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Date:      Fri,  6 Oct 2006 13:22:44 +0900 (JST)
From:      KIMURA Yasuhiro <yasu@utahime.org>
To:        FreeBSD-gnats-submit@FreeBSD.org
Subject:   ports/104035: [PATCH] devel/cvs+ipv6 : Update patch-freebsdlocal
Message-ID:  <20061006042244.565E230@eastasia.home.utahime.org>
Resent-Message-ID: <200610060430.k964UHXV052150@freefall.freebsd.org>

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>Number:         104035
>Category:       ports
>Synopsis:       [PATCH] devel/cvs+ipv6 : Update patch-freebsdlocal
>Confidential:   no
>Severity:       serious
>Priority:       medium
>Responsible:    freebsd-ports-bugs
>State:          open
>Quarter:        
>Keywords:       
>Date-Required:
>Class:          sw-bug
>Submitter-Id:   current-users
>Arrival-Date:   Fri Oct 06 04:30:16 GMT 2006
>Closed-Date:
>Last-Modified:
>Originator:     KIMURA Yasuhiro
>Release:        FreeBSD 6.1-RELEASE-p10 i386
>Organization:
>Environment:
System: FreeBSD xxxx 6.1-RELEASE-p10 FreeBSD 6.1-RELEASE-p10 #0: Sun Oct 1 10:53:31 JST 2006 xxxx i386


	
>Description:
	- Update files/patch-freebsdlocal since current version does not
	  include the fix of FreeBSD-SA-05:20.cvsbug.
	- Use MASTER_SITE_GNU as MASTER_SITES

	
>How-To-Repeat:
	
>Fix:

	

--- patch-cvs+ipv6 begins here ---
Index: Makefile
===================================================================
RCS file: /usr1/freebsd/cvsroot/ports/devel/cvs+ipv6/Makefile,v
retrieving revision 1.20
diff -u -r1.20 Makefile
--- Makefile	4 May 2006 21:40:29 -0000	1.20
+++ Makefile	6 Oct 2006 04:09:32 -0000
@@ -7,9 +7,10 @@
 
 PORTNAME=	cvs
 PORTVERSION=	1.11.17
+PORTREVISION=	1
 CATEGORIES=	devel ipv6
-MASTER_SITES=	http://musthave.sunbase.org/progs/ccvs/ \
-		http://keyserver.kjsl.com/~jharris/distfiles/
+MASTER_SITES=	${MASTER_SITE_GNU}
+MASTER_SITE_SUBDIR=	non-gnu/${PORTNAME}/source/stable/${PORTVERSION}
 PKGNAMESUFFIX=	+ipv6
 
 PATCH_SITES=	ftp://ftp.kame.net/pub/kame/misc/
Index: files/patch-freebsdlocal
===================================================================
RCS file: /usr1/freebsd/cvsroot/ports/devel/cvs+ipv6/files/patch-freebsdlocal,v
retrieving revision 1.6
diff -u -r1.6 patch-freebsdlocal
--- files/patch-freebsdlocal	21 May 2004 13:45:07 -0000	1.6
+++ files/patch-freebsdlocal	6 Oct 2006 03:14:41 -0000
@@ -1,50 +1,56 @@
-Index: FREEBSD-upgrade
-diff -u /dev/null src/contrib/cvs/FREEBSD-upgrade:1.10
---- /dev/null	Fri Apr 16 06:29:02 2004
-+++ FREEBSD-upgrade	Mon Sep  2 14:58:30 2002
-@@ -0,0 +1,58 @@
-+FreeBSD: src/contrib/cvs/FREEBSD-upgrade,v 1.10 2002/09/02 05:58:30 peter Exp $
-+
-+MAINTAINER=	peter@FreeBSD.org
-+
-+This directory contains the virgin CVS source on the vendor branch.  Do
-+not under any circumstances commit new versions onto the mainline, new
-+versions or official-patch versions must be imported.
+Index: FREEBSD-Xlist
+diff -u /dev/null src/contrib/cvs/FREEBSD-Xlist:1.1
+--- /dev/null	Fri Oct  6 12:14:37 2006
++++ FREEBSD-Xlist	Thu Jun 10 05:14:53 2004
+@@ -0,0 +1,21 @@
++FreeBSD: src/contrib/cvs/FREEBSD-Xlist,v 1.1 2004/06/09 20:14:53 des Exp $
 +
-+To prepare a new cvs dist for import, extract it into a fresh directory;
-+
-+The following generated files were deleted:
-+doc/*.ps
-+doc/*.info*
-+doc/texinfo.tex
-+lib/getdate.c
-+cvsnt.*
-+cvs.spec*
-+build.com
 +*/*.com
++*/*.dep
 +*/*.dsp
++*/*.mak
 +*/.cvsignore
 +.cvsignore
 +README.VMS
-+
-+The following non-freebsd-specific directories were deleted:
-+os2
++build.com
++cvs.spec*
++cvsnt.*
++doc/*.info*
++doc/*.ps
++doc/texinfo.tex
 +emx
-+windows-NT
++lib/getdate.c
++os2
 +vms
++windows-NT
 +zlib
+Index: FREEBSD-upgrade
+diff -u /dev/null src/contrib/cvs/FREEBSD-upgrade:1.11
+--- /dev/null	Fri Oct  6 12:14:37 2006
++++ FREEBSD-upgrade	Thu Jun 10 05:51:26 2004
+@@ -0,0 +1,38 @@
++FreeBSD: src/contrib/cvs/FREEBSD-upgrade,v 1.11 2004/06/09 20:51:26 des Exp $
++
++MAINTAINER=	peter@FreeBSD.org
++
++This directory contains the virgin CVS source on the vendor branch.  Do
++not under any circumstances commit new versions onto the mainline, new
++versions or official-patch versions must be imported.
 +
-+It is imported from it's top level directory something like this:
++To prepare a new cvs dist for import, extract it into a fresh directory;
++then delete the files and directories listed in FREEBSD-Xlist.
++
++CVS is imported from its top level directory something like this:
 +  cvs -n import src/contrib/cvs CVSHOME v<version>
 +
-+The -n option is "dont do anything" so you can see what is about to happen
++The -n option is "don't do anything" so you can see what is about to happen
 +first.  Remove it when it looks ok.
 +
 +The initial import was done with:
 +  cvs import src/contrib/cvs CVSHOME v1_8_1
 +
 +When new versions are imported, cvs will give instructions on how to merge
-+the local and vendor changes when/if conflicts arise..
++the local and vendor changes when/if conflicts arise.
