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RCSINTRO(1)		    General Commands Manual		   RCSINTRO(1)

NAME
       rcsintro	- introduction to RCS commands

DESCRIPTION
       The  Revision Control System (RCS) manages multiple revisions of	files.
       RCS automates the  storing,  retrieval,	logging,  identification,  and
       merging	of  revisions.	 RCS  is  useful for text that is revised fre-
       quently,	for example programs,  documentation,  graphics,  papers,  and
       form letters.

       The basic user interface	is extremely simple.  The novice only needs to
       learn  two  commands:  ci(1)  and co(1).	 ci, short for "check in", de-
       posits the contents of a	file into an archival file called an RCS file.
       An RCS file contains all	revisions of a particular file.	 co, short for
       "check out", retrieves revisions	from an	RCS file.

   Functions of	RCS
             Store and	retrieve multiple revisions of text.   RCS  saves  all
	      old  revisions  in a space efficient way.	 Changes no longer de-
	      stroy the	original, because the previous revisions remain	acces-
	      sible.  Revisions	can be retrieved according to ranges of	 revi-
	      sion numbers, symbolic names, dates, authors, and	states.

             Maintain	a  complete  history of	changes.  RCS logs all changes
	      automatically.  Besides the text of each	revision,  RCS	stores
	      the  author,  the	 date  and time	of check-in, and a log message
	      summarizing the change.  The logging makes it easy to  find  out
	      what  happened  to  a  module,  without having to	compare	source
	      listings or having to track down colleagues.

             Resolve access conflicts.	 When two or more programmers wish  to
	      modify  the  same	 revision, RCS alerts the programmers and pre-
	      vents one	modification from corrupting the other.

             Maintain a tree of revisions.  RCS can maintain  separate	 lines
	      of development for each module.  It stores a tree	structure that
	      represents the ancestral relationships among revisions.

             Merge  revisions	and  resolve conflicts.	 Two separate lines of
	      development of a module can be coalesced by merging.  If the re-
	      visions to be merged affect  the	same  sections	of  code,  RCS
	      alerts the user about the	overlapping changes.

             Control  releases	and configurations.  Revisions can be assigned
	      symbolic names and marked	 as  released,	stable,	 experimental,
	      etc.   With  these  facilities, configurations of	modules	can be
	      described	simply and directly.

             Automatically identify each revision with	name, revision number,
	      creation time, author, etc.  The identification is like a	 stamp
	      that  can	 be  embedded at an appropriate	place in the text of a
	      revision.	 The identification makes it simple to determine which
	      revisions	of which modules make up a given configuration.

             Minimize secondary storage.  RCS needs little  extra  space  for
	      the revisions (only the differences).  If	intermediate revisions
	      are  deleted,  the  corresponding	 deltas	are compressed accord-
	      ingly.

   Getting Started with	RCS
       Suppose you have	a file f.c that	you wish to put	under control of  RCS.
       If you have not already done so,	make an	RCS directory with the command

	      mkdir  RCS

       Then invoke the check-in	command

	      ci  f.c

       This  command creates an	RCS file in the	RCS directory, stores f.c into
       it as revision 1.1, and deletes f.c.  It	also asks you for  a  descrip-
       tion.   The  description	 should	 be  a synopsis	of the contents	of the
       file.  All later	check-in commands will ask you for a log entry,	 which
       should summarize	the changes that you made.

       Files  in the RCS directory are called RCS files; the others are	called
       working files.  To get back the working file f.c	in the previous	 exam-
       ple, use	the check-out command

	      co  f.c

       This  command extracts the latest revision from the RCS file and	writes
       it into f.c.  If	you want to edit f.c, you must lock it as you check it
       out with	the command

	      co  -l  f.c

       You can now edit	f.c.

       Suppose after some editing you want to know what	changes	that you  have
       made.  The command

	      rcsdiff  f.c

       tells  you  the difference between the most recently checked-in version
       and the working file.  You can check the	file back in by	invoking

	      ci  f.c

       This increments the revision number properly.

       If ci complains with the	message

	      ci error:	no lock	set by your name

       then you	have tried to check in a file even though you did not lock  it
       when  you  checked  it  out.   Of  course, it is	too late now to	do the
       check-out with locking, because another check-out would overwrite  your
       modifications.  Instead,	invoke

	      rcs  -l  f.c

       This  command  will  lock  the latest revision for you, unless somebody
       else got	ahead of you already.  In this case, you'll have to  negotiate
       with that person.

