
Unlock revision
.Ar rev
on the RCS files.
.It Fl V
Print the program's version string and exit.
.It Fl x Ns Ar suffixes
Specifies the suffixes for RCS files.
Suffixes should be separated by the
.Sq /
character.
.El
.Pp
.Ex -std rcs
.Sh BRANCHES AND REVISIONS
Files may be selected by
.Em revision
or, where no revision is specified,
the latest revision of the default
.Em branch
is used.
Revisions are specified either by using the
.Fl r
option or
by appending the revision number to any option that supports it.
Branches are selected using the
.Fl b
option.
.Pp
A file's revision consists of two elements:
release number and level number.
For example, revision 2.3 of a file denotes release 2, level 3.
Levels may also be subdivided into sublevels:
this might happen, for example,
if a parallel development is forked from a lower level revision.
The primary levels and the sublevels belong to separate branches:
the primary levels belong to a branch called HEAD,
while sublevels belong to branches specified by revision.
.Pp
.Nm
also supports the notion of
.Em state .
The state is an arbitrary string of characters used to describe a file
(or a specific revision of a file).
States can be set or changed using the
.Fl s
option, for RCS tools which support it.
The state of a file/revision can be modified without having to check in
a new file/revision.
The default state is
.Sq Exp
(Experimental).
Examples of states could be
.Sq Dev ,
.Sq Reviewed ,
or
.Sq Stab .
.Pp
In order to make large groups of RCS files more manageable,
RCS tools have the ability to select files by their
.Em symbolic name .
Thus files can be selected by their symbolic name,
rather than numerical revision.
.Xr ci 1
.Fl N
and
.Fl n
are used to set symbolic names for files.
.Pp
The following methods of file selection are therefore available:
revision number, state, and symbolic name.
For options which take as argument
.Ar rev
or
.Ar state ,
any of these methods may be used.
Some examples:
.Bd -literal -offset indent
$ co -r"myproject" foo.c
$ rcs -m1.3:update foo.c
$ ci -s"Exp" bar.c
.Ed
.Sh KEYWORD SUBSTITUTION
As long as source files are edited inside a working directory,
their state can be determined using the
.Xr cvs 1
.Ic status
or
.Ic log
commands, but as soon as files get exported from
a local working copy, it becomes harder to identify which
revisions they are.
.Pp
.Nm
and
.Xr cvs 1
use a mechanism known as
.Sq keyword substitution
to help identify the files.
Embedded strings of the form $keyword$ and $keyword:...$ in a file
are replaced with strings of the form $keyword: value$ whenever
a new revision of the file is obtained.
The possible keywords are as follows:
.Bl -tag -width "XrevisionXX" -offset "XXX"
.It $\&Author$
The name of the user who checked in the revision.
.It $\&Date$
The date and hour (UTC) the revision was checked in.
.It $\&Header$
Standard header containing the full pathname of the RCS
file, the revision number, the date (UTC), the author and the state.
.It $\&Id$
The same content as $\&Header$ but without the path
of the RCS file.
.It $\&Log$
The log message supplied during commit, preceded by a header
containing the RCS filename, the revision number, the
author, and the date (UTC).
.It $\&Mdocdate$
Produce a date of the form month name, day number, and year,
suitable for the
.Xr mdoc 7
.Dq \&Dd
macro.
.It $\&Name$
The tag name used to check out the file.
.It $\&RCSfile$
The name of the RCS file, but without a path.
.It $\&Revision$
The revision number assigned to the revision.
.It $\&Source$
The full pathname of the RCS file.
.It $\&State$
The state assigned to the revision.
.El
.Pp
Keyword substitution has its disadvantages: sometimes the
literal text string $\&Author$ is wanted inside a file without
.Nm
or
.Xr cvs 1
interpreting it as a keyword and expanding it.
The
.Fl k Ns Ar o
option can be used to turn off keyword substitution entirely though.
There is unfortunately no way to selectively turn off keyword substitution.
.Pp
Each file and working directory copy of a file have a stored
default substitution mode.
Substitution modes on files are set by the
.Fl k Ns Ar mode
option.