 +
 +The developers can be reached at:  <devel-cvs@cyclic.com>.  Local changes
 +that are suitable for public consumption should be submitted for inclusion
@@ -76,7 +82,7 @@
 Index: diff/diagmeet.note
 diff -u src/contrib/cvs/diff/diagmeet.note:1.1.1.1 src/contrib/cvs/diff/diagmeet.note:removed
 --- src/contrib/cvs/diff/diagmeet.note:1.1.1.1	Mon Jan 26 12:09:49 1998
-+++ diff/diagmeet.note	Fri Apr 16 06:29:02 2004
++++ diff/diagmeet.note	Fri Oct  6 12:14:38 2006
 @@ -1,71 +0,0 @@
 -Here is a comparison matrix which shows a case in which
 -it is possible for the forward and backward scan in `diag'
@@ -189,14 +195,2221 @@
  /* Unlike previous versions of this code, uint32 need not be exactly
     32 bits, merely 32 bits or more.  Choosing a data type which is 32
     bits instead of 64 is not important; speed is considerably more
-@@ -22,5 +35,7 @@
- void cvs_MD5Final PROTO ((unsigned char digest[16],
+@@ -23,4 +36,6 @@
  			  struct cvs_MD5Context *context));
  void cvs_MD5Transform PROTO ((cvs_uint32 buf[4], const unsigned char in[64]));
-+
-+#endif
  
++#endif
++
  #endif /* !MD5_H */
+Index: man/cvs.1
+diff -u /dev/null src/contrib/cvs/man/cvs.1:1.22
+--- /dev/null	Fri Oct  6 12:14:38 2006
++++ man/cvs.1	Thu Jul 28 22:53:45 2005
+@@ -0,0 +1,2203 @@
++.\" FreeBSD: src/contrib/cvs/man/cvs.1,v 1.22 2005/07/28 13:53:45 keramida Exp $
++.de Id
++.ds Rv \\$3
++.ds Dt \\$4
++..
++.TH CVS 1 "\*(Dt"
++.\" Full space in nroff; half space in troff
++.de SP
++.if n .sp
++.if t .sp .5
++..
++.\" quoted command
++.de `
++.RB ` "\|\\$1\|" '\\$2
++..
++.SH "NAME"
++cvs \- Concurrent Versions System
++.SH "SYNOPSIS"
++.TP
++\fBcvs\fP [ \fIcvs_options\fP ]
++.I cvs_command
++[
++.I command_options
++] [
++.I command_args
++]
++.SH "NOTE"
++This manpage is a summary of some of the features of
++.B cvs
++but it may no longer be kept up-to-date.  
++For more current and in-depth documentation, please consult the
++Cederqvist manual (via the
++.B info cvs
++command or otherwise,
++as described in the SEE ALSO section of this manpage).
++.SH "DESCRIPTION"
++.IX "revision control system" "\fLcvs\fR"
++.IX  cvs  ""  "\fLcvs\fP \- concurrent versions system"
++.IX  "concurrent versions system \- \fLcvs\fP"
++.IX  "release control system"  "cvs command"  ""  "\fLcvs\fP \- concurrent versions system"
++.IX  "source control system"  "cvs command"  ""  "\fLcvs\fP \- concurrent versions system"
++.IX  revisions  "cvs command"  ""  "\fLcvs\fP \- source control"
++CVS is a version control system, which allows you to keep old versions
++of files (usually source code), keep a log of who, when, and why
++changes occurred, etc., like RCS or SCCS.  Unlike the simpler systems,
++CVS does not just operate on one file at a time or one directory at a
++time, but operates on hierarchical collections of directories
++consisting of version controlled files.  CVS helps to manage releases
++and to control the concurrent editing of source files among multiple
++authors.  CVS allows triggers to enable/log/control various
++operations and works well over a wide area network.
++.SP
++.B cvs
++keeps a single copy of the master sources.
++This copy is called the source ``repository''; it contains all the
++information to permit extracting previous software releases at any
++time based on either a symbolic revision tag, or a date in the past.
++.SH "ESSENTIAL COMMANDS"
++.B cvs
++provides a rich variety of commands (\fIcvs_command\fP in the
++Synopsis), each of which often has a wealth of options, to satisfy the
++many needs of source management in distributed environments.  However,
++you don't have to master every detail to do useful work with
++.BR cvs ;
++in fact, five commands are sufficient to use (and contribute to)
++the source repository.
++.TP
++\fBcvs checkout\fP \fImodules\fP\|.\|.\|.
++A necessary preliminary for most \fBcvs\fP work: creates your private
++copy of the source for \fImodules\fP (named collections of source; you
++can also use a path relative to the source repository here).  You can
++work with this copy without interfering with others' work.  At least
++one subdirectory level is always created.
++.TP
++.B cvs update
++Execute this command from \fIwithin\fP your private source
++directory when you wish to update your copies of source files from
++changes that other developers have made to the source in the
++repository.
++.TP
++\fBcvs add\fP \fIfile\fP\|.\|.\|.
++Use this command to enroll new files in \fBcvs\fP records of your
++working directory.  The files will be added to the repository the next
++time you run
++.` "cvs commit".
++Note:
++You should use the
++.` "cvs import"
++command to bootstrap new sources into the source repository.
++.` "cvs add"
++is only used for new files to an already checked-out module.
++.TP
++\fBcvs remove\fP \fIfile\fP\|.\|.\|.
++Use this command (after erasing any files listed) to declare that you
++wish to eliminate files from the repository.  The removal does not
++affect others until you run
++.` "cvs commit".
++.TP
++\fBcvs commit\fP \fIfile\fP\|.\|.\|.
++Use this command when you wish to ``publish'' your changes to other
++developers, by incorporating them in the source repository.
++.SH "OPTIONS"
++The
++.B cvs
++command line can include
++.IR cvs_options ,
++which apply to the overall
++.B cvs
++program; a
++.IR cvs_command ,
++which specifies a particular action on the source repository; and
++.I command_options
++and
++.I command_arguments
++to fully specify what the
++.I cvs_command
++will do.
++.SP
++.I Warning:
++you must be careful of precisely where you place options relative to the
++.IR cvs_command .
++The same option can mean different things depending on whether it
++is in the
++.I cvs_options
++position (to the left of a
++.B cvs
++command) or in the
++.I command_options
++position (to the right of a
++.B cvs
++command).
++.SP
++There are only two situations where you may omit
++.IR cvs_command :
++.` "cvs \-H"
++or
++.` "cvs --help"
++elicits a list of available commands, and
++.` "cvs \-v"
++or
++.` "cvs --version"
++displays version information on \fBcvs\fP itself.
++.SP
++.SH "CVS OPTIONS"
++As of release 1.6,
++.B cvs
++supports
++.SM GNU
++style long options as well as short options.  Only
++a few long options are currently supported, these are listed in
++brackets after the short options whose functions they duplicate.
