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- $CVSid: @(#)TODO 1.26 94/09/21 $
-
- 14. Pathname stripper, for checkout, as well as for writing the
- Repository file.
- [[ I have a simple one, but need to make sure to call it at all the
- appropriate points ]]
- (I'm not sure what this means -kingdon, Jun 1995).
-
- 22. Catch signals for cleanup when "add"ing files.
-
- 24. Insist on a log message.
- (This should be configurable via commitinfo or some new config file
- -kingdon, Jun 1995).
-
- 30. Add "patch" program option to the modules database.
-
- 31. Think hard about ^C recovery.
-
- 35. Add "admin" command as an interface to "rcs".
- [[ a cheesy version is there, but it should be re-done ]]
-
- 38. Think hard about using RCS state information to allow one to checkin
- a new vendor release without having it be accessed until it has been
- integrated into the local changes.
-
- 39. Think about allowing parallel source trees that can easily track
- each other.
- [[ sort of solved with the automagic branch support, but I want more ]]
-
- 45. Consider enhancing the "patch" and "tag" command support in the module
- database -- they seem hard to use since these commands deal directly
- with the RCS ,v files.
-
- 46. Perhaps checkout/checkin/tag/patch commands should be imbedded in the
- file system directly, using special known command names?
-
- 49. cvs xxx commands should be able to deal with files in other
- directories. I want to do a cvs add foo/bar.c.
- [[ most commands now use the generic recursion processor, but not all;
- this note is left here to remind me to fix the others ]]
-
- 52. SCCS has a feature that I would *love* to see in CVS, as it is very
- useful. One may make a private copy of SCCS suid to a particular user,
- so other users in the authentication list may check files in and out of
- a project directory without mucking about with groups. Is there any
- plan to provide a similar functionality to CVS? Our site (and, I'd
- imagine, many other sites with large user bases) has decided against
- having the user-groups feature of unix available to the users, due to
- perceived administrative, technical and performance headaches. A tool
- such as CVS with features that provide group-like functionality would
- be a huge help.
-
- 62. Consider using revision controlled files and directories to handle the
- new module format -- consider a cvs command front-end to
- add/delete/modify module contents, maybe.
-
- 63. The "import" and vendor support commands (co -j) need to be documented
- better.
-
- 64. Need to greatly increase the performance of an initial checkout.
- [[ it got better, then we added functionality, making it worse again ]]
-
- 66. Length of the CVS temporary files must be limited to 14 characters for
- System-V stupid support. As well as the length on the CVS.adm files.
-
- 67. cvs import should populate the vendor sources with CVS.adm files so
- that one could use the vendor sources directly without having the check
- them out.
-
- 69. Consider enhacing import to add a module automatically to the module
- database. Perhaps with a new option, or perhaps with an editor.
-
- 72. Consider re-design of the module -o, -i, -t options to use the file
- system more intuitively.
-
- 73. Consider an option (in .cvsrc?) to automatically add files that are new
- and specified to commit.
-
- 76. Consider adding a layer of abstraction so that CVS can work with both
- RCS and SCCS files. Larry says this should be #ifdef'ed.
-
- 79. Might be nice to have some sort of interface to TFS and tagged
- revisions.
-
- 82. Maybe the import stuff should allow an arbitrary revision to be
- specified.
-
- 84. Improve the documentation about administration of the repository and
- how to add/remove files and the use of symbolic links.
-
- 85. Add revision controlled symbolic links to CVS using one of the tag
- fields in the RCS file.
-
- 91. Better document the format of the source repository and how one might
- convert their current SCCS or RCS files into CVS format.
-
- 92. Look into this:
- After a bit of soul searching via dbx, I realized my sin was that I'd
- specified "echo" as the program to call from loginfo. The commit
- procedure worked fine till it hit my echo, then silently aborted
- leaving the lockfiles intact. Since I needn't use the loginfo
- facility, I simply removed those commands and it all works.
-
- 93. Need to think hard about release and development environments. Think
- about execsets as well.
-
- 98. If diff3 bombs out (too many differences) cvs then thinks that the file
- has been updated and is OK to be commited even though the file
- has not yet been merged.
-
- 100. Checked out files should have revision control support. Maybe.
-
- 102. Perhaps directory modes should be propagated on all import check-ins.
- Not necessarily uid/gid changes.
-
- 103. setuid/setgid on files is suspect.