.Pp
The possible substitution modes are as follows:
.Bl -tag -width Ds -offset 3n
.It Fl k Ns Ar b
Like
.Fl k Ns Ar o ,
but also avoids the conversion of line endings.
This option is used to handle binary files.
.It Fl k Ns Ar k
Does not substitute the keywords.
Useful with the
.Xr cvs 1
.Ic diff
and
.Xr rcsdiff 1
commands to avoid displaying the differences between keyword substitutions.
.It Fl k Ns Ar kv
The default behaviour.
Keywords are normally substituted i.e. $\&Revision$ becomes
$\&Revision: 1.1 $.
.It Fl k Ns Ar kvl
Like
.Fl k Ns Ar kv ,
except that the locker's name is displayed along with the version
if the given revision is currently locked.
This option is normally not useful as
.Nm
and
.Xr cvs 1
do not use file locking by default.
.It Fl k Ns Ar o
No substitutions are done.
This option is often used with the
.Xr cvs 1
.Ic import
command to guarantee that files that already contain external keywords
do not get modified.
.It Fl k Ns Ar v
Substitute the value of keywords instead of keywords themselves
e.g. instead of $\&Revision$, only insert 1.1 and not $\&Revision: 1.1 $.
This option must be used with care, as it can only be used once.
It is often used with the
.Xr cvs 1
.Ic export
command to freeze the values before releasing software.
.El
.Sh ENVIRONMENT
.Bl -tag -width RCSINIT
.It Ev RCSINIT
If set, this variable should contain a list of space-delimited options that
are prepended to the argument list.
.El
.Sh EXAMPLES
One of the most common uses of
.Nm
is to track changes to a document containing source code.
.Pp
As an example,
we'll look at a user wishing to track source changes to a file
.Ar foo.c .
.Pp
If the
.Ar RCS
directory does not exist yet, create it as follows and invoke the
check-in command:
.Bd -literal -offset indent
$ mkdir RCS
$ ci foo.c
.Ed
.Pp
This command creates an RCS file
.Ar foo.c,v
in the
.Ar RCS
directory, stores
.Ar foo.c
into it as revision 1.1, and deletes
.Ar foo.c .
.Xr ci 1
will prompt for a description of the file to be entered.
Whenever a newly created (or updated) file is checked-in,
.Xr ci 1
will prompt for a log message to be entered which should summarize
the changes made to the file.
That log message will be added to the RCS file along with the new revision.
.Pp
The
.Xr co 1
command can now be used to obtain a copy of the checked-in
.Ar foo.c,v
file:
.Pp
.Dl $ co foo.c
.Pp
This command checks the file out in unlocked mode.
If a user wants to have exclusive access to the file to make changes to it,
it needs to be checked out in locked mode using the
.Fl l
option of the
.Xr co 1
command.
Only one concurrent locked checkout of a revision is permitted.
.Pp
Once changes have been made to the
.Pa foo.c
file, and before checking the file in, the
.Xr rcsdiff 1
command can be used to view changes between the working file
and the most recently checked-in revision:
.Pp
.Dl $ rcsdiff -u foo.c
.Pp
The
.Fl u
option produces a unified diff.
See
.Xr diff 1
for more information.
.Sh SEE ALSO
.Xr ci 1 ,
.Xr co 1 ,
.Xr ident 1 ,
.Xr rcsclean 1 ,
.Xr rcsdiff 1 ,
.Xr rcsmerge 1 ,
.Xr rlog 1
.Rs
.%A Tichy, Walter F.
.%T "RCS -- a system for version control"
.%J "Software--Practice & Experience"
.%V 15:7
.%D July, 1985
.%P pp. 637-654
.Re
.Sh STANDARDS
OpenRCS is compatible with
Walter Tichy's original RCS implementation.
.Pp
The flags
.Op Fl Mz
have no effect and are provided
for compatibility only.
.Sh HISTORY
The OpenRCS project is a BSD-licensed rewrite of the original
Revision Control System.
OpenRCS is written by Jean-Francois Brousseau, Joris Vink,
Niall O'Higgins, and Xavier Santolaria.
.Pp
The original RCS code was written in large parts by Walter F. Tichy
and Paul Eggert.
.Sh CAVEATS
For historical reasons,
the RCS tools do not permit whitespace between options and their arguments.