++.SP
++Use these options to control the overall
++.B cvs
++program:
++.TP
++.B \-H [ --help ]
++Display usage information about the specified
++.I cvs_command
++(but do not actually execute the command).  If you don't specify a
++command name,
++.` "cvs \-H"
++displays a summary of all the commands available.
++.TP
++.B \-Q
++Causes the command to be
++.I really
++quiet; the command will generate output only for serious problems.
++.TP
++.B \-q
++Causes the command to be somewhat quiet; informational messages, such
++as reports of recursion through subdirectories, are suppressed.
++.TP
++\fB\-b\fP \fIbindir\fP
++Use
++.I bindir
++as the directory where
++.SM RCS
++programs are located (CVS 1.9 and older).
++Overrides the setting of the
++.SM RCSBIN
++environment variable.
++This value should be specified as an absolute pathname.
++.TP
++\fB\-d\fP \fICVS_root_directory\fP
++Use
++.I CVS_root_directory
++as the root directory pathname of the master
++source repository.
++Overrides the setting of the
++.SM CVSROOT
++environment variable.
++This value should be specified as an absolute pathname.
++.TP
++\fB\-e\fP \fIeditor\fP
++Use
++.I editor
++to enter revision log information.
++Overrides the setting of the
++.SM CVSEDITOR\c
++,
++.SM VISUAL\c
++, and
++.SM EDITOR
++environment variables.
++.TP
++.B \-f
++Do not read the
++.B cvs
++startup file (\fI~/.cvsrc\fP).
++.TP
++.B \-n
++Do not change any files.  Attempt to execute the
++.IR cvs_command ,
++but only to issue reports; do not remove, update, or merge any
++existing files, or create any new files.
++.TP
++.B \-t
++Trace program execution; display messages showing the steps of
++.B cvs
++activity.  Particularly useful with
++.B \-n
++to explore the potential impact of an unfamiliar command.
++.TP
++.B \-r
++Makes new working files read-only.
++Same effect as if the
++.SM CVSREAD
++environment variable is set.
++.TP
++.B \-R
++Turns on read-only repository mode.  This allows one to check out from a
++read-only repository, such as within an anoncvs server, or from a CDROM
++repository.
++Same effect as if the
++.SM CVSREADONLYFS
++environment variable is set.  Using
++.B \-R
++can also considerably speed up checkout's over NFS.
++.TP
++.B \-v [ --version ]
++Displays version and copyright information for
++.BR cvs .
++.TP
++.B \-w
++Makes new working files read-write (default).
++Overrides the setting of the
++.SM CVSREAD
++environment variable.
++.TP
++.B \-g
++Forces group-write perms on working files.  This option is typically
++used when you have multiple users sharing a single checked out source
++tree, allowing them to operate their shells with a less dangerous umask.
++To use this feature, create a directory to hold the checked-out source
++tree, set it to a private group, and set up the directory such that
++files created under it inherit the group id of the directory.  This occurs 
++automatically with FreeBSD.  With SysV you must typically set the SGID bit
++on the directory.  The users who are to share the checked out tree must
++be placed in that group.  Note that the sharing of a single checked-out
++source tree is very different from giving several users access to a common
++CVS repository.  Access to a common CVS repository already maintains shared
++group-write perms and does not require this option.
++
++To use the option transparently, simply place the line 'cvs -g' in your
++~/.cvsrc file.  Doing this is not recommended unless you firewall all your
++source checkouts within a private group or within a private mode 0700
++directory.
++.TP
++.B \-x
++Encrypt all communication between the client and the server.  As of
++this writing, this is only implemented when using a Kerberos
++connection.
++.TP
++\fB\-z\fP \fIcompression\-level\fP
++When transferring files across the network use
++.B gzip
++with compression level \fIcompression\-level\fP to compress and
++de-compress data as it is transferred.  Requires the presence of
++the
++.SM GNU
++.B gzip
++program in the current search path at both ends of the link.
++.SH "USAGE"
++Except when requesting general help with
++.` "cvs \-H",
++you must specify a
++.I cvs_command
++to
++.B cvs
++to select a specific release control function to perform.
++Each
++.B cvs
++command accepts its own collection of options and arguments.
++However, many options are available across several commands.
++You can display a usage summary for each command by specifying the
++.B \-H
++option with the command.
++.SH "CVS STARTUP FILE"
++Normally, when CVS starts up, it reads the
++.I .cvsrc
++file from the home directory of the user reading it.  This startup
++procedure can be turned off with the
++.B \-f
++flag.
++.SP
++The
++.I .cvsrc
++file lists CVS commands with a list of arguments, one command per
++line.  For example, the following line in \fI.cvsrc\fP:
++.SP
++diff \-c
++.SP
++will mean that the
++.` "cvs diff"
++command will always be passed the \-c option in addition to any
++other options that are specified in the command line (in this case
++it will have the effect of producing context sensitive diffs for
++all executions of
++.` "cvs diff"
++).
++.SP
++Global options are specified using the \fBcvs\fP keyword.  For example,
++the following:
++.SP
++cvs \-q
++.SP
++will mean that all
++.` "cvs"
++commands will behave as thought he \-q global option had been supplied.
++.SH "CVS COMMAND SUMMARY"
++Here are brief descriptions of all the
++.B cvs
++commands:
++.TP
++.B add
++Add a new file or directory to the repository, pending a
++.` "cvs commit"
++on the same file.
++Can only be done from within sources created by a previous
++.` "cvs checkout"
++invocation.
++Use
++.` "cvs import"
++to place whole new hierarchies of sources under
++.B cvs
++control.
++(Does not directly affect repository; changes
++working directory.)
++.TP
++.B admin
++Execute
++control functions on the source repository.  (Changes
++repository directly; uses working directory without changing it.)
++.TP
++.B checkout
++Make a working directory of source files for editing.  (Creates or changes
++working directory.)
++.TP
++.B commit
++Apply to the source repository changes, additions, and deletions from your
++working directory.  (Changes repository.)
++.TP
++.B diff
++Show differences between files in working directory and source
++repository, or between two revisions in source repository.
++(Does not change either repository or working directory.)
++.TP
++.B export
++Prepare copies of a set of source files for shipment off site.
++Differs from
++.` "cvs checkout"
++in that no
++.B cvs
++administrative directories are created (and therefore
++.` "cvs commit"
++cannot be executed from a directory prepared with
++.` "cvs export"),
++and a symbolic tag must be specified.
++(Does not change repository; creates directory similar to working
++directories).
++.TP
++.B history
++Show reports on
++.B cvs
++commands that you or others have executed on a particular file or
++directory in the source repository.  (Does not change repository or
++working directory.)  History logs are kept only if enabled by creation
++of the
++.` "$CVSROOT/CVSROOT/history"
++file; see
++.BR cvs ( 5 ).
