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aegis -MoVe_file(1)	    General Commands Manual	   aegis -MoVe_file(1)

NAME
	aegis move file	- rename one or	more files as part of a	change

SYNOPSIS
	aegis  -MoVe_file  [  option...	  ] old-file-name new-file-name	[ old1
	new1 [ old2 new2 ... ]]
	aegis -MoVe_file -List [ option...  ]
	aegis -MoVe_file -Help

DESCRIPTION
	The aegis -MoVe_file command is	used to	copy a file into a change  and
	change its name	at the same time.

	The  named files will be copied	from the baseline (old-file-name) into
	the development	directory (new-file-name), and added to	 the  list  of
	files in the change.

	Warning: If there is already files in the development directory	of ei-
	ther the old-name or the new-name they will be overwritten.

	The  old-file-name  in	the  development directory will	contain	1KB of
	random text.  The random text is sufficiently revolting	that most com-
	pilers will give error messages, should	the file be  referenced	 acci-
	dentally.  This	is often very helpful when moving include files.

	You  may  rename directories.  All the files in	the old-name directory
	tree will be renamed to	be below the new-name directory	tree.

   File	Name Interpretation
	The aegis program will attempt to determine  the  project  file	 names
	from  the  file	 names	given on the command line.  All	file names are
	stored within aegis projects as	relative to the	root of	 the  baseline
	directory  tree.  The development directory and	the integration	direc-
	tory are shadows of this baseline directory,  and  so  these  relative
	names apply here, too.	Files named on the command line	are first con-
	verted	to  absolute  paths if necessary.  They	are then compared with
	the baseline path, the development directory path, and the integration
	directory path,	to determine a baseline-relative name.	It is an error
	if the file named is outside one of these directory trees.

	The -BAse_RElative option may be used to cause relative	 filenames  to
	be  interpreted	 as  relative to the baseline path; absolute filenames
	will still be compared with the	various	paths in order to determine  a
	baseline-relative name.

	The relative_filename_preference in the	user configuration file	may be
	used  to modify	this default behavior.	See aeuconf(5) for more	infor-
	mation.

   Process Side	Effects
	This command will cancel any  build  or	 test  registrations,  because
	adding another file logically invalidates them.

	When the change	files are listed (aegis	-List Change_Files -TERse) the
	new  files (new-file-name) will	appear in the listing, and the removed
	files (old-file-name) will not appear in  the  terse  listing.	 Simi-
	larly,	when the project files are listed with an explicit change num-
	ber (aegis -List Project_Files -TERse -Change N) none of the  change's
	files,	including  both	 the new and removed files, will appear	in the
	terse listing.	These two features are very helpful when calling aegis
	from within a DMT to generate the list of source files.

   Notification
	The new_file_command and remove_file_command  in  the  project	config
	file  are  run,	if set.	 The project_file_command is also run, if set,
	and if there has been an integration  recently.	  See  aepconf(5)  for
	more information.

WHITEOUT
	Aegis provides you with	what is	often called a "view path" which indi-
	cates  to development tools (compilers,	build systems, etc) look first
	in the development directory, then in the branch baseline, and	so  on
	up to the trunk	baseline.

	The problem with view paths is that in order to	remove files, you need
	some kind of "whiteout"	to say "stop looking, it's been	removed."

	When  you user the aerm(1) or aemv(1) commands,	this means "add	infor-
	mation to this change which will remove	the  file  from	 the  baseline
	when  this change is integrated".  I.e.	while the change is in the be-
	ing developed state, the file is only "removed"	in the development di-
	rectory	- it's still present in	the baseline, and will	be  until  the
	change is successfully integrated.

	When  you  use the aerm(1) or aemv(1) commands,	Aegis will create a 1K
	file to	act as the whiteout.  It's contents are	rather ugly so that if
	you compile or include the "removed" file accidentally,	you get	a  fa-
	tal error.  This will remind you to remove obsolete references.

	When  the  change in integrated, the removed file is not copied/linked
	from the baseline to the integration directory,	and is not copied from
	the development	directory.  At this time it  is	 physically  gone  (no
	whiteout).   It	is assumed that	because	of the error inducing whiteout
	all old	references were	found and fixed	while the change  was  in  the
	being developed	state.

