CI
Section: User Commands (1)
Updated: 1990/12/04
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NAME
ci - check in RCS revisions
SYNOPSIS
ci
[options] file ...
DESCRIPTION
ci
stores new revisions into RCS files.
Each file name ending in
,v
is taken to be an RCS file.
All others
are assumed to be working files containing new revisions.
ci
deposits the contents of each working file
into the corresponding RCS file.
If only a working file is given,
ci
tries to find the corresponding RCS file in an RCS subdirectory
and then in the working file's directory.
For more details, see
FILE NAMING
below.
For
ci
to work, the caller's login must be on the access list,
except if the access list is empty or the caller is the superuser or the
owner of the file.
To append a new revision to an existing branch, the tip revision on
that branch must be locked by the caller. Otherwise, only a
new branch can be created. This restriction is not enforced
for the owner of the file if non-strict locking is used
(see
rcs(1)).
A lock held by someone else may be broken with the
rcs
command.
Normally,
ci
checks whether the revision to be deposited is different
from the preceding one. If it is not different,
ci
aborts the deposit, asking beforehand if possible.
A deposit can be forced with the
-f
option.
For each revision deposited,
ci
prompts for a log message.
The log message should summarize the change and must be terminated by
end-of-file or by a line containing
. by
itself.
If several files are checked in
ci
asks whether to reuse the
previous log message.
If the standard input is not a terminal,
ci
suppresses the prompt
and uses the same log message for all files.
See also
-m.
The number of the deposited revision can be given by any of the options
-f,
-I,
-k,
-l,
-q,
-r,
or
-u.
If the RCS file does not exist,
ci
creates it and
deposits the contents of the working file as the initial revision
(default number:
1.1).
The access list is initialized to empty.
Instead of the log message,
ci
requests descriptive text (see
-t
below).
OPTIONS
- -r[rev]
-
assigns the revision number
rev
to the checked-in revision, releases the corresponding lock, and
deletes the working file. This is the default.
rev
may be symbolic, numeric, or mixed.
-
If
rev
is a revision number, it must be higher than the latest
one on the branch to which
rev
belongs, or must start a new branch.
If
rev
is a branch rather than a revision number,
the new revision is appended to that branch. The level number is obtained
by incrementing the tip revision number of that branch.
If
rev
indicates a non-existing branch,
that branch is created with the initial revision numbered
rev.1.
If
rev
is omitted,
ci
tries to derive the new revision number from
the caller's last lock. If the caller has locked the tip revision of a branch,
the new revision is appended to that branch.
The new revision number is obtained
by incrementing the tip revision number.
If the caller locked a non-tip revision, a new branch is started at
that revision by incrementing the highest branch number at that revision.
The default initial branch and level numbers are
1.
If
rev
is omitted and the caller has no lock, but owns
the file and locking
is not set to
strict,
then the revision is appended to the
default branch (normally the trunk; see the
-b
option of
rcs(1)).
Exception: On the trunk, revisions can be appended to the end, but
not inserted.
- -f[rev]
-
forces a deposit; the new revision is deposited even it is not different
from the preceding one.
- -k[rev]
-
searches the working file for keyword values to determine its revision number,
creation date, state, and author (see
co(1)),
and assigns these
values to the deposited revision, rather than computing them locally.
It also generates a default login message noting the login of the caller
and the actual checkin date.
This option is useful for software distribution. A revision that is sent to
several sites should be checked in with the
-k
option at these sites to
preserve the original number, date, author, and state.
The extracted keyword values and the default log message may be overridden
with the options
-d,
-m,
-s,
-w,
and any option that carries a revision number.
- -l[rev]
-
works like
-r,
except it performs an additional
co -l
for the
deposited revision. Thus, the deposited revision is immediately
checked out again and locked.
This is useful for saving a revision although one wants to continue
editing it after the checkin.
- -u[rev]
-
works like
-l,
except that the deposited revision is not locked.
This lets one read the working file
immediately after checkin.
- -q[rev]
-
quiet mode; diagnostic output is not printed.
A revision that is not different from the preceding one is not deposited,
unless
-f
is given.
- -I[rev]
-
interactive mode;
the user is prompted and questioned
even if the standard input is not a terminal.