++.TP
++.B import
++Incorporate a set of updates from off-site into the source repository,
++as a ``vendor branch''.  (Changes repository.)
++.TP
++.B init
++Initialize a repository by adding the CVSROOT subdirectory and some default
++control files. You must use this command or initialize the repository in
++some other way before you can use it.
++.TP
++.B log
++Display
++log information.
++(Does not change repository or working directory.)
++.TP
++.B rdiff
++Prepare a collection of diffs as a patch file between two releases in
++the repository.  (Does not change repository or working directory.)
++.TP
++.B release
++Cancel a
++.` "cvs checkout",
++abandoning any changes.
++(Can delete working directory; no effect on repository.)
++.TP
++.B remove
++Remove files from the source repository, pending a
++.` "cvs commit"
++on the same files.  (Does not directly affect repository;
++changes working directory.)
++.TP
++.B rtag
++Explicitly specify a symbolic tag for particular revisions of files in the
++source repository.  See also
++.` "cvs tag".
++(Changes repository directly; does not require or affect
++working directory.)
++.TP
++.B status
++Show current status of files: latest version, version in working
++directory, whether working version has been edited and, optionally,
++symbolic tags in the
++.SM RCS
++file.  (Does not change
++repository or working directory.)
++.TP
++.B tag
++Specify a symbolic tag for files in the repository.  By default, tags
++the revisions
++that were last synchronized with your working directory.   (Changes
++repository directly; uses working directory without changing it.)
++.TP
++.B update
++Bring your working directory up to date with changes from the
++repository.  Merges are performed automatically when possible; a
++warning is issued if manual resolution is required for conflicting
++changes.  (Changes working directory; does not change repository.)
++.SH "COMMON COMMAND OPTIONS"
++This section describes the
++.I command_options
++that are available across several
++.B cvs
++commands.  Not all commands support all of these options; each option
++is only supported for commands where it makes sense.  However, when
++a command has one of these options you can count on the same meaning
++for the option as in other commands.  (Other command
++options, which are listed with the individual commands, may have
++different meanings from one
++.B cvs
++command to another.)
++.I "Warning:"
++the
++.B history
++command is an exception;
++it supports many options that conflict
++even with these standard options.
++.TP
++\fB\-D\fP \fIdate_spec\fP
++Use the most recent revision no later than \fIdate_spec\fP (a single
++argument, date description specifying a date in the
++past).  A wide variety of date formats are supported, in particular
++ISO ("1972-09-24 20:05") or Internet ("24 Sep 1972 20:05").
++The \fIdate_spec\fP is interpreted as being in the local timezone, unless a
++specific timezone is specified.
++The specification is ``sticky'' when you use it to make a
++private copy of a source file; that is, when you get a working file
++using \fB\-D\fP, \fBcvs\fP records the date you
++specified, so that further updates in the same directory will use the
++same date (unless you explicitly override it; see the description of
++the \fBupdate\fP command).
++.B \-D
++is available with the
++.BR checkout ", " diff ", " history ", " export ", "
++.BR rdiff ", " rtag ", and "
++.B update
++commands.
++Examples of valid date specifications include:
++.in +1i
++.ft B
++.nf
++1 month ago
++2 hours ago
++400000 seconds ago
++last year
++last Monday
++yesterday
++a fortnight ago
++3/31/92 10:00:07 PST
++January 23, 1987 10:05pm
++22:00 GMT
++.fi
++.ft P
++.in -1i
++.TP
++.B \-f
++When you specify a particular date or tag to \fBcvs\fP commands, they
++normally ignore files that do not contain the tag (or did not exist on
++the date) that you specified.  Use the \fB\-f\fP option if you want
++files retrieved even when there is no match for the tag or date.  (The
++most recent version is used in this situation.)
++.B \-f
++is available with these commands:
++.BR checkout ", " export ", "
++.BR rdiff ", " rtag ", and " update .
++.TP
++\fB\-k\fP \fIkflag\fP
++Alter the default
++processing of keywords.
++The \fB\-k\fP option is available with the
++.BR add ", " checkout ", " diff ", " export ", "
++.BR rdiff ", and " update
++commands.  Your \fIkflag\fP specification is ``sticky'' when you use
++it to create a private copy of a source file; that is, when you use
++this option with the \fBcheckout\fP or \fBupdate\fP commands,
++\fBcvs\fP associates your selected \fIkflag\fP with the file, and
++continues to use it with future \fBupdate\fP commands on the same file
++until you specify otherwise.
++.SP
++Some of the more useful \fIkflag\fPs are \-ko and \-kb (for binary files),
++and \-kv which is useful for an
++.B export
++where you wish to retain keyword information after an
++.B import
++at some other site.
++.TP
++.B \-l
++Local; run only in current working directory, rather than recurring through
++subdirectories.   Available with the following commands:
++.BR checkout ", " commit ", " diff ", "
++.BR export ", " remove ", " rdiff ", " rtag ", "
++.BR status ", " tag ", and " update .
++.TP
++.B \-n
++Do
++.I not
++run any
++.BR checkout / commit / tag / update
++program.  (A program can be specified to run on each of these
++activities, in the modules database; this option bypasses it.)
++Available with the
++.BR checkout ", " commit ", " export ", and "
++.B rtag
++commands.
++.I Warning:
++this is not the same
++as the overall
++.` "cvs \-n"
++option, which you can specify to the
++.I left
++of a
++.B cvs
++command!
++.TP
++.B \-P
++Prune (remove) directories that are empty after being updated, on
++.BR checkout ", or " update .
++Normally, an empty directory (one that is void of revision-controlled
++files) is left alone.
++Specifying
++.B \-P
++will cause these directories to be silently removed from your checked-out
++sources.
++This does not remove the directory from the repository, only from your
++checked out copy.
++Note that this option is implied by the
++.B \-r
++or
++.B \-D
++options of
++.BR checkout " and " export .
++.TP
++.B \-T
++Create/Update CVS/Template by copying it from the (local) repository.
++This option is useful for developers maintaining a local cvs repository
++but committing to a remote repository.  By maintaining CVS/Template the
++remote commits will still be able to bring up the proper template in the
++commit editor session.
++Available with the
++.BR checkout " and " update
++commands.
++.TP
++.B \-p
++Pipe the files retrieved from the repository to standard output,
++rather than writing them in the current directory.  Available with the
++.BR checkout " and " update
++commands.
++.TP
++\fB\-r\fP \fItag\fP
++Use the revision specified by the
++.I tag
++argument instead of the default ``head'' revision.  As well as
++arbitrary tags defined with the \fBtag\fP or \fBrtag\fP command, two
++special tags are always available:
++.` "HEAD"
++refers to the most
++recent version available in the repository, and
++.` "BASE"
++refers to the revision you last checked out into the current working
++directory.
