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aegis -ReMove_file(1) General Commands Manual aegis -ReMove_file(1) NAME aegis remove file - add files to be deleted to a change SYNOPSIS aegis -ReMove_file file-name... [ option... ] aegis -ReMove_file -List [ option... ] aegis -ReMove_file -Help DESCRIPTION The aegis -ReMove_file command is used to add files to be deleted to a change. The file will be added to the list of files in the change, and will be removed from the baseline at integration time. This command may be used to remove tests, not just source files. Tests are treated just like any other source file, and are subject to the same process. A file will be created in the development directory containing 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 removing include files. You may specify a directory name to remove all files in the named di- rectory tree. It is an error if there are no relevant files. 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 a file logically invalidates them. When the change files are listed (aegis -List Change_Files -TERse) the removed files will not appear in the terse listing. Similarly, when the project files are listed with an explicit change number (aegis -List Project_Files -TERse -Change N) none of the change's files, in- cluding the the removed files, will not 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. Changing the Type of a File If you want to change the type of a file (say, from a test to a source file, or vice versa) you could do it as two changes, by first using aerm(1) in one change and then using aenf(1) or aent(1) in a second change, or you can combine both steps in the same change. Remember to use the aerm -nowhiteout option or you will get a most peculiar new file template. Notification The remove_file_command in the project config file is 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. File Action Adjustment When this command runs, it first checks the change files against the projects files. If there are inconsistencies, the file actions will be adjusted as follows: create If a file is being created, but another change set is inte- grated which also creates the file, the file action in the change set still being developed will be adjusted to "modify". modify If a file is being modified, but another change set is inte- grated which removes the file, the file action in the change set still being developed will be adjusted to "create". remove If a file is being removed, but another change set is inte- grated which removes the file, the file will be dropped from the change set still being developed. OPTIONS The following options are understood: -as-needed Usually it is an error if a file is already in a change set, and is redundantly added to the change set again. This option says to ignore such files. -BAse_RElative This option may be used to cause relative filenames to be con- sidered relative to the base of the source tree. See aeu- conf(5) for the corresponding user preference. -CUrrent_RElative This option may be used to cause relative filenames to be con- sidered relative to the current directory. This is usually the default. See aeuconf(5) for the corresponding user pref- erence. -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 aerm 'aegis -rm \!* -v' sh$ aerm(){aegis -rm "$@" -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 the file does not exist in the baseline. It is an error if the file is already part of 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 aemv(1) rename a file as part of a change aenf(1) add files to be created to a change aermu(1) remove files to be deleted from 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 -ReMove_file(1)
NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | WHITEOUT | OPTIONS | RECOMMENDED ALIAS | ERRORS | EXIT STATUS | ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES | SEE ALSO | COPYRIGHT | AUTHOR
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