-
- 104. cvs should recover nicely on unreadable files/directories.
-
- 105. cvs should have administrative tools to allow for changing permissions
- and modes and what not. In particular, this would make cvs a
- more attractive alternative to rdist.
-
- 107. It should be possible to specify a list of symbolic revisions to
- checkout such that the list is processed in reverse order looking for
- matches within the RCS file for the symbolic revision. If there is
- not a match, the next symbolic rev on the list is checked, and so on,
- until all symbolic revs are exhausted. This would allow one to, say,
- checkout "4.0" + "4.0.3" + "4.0.3Patch1" + "4.0.3Patch2" to get the
- most recent 4.x stuff. This is usually handled by just specifying the
- right release_tag, but most people forget to do this.
-
- 108. If someone creates a whole new directory (i.e. adds it to the cvs
- repository) and you happen to have a directory in your source farm by
- the same name, when you do your cvs update -d it SILENTLY does
- *nothing* to that directory. At least, I think it was silent;
- certainly, it did *not* abort my cvs update, as it would have if the
- same thing had happened with a file instead of a directory.
-
- 109. I had gotten pieces of the sys directory in the past but not a
- complete tree. I just did something like:
-
- cvs get *
-
- Where sys was in * and got the message
-
- cvs get: Executing 'sys/tools/make_links sys'
- sh: sys/tools/make_links: not found
-
- I suspect this is because I didn't have the file in question,
- but I do not understand how I could fool it into getting an
- error. I think a later cvs get sys seemed to work so perhaps
- something is amiss in handling multiple arguments to cvs get?
-
- 113. The "cvs update" command should tee its output to a log file in ".".
- (why? What is wrong with piping stdout to "tee"? -kingdon, Jun 1995)
-
- 119. Consider an option to have import checkout the RCS or SCCS files
- if necessary.
-
- 122. If Name_Repository fails, it currently causes CVS to die completely. It
- should instead return NULL and have the caller do something reasonable.
-
- 123. Add a flag to import to not build vendor branches for local code.
-
- 124. Anyway, I thought you might want to add something like the following
- to the cvs man pages:
-
- BUGS
- The sum of the sizes of a module key and its contents are
- limited. See ndbm(3).
-
- 126. Do an analysis to see if CVS is forgetting to close file descriptors.
- Especially when committing many files (more than the open file limit
- for the particular UNIX).
-
- 127. Look at *info files; they should all be quiet if the files are not
- there. Should be able to point at a RCS directory and go.
-
- 128. When I tag a file, the message tells me that I'm tagging a directory.
-
- 129. Something strange seems to have happened here. When I check this out,
- the update lines (U CFTS/...) seem to report a bogus leading CFTS
- (e.g. U CFTS/Medusa_TS/...) when the later files are checked out.
-
- The directory structure doesn't seem to be botched, just the
- messages. I don't recall seeing this before.
-
- 130. cvs diff with no -r arguments does not need to look up the current RCS
- version number since it only cares about what's in the Entries file.
- This should make it much faster.
-
- It should ParseEntries itself and access the entries list much like
- Version_TS does (sticky tags and sticky options may need to be
- supported here as well). Then it should only diff the things that
- have the wrong time stamp (the ones that look modified).
-
- 134. Make a statement about using hard NFS mounts to your source
- repository. Look into checking NULL fgets() returns with ferror() to
- see if an error had occurred.
-
- 135. The email CVS sends with each checkin, should include the version
- number of each file it is checking in.
- [[ Sort of solved by contrib/log.pl, which does a good job of this ]]
-
- 137. Some sites might want CVS to fsync() the RCS ,v file to protect
- against nasty hardware errors. There is a slight performance hit with
- doing so, though, so it should be configurable in the .cvsrc file.
- Also, along with this, we should look at the places where CVS itself
- could be a little more synchronous so as not to lose data.
- [[ I've done some of this, but it could use much more ]]
-
- 138. Some people have suggested that CVS use a VPATH-like environment
- variable to limit the amount of sources that need to be duplicated for
- sites with giant source trees and no disk space.
-
- 141. Import should accept modules as its directory argument.
-
- 143. Update the documentation to show that the source repository is
- something far away from the files that you work on.
-
- 144. Have cvs checkout look for the environment variable CVSPREFIX
- (or CVSMODPREFIX or some such). If it's set, then when looking
- up an alias in the modules database, first look it up with the
- value of CVSPREFIX attached, and then look for the alias itself.