++.SP
++The \fItag\fP specification is ``sticky'' when you use
++this option with
++.` "cvs checkout"
++or
++.` "cvs update"
++to
++make your own copy of a file: \fBcvs\fP remembers the \fItag\fP and
++continues to use it on future \fBupdate\fP commands, until you specify
++otherwise.
++.I tag
++can be either a symbolic or numeric tag.
++Specifying the
++.B \-q
++global option along with the
++.B \-r
++command option is often useful, to suppress the warning messages when the
++.SM RCS
++file does not contain the specified tag.
++.B \-r
++is available with the
++.BR checkout ", " commit ", " diff ", "
++.BR history ", " export ", "
++.BR rdiff ", " rtag ", and " update
++commands.
++.I Warning:
++this is not the same
++as the overall
++.` "cvs \-r"
++option, which you can specify to the
++.I left
++of a
++.B cvs
++command!
++.SH "CVS COMMANDS"
++Here (finally) are details on all the
++.B cvs
++commands and the options each accepts.  The summary lines at the top
++of each command's description highlight three kinds of things:
++.TP 1i
++\ \ \ \ Command Options and Arguments
++Special options are described in detail below; common command options
++may appear only in the summary line.
++.TP 1i
++\ \ \ \ Working Directory, or Repository?
++Some \fBcvs\fP commands require a working directory to operate; some
++require a repository.  Also, some commands \fIchange\fP the
++repository, some change the working directory, and some change
++nothing.
++.TP 1i
++\ \ \ \ Synonyms
++Many commands have synonyms, which you may find easier to
++remember (or type) than the principal name.
++.PP
++.TP
++\fBadd\fP [\fB\-k\fP \fIkflag\fP] [\fB\-m '\fP\fImessage\fP\fB'\fP] \fIfiles.\|.\|.\fP
++.I Requires:
++repository, working directory.
++.br
++.I Changes:
++working directory.
++.br
++.I Synonym:
++.B new
++.br
++Use the
++.B add
++command to create a new file or directory in the
++source repository.
++The files or directories specified with
++.B add
++must already exist in the current directory (which must have been created
++with the
++.B checkout
++command).
++To add a whole new directory hierarchy to the source repository
++(for example, files received from a third-party vendor), use the
++.` "cvs import"
++command instead.
++.SP
++If the argument to
++.` "cvs add"
++refers to an immediate sub-directory, the directory is
++created at the correct place in the
++source repository, and the necessary
++.B cvs
++administration files are created in your working directory.
++If the directory already exists in the source repository,
++.` "cvs add"
++still creates the administration files in your version of the directory.
++This allows you to use
++.` "cvs add"
++to add a particular directory to your private sources even if
++someone else created that directory after your
++.B checkout
++of the sources.  You can do the following:
++.SP
++.in +1i
++.ft B
++.nf
++example% mkdir new_directory
++example% cvs add new_directory
++example% cvs update new_directory
++.fi
++.ft P
++.in -1i
++.SP
++An alternate approach using
++.` "cvs update"
++might be:
++.SP
++.in +1i
++.ft B
++.nf
++example% cvs update -d new_directory
++.fi
++.ft P
++.in -1i
++.SP
++(To add \fIany available\fP new directories to your working directory, it's
++probably simpler to use
++.` "cvs checkout"
++or
++.` "cvs update -d".)
++.SP
++The added files are not placed in the
++source repository until you use
++.` "cvs commit"
++to make the change permanent.
++Doing a
++.` "cvs add"
++on a file that was removed with the
++.` "cvs remove"
++command will resurrect the file, if no
++.` "cvs commit"
++command intervened.
++.SP
++You will have the opportunity to specify a logging message, as usual,
++when you use
++.` "cvs commit"
++to make the new file permanent.  If you'd like to have another
++logging message associated with just
++.I creation
++of the file (for example, to describe the file's purpose), you can
++specify it with the
++.` "\-m \fImessage\fP"
++option to the
++.B add
++command.
++.SP
++The
++.` "-k kflag"
++option specifies the default way that this
++file will be checked out.
++The
++.` "kflag"
++argument is stored in the
++.SM RCS
++file and can be changed with
++.` "cvs admin".
++Specifying
++.` "-ko"
++is useful for checking in binaries that
++shouldn't have
++keywords expanded.
++.TP
++\fBadmin\fP [\fIrcs-options\fP] \fIfiles.\|.\|.\fP
++.I Requires:
++repository, working directory.
++.br
++.I Changes:
++repository.
++.br
++.I Synonym:
++.B rcs
++.br
++This is the
++.B cvs
++interface to assorted administrative
++facilities, similar to
++.BR rcs ( 1 ).
++This command works recursively, so extreme care should be
++used.
++.TP
++\fBcheckout\fP [\fBoptions\fP] \fImodules\fP.\|.\|.
++.I Requires:
++repository.
++.br
++.I Changes:
++working directory.
++.br
++.I Synonyms:
++.BR co ", " get
++.br
++Make a working directory containing copies of the source files specified by
++.IR modules .
++You must execute
++.` "cvs checkout"
++before using most of the other
++.B cvs
++commands, since most of them operate on your working directory.
++.SP
++\fImodules\fP are either symbolic names (themselves defined as the
++module
++.` "modules"
++in the source repository; see
++.BR cvs ( 5 ))
++for some collection of source directories and files, or paths to
++directories or files in the repository.
++.SP
++Depending on the
++.I modules
++you specify,
++.B checkout
++may recursively create directories and populate them with the appropriate
++source files.
++You can then edit these source files at any time (regardless of whether
++other software developers are editing their own copies of the sources);
++update them to include new changes applied by others to the source
++repository; or commit your work as a permanent change to the
++repository.
++.SP
++Note that
++.B checkout
++is used to create directories.
++The top-level directory created is always added to the directory
++where
++.B checkout
++is invoked, and usually has the same name as the specified
++.IR module .
++In the case of a
++.I module
++alias, the created sub-directory may have a different name, but you can be
++sure that it will be a sub-directory, and that
++.B checkout
++will show the relative path leading to each file as it is extracted into
++your private work area (unless you specify the
++.B \-Q
++global option).
++.SP
++Running
++.` "cvs checkout"
++on a directory that was already built by a prior
++.B checkout
++is also permitted, and
++has the same effect as specifying the
++.B \-d
++option to the
++.B update
++command described below.
++.SP
++The
++.I options
++permitted with
++.` "cvs checkout"
++include the standard command options
++.BR \-P ", " \-f ", "
++.BI \-k " kflag"
++\&,
++.BR \-l ", " \-n ", " \-p ", "
++.BR \-r
++.IR tag ", and"
++.BI \-D " date"\c
++\&.