       Locking	assures	 that you, and only you, can check in the next update,
       and avoids nasty	problems if several people  work  on  the  same	 file.
       Even  if	a revision is locked, it can still be checked out for reading,
       compiling, etc.	All that locking prevents is a check-in	by anybody but
       the locker.

       If your RCS file	is private, i.e., if you are the only  person  who  is
       going  to  deposit  revisions into it, strict locking is	not needed and
       you can turn it off.  If	strict locking is turned off, the owner	of the
       RCS file	need not have a	lock for check-in; all others still do.	 Turn-
       ing strict locking off and on is	done with the commands

	      rcs  -U  f.c     and     rcs  -L	f.c

       If you don't want to clutter your working  directory  with  RCS	files,
       create  a  subdirectory	called RCS in your working directory, and move
       all your	RCS files there.  RCS commands will look first into  that  di-
       rectory	to  find  needed files.	 All the commands discussed above will
       still work, without any modification.   (Actually,  pairs  of  RCS  and
       working	files  can be specified	in three ways: (a) both	are given, (b)
       only the	working	file is	given, (c) only	the RCS	file is	 given.	  Both
       RCS  and	 working  files	may have arbitrary path	prefixes; RCS commands
       pair them up intelligently.)

       To avoid	the deletion of	the working file during	check-in (in case  you
       want to continue	editing	or compiling), invoke

	      ci  -l  f.c     or     ci	 -u  f.c

       These  commands	check  in f.c as usual,	but perform an implicit	check-
       out.  The first form also locks the checked in revision,	the second one
       doesn't.	 Thus, these options save you one  check-out  operation.   The
       first form is useful if you want	to continue editing, the second	one if
       you just	want to	read the file.	Both update the	identification markers
       in your working file (see below).

       You  can	give ci	the number you want assigned to	a checked in revision.
       Assume all your revisions were numbered 1.1, 1.2, 1.3,  etc.,  and  you
       would like to start release 2.  The command

	      ci  -r2  f.c     or     ci  -r2.1	 f.c

       assigns the number 2.1 to the new revision.  From then on, ci will num-
       ber  the	subsequent revisions with 2.2, 2.3, etc.  The corresponding co
       commands

	      co  -r2  f.c     and     co  -r2.1  f.c

       retrieve	the latest revision numbered 2.x and the revision 2.1, respec-
       tively.	co without a revision number selects the  latest  revision  on
       the  trunk,  i.e.  the highest revision with a number consisting	of two
       fields.	Numbers	with more than two fields  are	needed	for  branches.
       For example, to start a branch at revision 1.3, invoke

	      ci  -r1.3.1  f.c

       This  command  starts  a	branch numbered	1 at revision 1.3, and assigns
       the number 1.3.1.1 to the new revision.	 For  more  information	 about
       branches, see rcsfile(5).

   Automatic Identification
       RCS can put special strings for identification into your	source and ob-
       ject code.  To obtain such identification, place	the marker

	      $Id$

       into  your  text, for instance inside a comment.	 RCS will replace this
       marker with a string of the form

	      $Id:  filename  revision	date  time  author  state  $

       With such a marker on the first page of each module, you	can always see
       with which revision you are working.  RCS keeps the markers up to  date
       automatically.	To propagate the markers into your object code,	simply
       put them	into literal character strings.	 In C, this is	done  as  fol-
       lows:

	      static char rcsid[] = "$Id$";

       The command ident extracts such markers from any	file, even object code
       and dumps.  Thus, ident lets you	find out which revisions of which mod-
       ules were used in a given program.

       You may also find it useful to put the marker $Log$ into	your text, in-
       side  a comment.	 This marker accumulates the log messages that are re-
       quested during check-in.	 Thus, you can maintain	the  complete  history
       of  your	file directly inside it.  There	are several additional identi-
       fication	markers; see co(1) for details.

IDENTIFICATION
       Author: Walter F. Tichy.
       Manual Page Revision: 5.3; Release Date:	1993/11/03.
       Copyright (C) 1982, 1988, 1989 Walter F.	Tichy.
       Copyright (C) 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993 Paul Eggert.

SEE ALSO
       ci(1), co(1), ident(1), rcs(1), rcsdiff(1),  rcsintro(1),  rcsmerge(1),
       rlog(1)
       Walter  F. Tichy, RCS--A	System for Version Control, Software--Practice
       & Experience 15,	7 (July	1985), 637-654.

GNU				  1993/11/03			   RCSINTRO(1)

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