- This would be useful when you have several projects in a single
- repository. You could have aliases abc_src and xyz_src and
- tell people working on project abc to put "setenv CVSPREFIX abc_"
- in their .cshrc file (or equivalent for other shells).
- Then they could do "cvs co src" to get a copy of their src
- directory, not xyz's. (This should create a directory called
- src, not abc_src.)
-
- 145. After you create revision 1.1.1.1 in the previous scenario, if
- you do "cvs update -r1 filename" you get revision 1.1, not
- 1.1.1.1. It would be nice to get the later revision. Again,
- this restriction comes from RCS and is probably hard to
- change in CVS. Sigh.
-
- |"cvs update -r1 filename" does not tell RCS to follow any branches. CVS
- |tries to be consistent with RCS in this fashion, so I would not change
- |this. Within CVS we do have the flexibility of extending things, like
- |making a revision of the form "-r1HEAD" find the most recent revision
- |(branch or not) with a "1." prefix in the RCS file. This would get what
- |you want maybe.
-
- This would be very useful. Though I would prefer an option
- such as "-v1" rather than "-r1HEAD". This option might be
- used quite often.
-
- 146. The merging of files should be controlled via a hook so that programs
- other than "rcsmerge" can be used, like Sun's filemerge or emacs's
- emerge.el. (but be careful in making this work client/server--it means
- doing the interactive merging at the end after the server is done).
-
- 149. On Sun, 2 Feb 92 22:01:38 EST, rouilj@dl5000.bc.edu (John P. Rouillard)
- said:
- Maybe there should be an option to cvs admin that allows a user to
- change the Repository file with some degree of error checking?
- Something like "cvs admin reposmv /old/path /new/pretty/path". Before
- it does the replace it check to see that the files
- /new/pretty/path/<dir>/<files> exist.
-
- 150. I have a customer request for a way to specify log message per
- file, non-interactively before the commit, such that a single, fully
- recursive commit prompts for one commit message, and concatenates the
- per file messages for each file. In short, one commit, one editor
- session, log messages allowed to vary across files within the commit.
- Also, the per file messages should be allowed to be written when the
- files are changed, which may predate the commit considerably.
-
- A new command seems appropriate for this. The state can be saved in the
- CVS directory. I.e.,
-
- % cvs msg foo.c
- Enter log message for foo.c
- >> fixed an uninitialized variable
- >> ^D
-
- The text is saved as CVS/foo.c,m (or some such name) and commit is
- modified to append (prepend?) the text (if found) to the log message
- specified at commit time. Easy enough.
-
- 151. Also, is there a flag I am missing that allows replacing Ulrtx_Build
- by Ultrix_build? I.E. I would like a tag replacement to be a one step
- operation rather than a two step "cvs rtag -r Ulrtx_Build Ultrix_Build"
- followed by "cvs trag -d Ulrtx_Build"
-
- 152. The "cvs -n" option does not work as one would expect for all the
- commands. In particular, for "commit" and "import", where one would
- also like to see what it would do, without actually doing anything.
-
- 153. There should be some command (maybe I just haven't figured
- out which one...) to import a source directory which is already
- RCS-administered without losing all prior RCS gathered data. Thus, it
- would have to examine the RCS files and choose a starting version and
- branch higher than previous ones used.
-
- 154. When committing the modules file, a pre-commit check should be done to
- verify the validity of the new modules file before allowing it to be
- committed.
-
- 155. The options for "cvs history" are mutually exclusive, even though
- useful queries can be done if they are not, as in specifying both a
- module and a tag. A workaround is to specify the module, then run the
- output through grep to only display lines that begin with T, which are
- tag lines.
-
- 156. Also, how hard would it be to allow continuation lines in the
- {commit,rcs,log}info files? It would probably be useful with all of
- the various flags that are now available, or if somebody has a lot of
- files to put into a module.
-
- 157. The "cvs release" command does not understand about module names with
- the same flexibility that the "checkout" and "rdiff" commands do.
- It should, though, since it's confusing right now.
-
- 158. If I do a recursive commit and find that the same RCS file is checked
- out (and modified!) in two different places within my checked-out
- files (but within the realm of a single "commit"), CVS will commit the
- first change, then overwrite that change with the second change. We
- should catch this (typically unusual) case and issue an appropriate
- diagnostic and die.