++.SP
++In addition to those, you can use these special command options
++with
++.BR checkout :
++.SP
++Use the
++.B \-A
++option to reset any sticky tags, dates, or
++.B \-k
++options.  (If you get a working file using one of the
++\fB\-r\fP, \fB\-D\fP, or \fB\-k\fP options, \fBcvs\fP remembers the
++corresponding tag, date, or \fIkflag\fP and continues using it on
++future updates; use the \fB\-A\fP option to make \fBcvs\fP forget these
++specifications, and retrieve the ``head'' version of the file).
++.SP
++The
++.BI \-j " branch"
++option merges the changes made between the
++resulting revision and the revision that it is based on (e.g., if
++the tag refers to a branch,
++.B cvs
++will merge all changes made in that branch into your working file).
++.SP
++With two \fB-j\fP options,
++.B cvs
++will merge in the changes between the two respective revisions.
++This can be used to ``remove'' a certain delta from your working file.
++.SP
++In addition, each \fB-j\fP option can contain on optional date
++specification which, when used with branches, can limit the chosen
++revision to one within a specific date.
++An optional date is specified by adding a colon (:) to the tag.
++An example might be what
++.` "cvs import"
++tells you to do when you have
++just imported sources that have conflicts with local changes:
++.SP
++.in +1i
++.ft B
++.nf
++example% cvs checkout -jTAG:yesterday -jTAG module
++.fi
++.ft P
++.in -1i
++.SP
++Use the
++.B \-N
++option with
++.` "\-d \fIdir\fP"
++to avoid shortening module paths in your working directory.   (Normally, \fBcvs\fP shortens paths as much as possible when you specify an explicit target directory.)
++.SP
++Use the
++.B \-c
++option to copy the module file, sorted, to the standard output,
++instead of creating or modifying any files or directories in your
++working directory.
++.SP
++Use the
++.BI \-d " dir"
++option to create a directory called
++.I dir
++for the working files, instead of using the module name.  Unless you
++also use \fB\-N\fP, the paths created under \fIdir\fP will be as short
++as possible.
++.SP
++Use the
++.B \-s
++option to display per-module status information stored with
++the
++.B \-s
++option within the modules file. 
++.TP
++\fBcommit\fP [\fB\-lnR\fP] [\fB\-m\fP '\fIlog_message\fP' | \fB\-F\fP \fIfile\fP] [\fB\-r\fP \fIrevision\fP] [\fIfiles.\|.\|.\fP]
++.I Requires:
++working directory, repository.
++.br
++.I Changes:
++repository.
++.br
++.I Synonym:
++.B ci
++.br
++Use
++.` "cvs commit"
++when you want to incorporate changes from your working source
++files into the general source repository.
++.SP
++If you don't specify particular \fIfiles\fP to commit, all
++of the files in your working current directory are examined.
++.B commit
++is careful to change in the repository only those files that you have
++really changed.  By default (or if you explicitly specify the
++.B \-R
++option), files
++in subdirectories are also examined and committed if they have
++changed; you can use the
++.B \-l
++option to limit
++.B commit
++to the current directory only.
++Sometimes you may want to force a file to be committed even though it
++is unchanged; this is achieved with the
++.B \-f
++flag, which also has the effect of disabling recursion (you can turn
++it back on with
++.B \-R
++of course).
++.SP
++.B commit
++verifies that the selected files are up to date with the current revisions
++in the source repository; it will notify you, and exit without
++committing, if any of the specified files must be made current first
++with
++.` "cvs update".
++.B commit
++does not call the
++.B update
++command for you, but rather leaves that for you to do when
++the time is right.
++.SP
++When all is well, an editor is invoked to allow you to enter a log
++message that will be written to one or more logging programs and placed in the
++source repository file.
++You can instead specify the log message on the command line with the
++.B \-m
++option, thus suppressing the editor invocation, or use the
++.B \-F
++option to specify that the argument \fIfile\fP contains the log message.
++.SP
++The
++.B \-r
++option can be used to commit to a particular symbolic or numeric revision.
++For example, to bring all your files up to the
++revision ``3.0'' (including those that haven't changed), you might do:
++.SP
++.in +1i
++.ft B
++.nf
++example% cvs commit -r3.0
++.fi
++.ft P
++.in -1i
++.SP
++.B cvs
++will only allow you to commit to a revision that is on the main trunk (a
++revision with a single dot).
++However, you can also commit to a branch revision (one that has an even
++number of dots) with the
++.B \-r
++option.
++To create a branch revision, one typically use the
++.B \-b
++option of the
++.BR rtag " or " tag
++commands.
++Then, either
++.BR checkout " or " update
++can be used to base your sources on the newly created branch.
++From that point on, all
++.B commit
++changes made within these working sources will be automatically added
++to a branch revision, thereby not perturbing main-line development in any
++way.
++For example, if you had to create a patch to the 1.2 version of the
++product, even though the 2.0 version is already under development, you
++might do:
++.SP
++.in +1i
++.ft B
++.nf
++example% cvs rtag -b -rFCS1_2 FCS1_2_Patch product_module
++example% cvs checkout -rFCS1_2_Patch product_module
++example% cd product_module
++[[ hack away ]]
++example% cvs commit
++.fi
++.ft P
++.in -1i
++.SP
++Say you have been working on some extremely experimental software, based on
++whatever revision you happened to checkout last week.
++If others in your group would like to work on this software with you, but
++without disturbing main-line development, you could commit your change to a
++new branch.
++Others can then checkout your experimental stuff and utilize the full
++benefit of
++.B cvs
++conflict resolution.
++The scenario might look like:
++.SP
++.in +1i
++.ft B
++.nf
++example% cvs tag -b EXPR1
++example% cvs update -rEXPR1
++[[ hack away ]]
++example% cvs commit
++.fi
++.ft P
++.in -1i
++.SP
++Others would simply do
++.` "cvs checkout -rEXPR1 whatever_module"
++to work with you on the experimental change.
++.TP
++\fBdiff\fP [\fB\-kl\fP] [\fIformat_options\fP] [[\fB\-r\fP \fIrev1\fP | \fB\-D\fP \fIdate1\fP | \fB\-j\fP \fIrev1:date1\fP] [\fB\-r\fP \fIrev2\fP | \fB\-D\fP \fIdate2\fP | \fB\-j\fP \fIrev2:date2\fP]] [\fIfiles.\|.\|.\fP]
++.I Requires:
++working directory, repository.
++.br
++.I Changes:
++nothing.
++.br
++You can compare your working files with revisions in the source
++repository, with the
++.` "cvs diff"
++command.  If you don't specify a particular revision, your files
++are compared with the revisions they were based on.  You can also use
++the standard
++.B cvs
++command option
++.B \-r
++to specify a particular revision to compare your files with.  Finally,
++if you use
++.B \-r
++twice, you can see differences between two revisions in the
++repository.