   File	Manifests
	When  generating  list of files	to be compiled or linked, it is	impor-
	tant that the file manifest be generated  from	information  known  by
	Aegis, rather than from	the file system.  This is for several reasons:

	(a) Aegis  knows exactly what (source) files are where,	whereas	every-
	    thing else is inferring Aegis' knowledge; and

	(b) looking in the file	system is hard when the	view  path  is	longer
	    that  2 directories	(and Aegis' branching method can make it arbi-
	    trarily long); and

	(c) The	whiteout files,	and anything else left	"lying	around",  will
	    confuse any	method which interrogates the file system.

	The easiest way	to use Aegis' file knowledge is	with something like an
	awk(1)	script	processing the Aegis file lists.  For example, you can
	do this	with make(1) as	follows:
		# generate the file manifest
		manifest.make.inc: manifest.make.awk
		    ( aegis -l cf -ter ; aegis -l pf -ter ) | \
		    awk	-f manifest.make.awk > manifest.make.inc
		# now include the file manifest
		include	manifest.make.inc
	Note: this would be inefficient	of you did it once per directory,  but
	there  is  nothing  stopping you writing numerous assignments into the
	manifest.make.inc file,	all in one pass.

	It is possible to do the same thing with Aegis'	report generator  (see
	aer(1)	for  more  information),  but  this  is	more involved than the
	awk(1) script.	However,  with	the  information  "straight  from  the
	horse's	mouth" as it were, it can also be much smarter.

	This  file  manifest  would become out-of-date without an interlock to
	Aegis' file operations commands.  By  using  the  project-file_command
	and  change_file_command  fields  of the project config	file (see aep-
	conf(5)	for more information), you can delete this file	 at  strategic
	times.
		/* run when the	change file manifest is	altered	*/
		change_file_command = "rm -f manifest.make.inc";
		/* run when the	project	file manifest is altered */
		project_file_command = "rm -f manifest.make.inc";
	The  new  file	manifest  will thus be re-built	during the next	aeb(1)
	command.

   Options and Preferences
	There is a -No-WhiteOut	option,	which may be used to suppress whiteout
	files when you use the aerm(1) and aemv(1) commands.  There is a  cor-
	responding -WhiteOut option, which is usually the default.

	There is a whiteout_preference field in	the user preferences file (see
	aeuconf(5)  for	 more information) if you want to set this option more
	permanently.

   Whiteout File Templates
	The whiteout_template field of the project config file may be used  to
	produce	 language-specific error files.	 If no whiteout	template entry
	matches, a very	ugly 1KB file will be produced - it should induce com-
	piler errors for just about any	language.

	If you want a more human-readable error	message, entries such as
		whiteout_template =
		[
		    {
			pattern	= [ "*.[ch]" ];
			body = "#error This file has been removed.";
		    }
		];
	can be very effective (this example assumes gcc(1) is being used).

	If it is essential that	no whiteout file be produced, say for C	source
	files, you could use a whiteout	template such as
		whiteout_template =
		[
		    { pattern =	[ "*.c"	]; }
		];
	because	an absent body sub-field means generate	no  whiteout  file  at
	all.

	You  may have more than	one whiteout template entry, but note that the
	order of the entries is	important.  The	first entry which matches will
	be used.

   Notification
	On successful completion of this command,  the	notifications  usually
	performed by the aerm(1), aenf(1) and aent(1) commands are run,	as ap-
	propriate.   These include the project_file_command, new_file_command,
	new_test_command and remove_file_command fields	of the project	config
	file.  See aepconf(5) for more information.

OPTIONS
	The following options are understood:

	-Change	number
		This  option may be used to specify a particular change	within
		a project.  See	aegis(1) for a complete	 description  of  this
		option.

	-Help
		This  option  may be used to obtain more information about how
		to use the aegis program.

	-List
		This option may	be used	to obtain a list of suitable  subjects
		for this command.  The list may	be more	general	than expected.

	-Not_Logging
		This  option  may  be used to disable the automatic logging of
		output and errors to a file.  This is often useful  when  sev-
		eral aegis commands are	combined in a shell script.