-
- 159. On "update", when a merge is done, CVS should remember that your file
- was merged into and should keep reminding you of this fact until you
- actually look at the file (change its access time). Once you do this,
- it should go back to being a normal, unmodified file. This way, after
- a big update, you can run update again to see which files just got
- merged and may need attention.
-
- 160. The checks that the commit command does should be extended to make
- sure that the revision that we will lock is not already locked by
- someone else. Maybe it should also lock the new revision if the old
- revision was already locked by the user as well, thus moving the lock
- forward after the commit.
-
- 161. The date parser included with CVS (lib/getdate.y) does not support
- such RCS-supported dates as "1992/03/07". It probably should.
-
- 163. The rtag/tag commands should have an option that removes the specified
- tag from any file that is in the attic. This allows one to re-use a
- tag (like "Mon", "Tue", ...) all the time and still have it tag the
- real main-line code.
-
- 164. The *info files should allow multiple ocurrences of $CVSROOT and/or
- other cvs variables. They probably should *not* expand environment
- variables, as their behavior probably should not depend on who is
- running CVS.
-
- 165. The "import" command will create RCS files automatically, but will
- screw-up when trying to create long file names on short file name
- file systems. Perhaps import should be a bit more cautious.
-
- 166. There really needs to be a "Getting Started" document which describes
- some of the new CVS philosophies. Folks coming straight from SCCS or
- RCS might be confused by "cvs import". Also need to explain:
- - How one might setup their $CVSROOT
- - What all the tags mean in an "import" command
- - Tags are important; revision numbers are not
-
- 167. "cvs log" doesn't understand about CVS magic branch numbers. As such,
- the command:
-
- cvs log -r1.63.2
- cvs log -rC2
-
- where "C2" is a magic branch that resolves to 1.63.2 do not print the
- same things. Sigh.
-
- 169. We are using CVS as the configuration control for a software reuse library.
- What we do is do system calls passing the needed arguments. In the next
- release, it would be nice to see an option to put cvs .o files into a
- archive library with an API. This enhancement would go nicely with the
- notion of being able to integrate tools into a large software engineering
- environment.
-
- 170. Is there an "info" file that can be invoked when a file is checked out, or
- updated ? What I want to do is to advise users, particularly novices, of
- the state of their working source whenever they check something out, as
- a sanity check.
-
- For example, I've written a perl script which tells you what branch you're
- on, if any. Hopefully this will help guard against mistaken checkins to
- the trunk, or to the wrong branch. I suppose I can do this in
- "commitinfo", but it'd be nice to advise people before they edit their
- files.
-
- It would also be nice if there was some sort of "verboseness" switch to
- the checkout and update commands that could turn this invocation of the
- script off, for mature users.
-
- 173. We have a tagged branch in CVS. How do we get the version of that branch
- (for an entire directory) that corresponds to the files on that branch on a
- certain day? I'd like to specify BOTH -r and -D to 'cvs checkout', but I
- can't. It looks like I can only specify the date for the main line (as
- opposed to any branches). True? Any workarounds to get what I need?
-
- 174. I would like to see "cvs release" modified so that it only removes files
- which are known to CVS - all the files in the repository, plus those which
- are listed in .cvsignore. This way, if you do leave something valuable in
- a source tree you can "cvs release -d" the tree and your non-CVS goodies
- are still there. If a user is going to leave non-CVS files in their source
- trees, they really should have to clean them up by hand.
-
- 175. And, in the feature request department, I'd dearly love a command-line
- interface to adding a new module to the CVSROOT/modules file.
-
- 176. If you use the -i flag in the modules file, you can control access
- to source code; this is a Good Thing under certain circumstances. I
- just had a nasty thought, and on experiment discovered that the
- filter specified by -i is _not_ run before a cvs admin command; as
- this allows a user to go behind cvs's back and delete information
- (cvs admin -o1.4 file) this seems like a serious problem.
-
- 177. We've got some external vendor source that sits under a source code
- hierarchy, and when we do a cvs update, it gets wiped out because
- its tag is different from the "main" distribution. I've tried to
- use "-I" to ignore the directory, as well as .cvsignore, but this
- doesn't work.
-
- 179. "cvs admin" does not log its actions with loginfo, nor does it check
- whether the action is allowed with commitinfo. It should.
-