++You can also specify
++.B \-D
++options to diff against a revision (on the head branch) in the past, and
++you can also specify
++.B \-j
++options to diff against a revision relative to a branch tag in the past.
++The
++.B \-r
++and
++.B \-D
++and
++.B \-j
++options can be mixed together with at most two options ever specified.
++.SP
++See
++.` "cvs --help diff"
++for a list of supported
++.IR format_options .
++.SP
++If you don't specify any files,
++.B diff
++will display differences for all those files in the current directory
++(and its subdirectories, unless you use the standard option
++.BR \-l )
++that
++differ from the corresponding revision in the source repository
++(i.e. files that
++.I you
++have changed), or that differ from the revision specified.
++.TP
++\fBexport\fP [\-\fBf\|lNnQq\fP] \fB\-r\fP \fIrev\fP\||\|\fB\-D\fP \fIdate\fP [\fB\-d\fP \fIdir\fP] [\fB\-k\fP \fIkflag\fP] \fImodule\fP.\|.\|.
++.I Requires:
++repository.
++.br
++.I Changes:
++current directory.
++.br
++This command is a variant of
++.` "cvs checkout";
++use it when you want a copy of the source for \fImodule\fP
++without the \fBcvs\fP administrative directories.  For example, you
++might use
++.` "cvs export"
++to prepare source for shipment
++off-site.  This command \fIrequires\fP that you specify a date or tag
++(with \fB\-D\fP or \fB\-r\fP), so that you can count on reproducing
++the source you ship to others.
++.SP
++The only non-standard options are
++.` "\-d \fIdir\fP"
++(write the
++source into directory \fIdir\fP) and
++.` "\-N"
++(don't shorten
++module paths).
++These have the same meanings as the same options in
++.` "cvs checkout".
++.SP
++The
++.B \-kv
++option is useful when
++.B export
++is used.
++This causes any
++keywords to be expanded such that an
++.B import
++done at some other site will not lose the keyword revision information.
++Other \fIkflag\fPs may be used with
++.` "cvs export"
++and are described in
++.BR co ( 1 ).
++.TP
++\fBhistory\fP [\fB\-\fP\fIreport\fP] [\fB\-\fP\fIflags\fP] [\fB\-\fP\fIoptions args\fP] [\fIfiles\fP.\|.\|.]
++.I Requires:
++the file
++.` "$CVSROOT/CVSROOT/history"
++.br
++.I Changes:
++nothing.
++.br
++\fBcvs\fP keeps a history file that tracks each use of the
++\fBcheckout\fP, \fBcommit\fP, \fBrtag\fP, \fBupdate\fP, and \fBrelease\fP
++commands.  You can use
++.` "cvs history"
++to display this
++information in various formats.
++.SP
++.I Warning:
++.` "cvs history"
++uses
++.` "\-f",
++.` "\-l",
++.` "\-n",
++and
++.` "\-p"
++in ways that conflict with the
++descriptions in
++.SM
++COMMON COMMAND OPTIONS\c
++\&.
++.SP
++Several options (shown above as \fB\-\fP\fIreport\fP) control what
++kind of report is generated:
++.TP 1i
++.B \ \ \ \ \ \ \-c
++Report on each time \fBcommit\fP was used (i.e., each time the
++repository was modified).
++.TP 1i
++\fB\ \ \ \ \ \ \-m\fP \fImodule\fP
++Report on a particular \fImodule\fP.  (You can meaningfully use
++\fB\-m\fP more than once on the command line.)
++.TP 1i
++.B \ \ \ \ \ \ \-o
++Report on checked-out modules.
++.TP 1i
++.B \ \ \ \ \ \ \-T
++Report on all tags.
++.TP 1i
++\fB\ \ \ \ \ \ \-x\fP \fItype\fP
++Extract a particular set of record types \fIX\fP from the \fBcvs\fP
++history.  The types are indicated by single letters, which you may
++specify in combination.
++Certain commands have a single record type: \fBcheckout\fP (type `O'),
++\fBrelease\fP (type `F'), and \fBrtag\fP (type `T').  One of four
++record types may result from an \fBupdate\fP: `W', when the working copy
++of a file is deleted during update (because it was gone from the
++repository); `U', when a working file was copied from the
++repository; `G', when a merge was necessary and it succeeded; and 'C',
++when a merge was necessary but collisions were detected (requiring
++manual merging).  Finally, one of three record types results from
++\fBcommit\fP: `M', when a file was modified; `A', when a file is first
++added; and `R', when a file is removed.
++.TP 1i
++.B \ \ \ \ \ \ \-e
++Everything (all record types); equivalent to specifying
++.` "\-xMACFROGWUT".
++.TP 1i
++\fB\ \ \ \ \ \ \-z\fP \fIzone\fP
++Use time zone
++.I zone
++when outputting history records.
++The zone name
++.B LT
++stands for local time;
++numeric offsets stand for hours and minutes ahead of UTC.
++For example,
++.B +0530
++stands for 5 hours and 30 minutes ahead of (i.e. east of) UTC.
++.PP
++.RS .5i
++The options shown as \fB\-\fP\fIflags\fP constrain the report without
++requiring option arguments:
++.RE
++.TP 1i
++.B \ \ \ \ \ \ \-a
++Show data for all users (the default is to show data only for the user
++executing
++.` "cvs history").
++.TP 1i
++.B \ \ \ \ \ \ \-l
++Show last modification only.
++.TP 1i
++.B \ \ \ \ \ \ \-w
++Show only the records for modifications done from the same working
++directory where
++.` "cvs history"
++is executing.
++.PP
++.RS .5i
++The options shown as \fB\-\fP\fIoptions args\fP constrain the report
++based on an argument:
++.RE
++.TP 1i
++\fB\ \ \ \ \ \ \-b\fP \fIstr\fP
++Show data back to a record containing the string \fIstr\fP in either
++the module name, the file name, or the repository path.
++.TP 1i
++\fB\ \ \ \ \ \ \-D\fP \fIdate\fP
++Show data since \fIdate\fP.
++.TP 1i
++\fB\ \ \ \ \ \ \-p\fP \fIrepository\fP
++Show data for a particular source repository (you can specify several
++\fB\-p\fP options on the same command line).
++.TP 1i
++\fB\ \ \ \ \ \ \-r\fP \fIrev\fP
++Show records referring to revisions since the revision or tag
++named \fIrev\fP appears in individual RCS files.
++Each
++.SM RCS
++file is searched for the revision or tag.
++.TP 1i
++\fB\ \ \ \ \ \ \-t\fP \fItag\fP
++Show records since tag \fItag\fP was last added to the history file.
++This differs from the \fB-r\fP flag above in that it reads
++only the history file, not the
++.SM RCS
++files, and is much faster.