	-Project name
		This  option  may  be  used to select the project of interest.
		When no	-Project option	is specified, the AEGIS_PROJECT	 envi-
		ronment	 variable  is  consulted.  If that does	not exist, the
		user's $HOME/.aegisrc file is examined for a  default  project
		field (see aeuconf(5) for more information).  If that does not
		exist,	when the user is only working on changes within	a sin-
		gle project, the project name defaults to that project.	  Oth-
		erwise,	it is an error.

	-TERse
		This  option may be used to cause listings to produce the bare
		minimum	of  information.   It  is  usually  useful  for	 shell
		scripts.

	-Verbose
		This option may	be used	to cause aegis to produce more output.
		By  default  aegis  only produces output on errors.  When used
		with the -List option this option causes column	headings to be
		added.

	-Wait	This option may	be used	to require Aegis commands to wait  for
		access	locks,	if  they  cannot be obtained immediately.  De-
		faults to the user's lock_wait_preference  if  not  specified,
		see aeuconf(5) for more	information.

	-No_Wait
		This  option  may  be used to require Aegis commands to	emit a
		fatal error if access locks cannot  be	obtained  immediately.
		Defaults  to the user's	lock_wait_preference if	not specified,
		see aeuconf(5) for more	information.

	-WhiteOut
		This option may	be used	to request that	deleted	files  be  re-
		placed by a "whiteout" file in the development directory.  The
		idea  is that compiling	such a file will result	in a fatal er-
		ror, in	order that all references may be found.	 This is  usu-
		ally the default.

	-No_WhiteOut
		This  option may be used to request that no "whiteout" file be
		placed in the development directory.

	See also aegis(1) for options common to	all aegis commands.

	All options may	be abbreviated;	the abbreviation is documented as  the
	upper case letters, all	lower case letters and underscores (_) are op-
	tional.	 You must use consecutive sequences of optional	letters.

	All  options  are case insensitive, you	may type them in upper case or
	lower case or a	combination of both, case is not important.

	For example: the arguments "-project", "-PROJ" and "-p"	are all	inter-
	preted to mean the -Project option.  The argument "-prj" will  not  be
	understood, because consecutive	optional characters were not supplied.

	Options	 and  other command line arguments may be mixed	arbitrarily on
	the command line, after	the function selectors.

	The GNU	long option names are understood.  Since all option names  for
	aegis are long,	this means ignoring the	extra leading '-'.  The	"--op-
	tion=value" convention is also understood.

RECOMMENDED ALIAS
	The recommended	alias for this command is
	csh%	alias aemv 'aegis -mv \!* -v'
	sh$	aemv(){aegis -mv "$@" -v}

ERRORS
	It is an error if the change is	not in the being developed state.
	It is an error if the change is	not assigned to	the current user.
	It is an error if either file is already in the	change.

EXIT STATUS
	The  aegis  command  will  exit	 with a	status of 1 on any error.  The
	aegis command will only	exit with a status of 0	if there  are  no  er-
	rors.

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
	See aegis(1) for a list	of environment variables which may affect this
	command.    See	  aepconf(5)  for  the	project	 configuration	file's
	project_specific field for how to set environment  variables  for  all
	commands executed by Aegis.

SEE ALSO
	aecp(1)	copy files into	a change

	aedb(1)	begin development of a change

	aemvu(1)
		undo the rename	files as part of a change

	aenf(1)	add files to be	created	by a change

	aenfu(1)
		remove files to	be created by a	change

	aerm(1)	add files to be	deleted	by a change

	aermu(1)
		remove files to	be deleted by a	change

	aeuconf(5)
		user configuration file	format

COPYRIGHT
	aegis version 4.25.D510
	Copyright  (C)	1991,  1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999,
	2000, 2001, 2002, 2003,	2004, 2005,  2006,  2007,  2008,  2009,	 2010,
	2011, 2012 Peter Miller

	The  aegis  program comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY; for details use
	the 'aegis -VERSion License' command.  This is free software  and  you
	are  welcome  to redistribute it under certain conditions; for details
	use the	'aegis -VERSion	License' command.

AUTHOR
	Peter Miller   E-Mail:	 pmiller@opensource.org.au
	/\/\*		  WWW:	 http://miller.emu.id.au/pmiller/

Reference Manual		     Aegis		   aegis -MoVe_file(1)

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