Mercurial > emacs
view lib-src/rcs-checkin @ 4824:eaf67474339b
(Fminibuffer_complete_word): GCPRO1 `completion' during calls to
Ftry_completion.
(read_minibuf): Rewrite change of Sep 14. Save the return value on
the history list provided in the form that the value is returned, iff
the value is not equal to the front of the history list.
(Fread_no_blanks_input): Change DEFUN to allow 2nd arg to be optional.
The code was already written correctly.
author | Brian Fox <bfox@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Tue, 05 Oct 1993 01:46:45 +0000 |
parents | aa19e3673b9f |
children | 9e5812a795da |
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#!/bin/sh # This script accepts any number of file arguments and checks them into RCS. # # Arguments which are detectably either RCS masters (with names ending in ,v) # or Emacs version files (with names of the form foo.~<number>~) are ignored. # For each file foo, the script looks for Emacs version files related to it. # These files are checked in as deltas, oldest first, so that the contents of # the file itself becomes the latest revision in the master. # # The first line of each file is used as its description text. The file itself # is not deleted, as under VC with vc-keep-workfiles at its default of t, but # all the version files are. # # If an argument file is already version-controlled under RCS, any version # files are added to the list of deltas and deleted, and then the workfile # is checked in again as the latest version. This is probably not quite # what was wanted, and is the main reason VC doesn't simply call this to # do checkins. # # This script is intended to be used to convert files with an old-Emacs-style # version history for use with VC (the Emacs 19 version-control interface), # which likes to use RCS as its back end. It was written by Paul Eggert # and revised/documented for use with VC by Eric S. Raymond, Mar 19 1993. case $# in 0) echo "rcs-checkin: usage: rcs-checkin file ..." echo "rcs-checkin: function: checks file.~*~ and file into a new RCS file" echo "rcs-checkin: function: uses the file's first line for the description" esac # expr pattern to extract owner from ls -l output ls_owner_pattern='[^ ][^ ]* *[^ ][^ ]* *\([^ ][^ ]*\)' for file do # Make it easier to say `rcs-checkin *' # by ignoring file names that already contain `~', or end in `,v'. case $file in *~* | *,v) continue esac # Ignore non-files too. test -f "$file" || continue # Check that file is readable. <$file || exit # If the RCS file does not already exist, # initialize it with a description from $file's first line. rlog -R "$file" >/dev/null 2>&1 || rcs -i -q -t-"`sed 1q $file`" "$file" || exit # Get list of old files. oldfiles=` ls $file.~[0-9]*~ 2>/dev/null | sort -t~ -n +1 ` # Check that they are properly sorted by date. case $oldfiles in ?*) oldfiles_by_date=`ls -rt $file $oldfiles` test " $oldfiles $file" = " $oldfiles_by_date" || { echo >&2 "rcs-checkin: skipping $file, because its mod times are out of order. Sorted by mod time: $oldfiles_by_date Sorted by name: $oldfiles $file" continue } esac echo >&2 rcs-checkin: checking in: $oldfiles $file # Save $file as $file.~-~ temporarily. mv "$file" "$file.~-~" || exit # Rename each old file to $file, and check it in. for oldfile in $oldfiles do mv "$oldfile" "$file" || exit ls_l=`ls -l "$file"` || exit owner=-w`expr " $ls_l" : " $ls_owner_pattern"` || owner= echo "Formerly ${oldfile}" | ci -d -l -q $owner "$file" || exit done # Bring $file back from $file.~-~, and check it in. mv "$file.~-~" "$file" || exit ls_l=`ls -l "$file"` || exit owner=-w`expr " $ls_l" : " $ls_owner_pattern"` || owner= ci -d -q -u $owner -m"entered into RCS" "$file" || exit done