- -d[date]
-
uses
date
for the checkin date and time.
The
date
is specified in free format as explained in
co(1).
This is useful for lying about the checkin date, and for
-k
if no date is available.
If
date
is empty, the working file's time of last modification is used.
- -mmsg
-
uses the string
msg
as the log message for all revisions checked in.
- -nname
-
assigns the symbolic name
name
to the number of the checked-in revision.
ci
prints an error message if
name
is already assigned to another
number.
- -Nname
-
same as
-n,
except that it overrides a previous assignment of
name.
- -sstate
-
sets the state of the checked-in revision to the identifier
state.
The default state is
Exp.
- -tfile
-
writes descriptive text from the contents of the named
file
into the RCS file,
deleting the existing text.
The
file
name may not begin with
-.
- -t-string
-
Write descriptive text from the
string
into the RCS file, deleting the existing text.
-
The
-t
option, in both its forms, has effect only during an initial checkin;
it is silently ignored otherwise.
During the initial checkin, if
-t
is not given,
ci
obtains the text from standard input,
terminated by end-of-file or by a line containing
. by
itself.
The user is prompted for the text if interaction is possible; see
-I.
For backward compatibility with older versions of RCS, a bare
-t
option is ignored.
- -wlogin
-
uses
login
for the author field of the deposited revision.
Useful for lying about the author, and for
-k
if no author is available.
- -Vn
-
Emulate RCS version
n.
See
co(1)
for details.
FILE NAMING
Pairs of RCS files and working files may be specified in three ways
(see also the
example section of
co(1)).
1) Both the RCS file and the working file are given. The RCS file name is of
the form
path1/workfile,v
and the working file name is of the form
path2/workfile
where
path1/
and
path2/
are (possibly different or empty) paths and
workfile
is a file name.
2) Only the RCS file is given. Then the working file is created in the current
directory and its name is derived from the name of the RCS file
by removing
path1/
and the suffix
,v.
3) Only the working file is given.
Then
ci
looks for an RCS file of the form
path2/RCS/workfile,v
or
path2/workfile,v
(in this order).
If the RCS file is specified without a path in 1) and 2), then
ci
looks for the RCS file first in the directory
./RCS
and then in the current
directory.
FILE MODES
An RCS file created by
ci
inherits the read and execute permissions
from the working file. If the RCS file exists already,
ci
preserves its read and execute permissions.
ci
always turns off all write permissions of RCS files.
FILES
Several temporary files may be created.
A semaphore file is created in the directory containing the RCS file.
The effective user+group must be able to read the RCS file
and to search and write the directory containing the RCS file.
Normally, the real user+group must be able to read the working file
and to search and write the directory containing the working file;
however, some older hosts that do not conform to Posix 1003.1-1990
cannot easily switch between real and effective ids,
so on these hosts the effective user+group is used for all accesses.
The effective user+group is the same as the real user+group
unless your copy of RCS has setuid or setgid privileges.
These privileges yield extra security if RCS files are protected so that
only the effective user+group can write RCS directories.
Further protection can be achieved by granting access
only to the effective user+group.
ci
never changes an RCS or working file;
instead, it unlinks the file and creates a new one.
This strategy breaks hard links to such files,
but does not affect symbolic links.
DIAGNOSTICS
For each revision,
ci
prints the RCS file, the working file, and the number
of both the deposited and the preceding revision.
The exit status is zero if and only if all operations were successful.
IDENTIFICATION
Author: Walter F. Tichy.
Revision Number: 5.4; Release Date: 1990/12/04.
Copyright © 1982, 1988, 1989 by Walter F. Tichy.
Copyright © 1990 by Paul Eggert.
SEE ALSO
co(1), ident(1), rcs(1), rcsdiff(1), rcsintro(1), rcsmerge(1), rlog(1),
rcsfile(5)
Walter F. Tichy,
RCS--A System for Version Control,
Software--Practice & Experience
15,
7 (July 1985), 637-654.
Index
- NAME
-
- SYNOPSIS
-
- DESCRIPTION
-
- OPTIONS
-
- FILE NAMING
-
- FILE MODES
-
- FILES
-
- DIAGNOSTICS
-
- IDENTIFICATION
-
- SEE ALSO
-
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