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Other common options are -I, -q, -s, -T, -V, -w, -x.
-I
This option enables interactive mode. More precisely, it forces interactive mode, whereby RCS commands believe that their standard input is a terminal, normally a precondition for displaying a prompt to receive input (such as a log message on checkin). The intention of -I is for scripting situations where standard input is actually not a terminal but you know beforehand (without prompting) that input is needed and you are ready to provide it on standard input anyway.
-q
This option enables quiet mode. Commands work silently (unless there is an error condition), and suppress warnings and prompts.
-sstate
Specify the state to be state.
-T
This option controls how commands timestamp the RCS file. Normally, RCS commands set the RCS file’s timestamp when modifying it in the “natural” way (without taking any particular care). With -T, on the other hand, the commands either preserve the timestamp (for standalone lock/unlock operations), or use the timestamp of the working file (for ci).
This can be useful if the RCS file is found in a makefile target’s list of prerequisites (see Rule Syntax in The GNU Make Manual), that is, if some target should be rebuilt if the RCS file is newer than it. In that case, you can do ‘rcs -u -T’, for example, to unlock a revision in the RCS file without triggering a recompilation.
-V
Behave like --version, i.e., display command version information and exit successfully. NB: This option is obsolete and its support will be removed in some future release.
-Vn
n specifies the RCS (major) version to emulate.
Valid values for n are: 3, 4, 5.
Version 5 is the current version, so -V5
does nothing special.
In versions prior to 5, RCS outputs ‘\t’ (tab, U+09) between
the ‘:’ (colon) and the value (for keyword substitution) instead
of space, uses the RCS file comment
string to prefix each line
in the Log
expansion instead of computing it on the fly from
the input text, writes/reads localtime instead of UTC, and displays
slightly different output for rlog.
For version 4, the Header
expansion unconditionally includes
Locker: locker
, as if the kvl
substitution mode
were specified (see Substitution mode option).
For version 3, the Header
exapnsion omits the directories from
the filename and says only Locked
instead of the state.
-wlogin
Some commands accept an option of the form ‘-wlogin’ to specify the login name of the author of a revision, i.e., “who” is responsible.
-xsuff
Specify suff as the slash-separated list of file name suffixes used to recognize an RCS file. The default value is ‘,v/’, that is, first try with ‘,v’ then try with an empty suffix.
This basename search occurs within (i.e., starting from the beginning) the larger directory search loop, which comprises two candidates: d/RCS and d, where d is the directory component of the working file name. For example, given the working file a.c in the current directory, RCS tries, in order, these candidates:
./RCS/a.c,v ./RCS/a.c ./a.c,v ./a.c
Note that the last candidate is impossible (and is in fact discarded), because the working and RCS files cannot have the same name.
Next: Environment, Previous: Log message option, Up: Common elements [Contents][Index]
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