| Version Management with CVS - the CVS manual by Per Cederqvist et al. Paperback (6"x9"), 216 pages, 8 figures ISBN 0954161718 RRP £19.95 ($29.95) |
A.17.2 update output
update and checkout keep you informed of
their progress by printing a line for each file, preceded
by one character indicating the status of the file:
U file- The file was brought up to date with respect to the repository. This is done for any file that exists in the repository but not in your working directory, and for files that you haven't changed but are not the most recent versions available in the repository.
P file- Like ‘U’, but the CVS server sends a patch instead of an entire file. This accomplishes the same thing as ‘U’ using less bandwidth.
A file-
The file has been added to your private copy of the
sources, and will be added to the source repository
when you run
commiton the file. This is a reminder to you that the file needs to be committed. R file-
The file has been removed from your private copy of the
sources, and will be removed from the source repository
when you run
commiton the file. This is a reminder to you that the file needs to be committed. M file-
The file is modified in your working directory.
‘M’ can indicate one of two states for a file
you're working on: either there were no modifications
to the same file in the repository, so that your file
remains as you last saw it; or there were modifications
in the repository as well as in your copy, but they
were merged successfully, without conflict, in your
working directory.
CVS will print some messages if it merges your work,
and a backup copy of your working file (as it looked
before you ran
update) will be made. The exact name of that file is printed whileupdateruns. C file- A conflict was detected while trying to merge your changes to file with changes from the source repository. file (the copy in your working directory) is now the result of attempting to merge the two revisions; an unmodified copy of your file is also in your working directory, with the name ‘.#file.revision’ where revision is the revision that your modified file started from. Resolve the conflict as described in section 10.3 Conflicts example. (Note that some systems automatically purge files that begin with ‘.#’ if they have not been accessed for a few days. If you intend to keep a copy of your original file, it is a very good idea to rename it.) Under VMS, the file name starts with ‘__’ rather than ‘.#’.
? file- file is in your working directory, but does not correspond to anything in the source repository, and is not in the list of files for CVS to ignore (see the description of the ‘-I’ option, and see section B.7 Ignoring files via cvsignore).
| ISBN 0954161718 | Version Management with CVS - the CVS manual | See the print edition |