++.TP 1i
++\fB\ \ \ \ \ \ \-u\fP \fIname\fP
++Show records for user \fIname\fP.
++.PP
++.TP
++\fBimport\fP [\fB\-\fP\fIoptions\fP] \fIrepository vendortag releasetag\fP.\|.\|.
++.I Requires:
++Repository, source distribution directory.
++.br
++.I Changes:
++repository.
++.br
++Use
++.` "cvs import"
++to incorporate an entire source
++distribution from an outside source (e.g., a source vendor) into your
++source repository directory.  You can use this command both for
++initial creation of a repository, and for wholesale updates to the
++module form the outside source.
++.SP
++The \fIrepository\fP argument gives a directory name (or a path to a
++directory) under the CVS root directory for repositories; if the
++directory did not exist, \fBimport\fP creates it.
++.SP
++When you use \fBimport\fP for updates to source that has been modified in your
++source repository (since a prior \fBimport\fP), it
++will notify you of any files that conflict in the two branches of
++development; use
++.` "cvs checkout -j"
++to reconcile the differences, as \fBimport\fP instructs you to do.
++.SP
++By default, certain file names are ignored during
++.` "cvs import":
++names associated with
++.SM CVS
++administration, or with other common source control systems; common
++names for patch files, object files, archive files, and editor backup
++files; and other names that are usually artifacts of assorted utilities.
++For an up to date list of ignored file names, see the Cederqvist manual (as
++described in the SEE ALSO section of this manpage).
++.SP
++The outside source is saved in a first-level
++branch, by default
++.` "1.1.1".
++Updates are leaves of this
++branch; for example, files from the first imported collection of
++source will be revision
++.` "1.1.1.1",
++then files from the first
++imported update will be revision
++.` "1.1.1.2",
++and so on.
++.SP
++At least three arguments are required.  \fIrepository\fP is needed to
++identify the collection of source.  \fIvendortag\fP is a tag for the
++entire branch (e.g., for
++.` "1.1.1").
++You must also specify at
++least one \fIreleasetag\fP to identify the files at the leaves created
++each time you execute
++.` "cvs import".
++.SP
++One of the standard
++.B cvs
++command options is available: \fB\-m\fP
++\fImessage\fP.  If you do not specify a logging message with
++\fB\-m\fP, your editor is invoked (as with \fBcommit\fP) to allow you
++to enter one.
++.SP
++There are three additional special options.
++.SP
++Use
++.` "\-d"
++to specify that each file's time of last modification should be used
++for the checkin date and time.
++.SP
++Use
++.` "\-b \fIbranch\fP"
++to specify a first-level branch other
++than
++.` "1.1.1".
++.SP
++Use
++.` "\-I \fIname\fP"
++to specify file names that should be
++ignored during \fBimport\fP.  You can use this option repeatedly.
++To avoid ignoring any files at all (even those ignored by default),
++specify
++.` "\-I !".
++.TP
++\fBlog\fP [\fB\-l\fP] \fIrlog-options [files\fP\|.\|.\|.]
++.I Requires:
++repository, working directory.
++.br
++.I Changes:
++nothing.
++.br
++.I Synonym:
++.B rlog
++.br
++Display log information for \fIfiles\fP.
++Among the more useful options are \fB\-h\fP
++to display only the header (including tag definitions, but omitting
++most of the full log); \fB\-r\fP to select logs on particular
++revisions or ranges of revisions; and \fB\-d\fP to select particular
++dates or date ranges.  See
++.BR rlog ( 1 )
++for full explanations.
++This command is recursive by default, unless the
++.B \-l
++option is specified.
++.TP
++\fBrdiff\fP [\fB\-\fP\fIflags\fP] [\fB\-V\fP \fIvn\fP] [\fB\-r\fP \fIt\fP|\fB\-D\fP \fId\fP [\fB\-r\fP \fIt2\fP|\fB\-D\fP \fId2\fP]] \fImodules\|.\|.\|.\fP
++.I Requires:
++repository.
++.br
++.I Changes:
++nothing.
++.br
++.I Synonym:
++.B patch
++.br
++Builds a Larry Wall format
++.BR patch ( 1 )
++file between two releases, that can be fed directly into the
++.B patch
++program to bring an old release up-to-date with the new release.
++(This is one of the few \fBcvs\fP commands that operates directly from
++the repository, and doesn't require a prior
++.BR checkout .)
++The diff output is sent to the standard output device.
++You can specify (using the standard \fB\-r\fP and \fB\-D\fP options)
++any combination of one or two revisions or dates.
++If only one revision or date is specified, the
++patch file reflects differences between that revision or date and the
++current ``head'' revisions in the
++.SM RCS
++file.
++.SP
++Note that if the software release affected
++is contained in more than one directory, then it may be necessary to
++specify the
++.B \-p
++option to the
++.B patch
++command when patching the old sources, so that
++.B patch
++is able to find the files that are located in other directories.
++.SP
++The standard option \fIflags\fP \fB\-f\fP, and \fB\-l\fP
++are available with this command.  There are also several
++special option flags:
++.SP
++If you use the
++.B \-s
++option, no patch output is produced.
++Instead, a summary of the changed or added files between the two
++releases is sent to the standard output device.
++This is useful for finding out, for example, which files have changed
++between two dates or revisions.
++.SP
++If you use the
++.B \-t
++option, a diff of the top two revisions is sent to the standard output device.
++This is most useful for seeing what the last change to a file was.
++.SP
++If you use the
++.B \-u
++option, the patch output uses the newer ``unidiff'' format for context
++diffs.
++.SP
++You can use
++.B \-c
++to explicitly specify the
++.` "diff \-c"
++form of context diffs
++(which is the default), if you like.
++.TP
++\fBrelease\fP [\fB\-dQq\fP] \fImodules\fP\|.\|.\|.
++.I Requires:
++Working directory.
++.br
++.I Changes:
++Working directory, history log.
++.br
++This command is meant to safely cancel the effect of
++.` "cvs checkout".
++Since
++.B cvs
++doesn't lock files, it isn't strictly necessary to use this command.
++You can always simply delete your working directory, if you
++like; but you risk losing changes you may have forgotten, and you
++leave no trace in the
++.B cvs
++history file that you've abandoned your checkout.
++.SP
++Use
++.` "cvs release"
++to avoid these problems.  This command
++checks that no un-committed changes are present; that you are
++executing it from immediately above, or inside, a \fBcvs\fP working
++directory; and that the repository recorded for your files is the same
++as the repository defined in the module database.
++.SP
++If all these conditions are true,
++.` "cvs release"
++leaves a
++record of its execution (attesting to your intentionally abandoning
++your checkout) in the
++.B cvs
++history log.
++.SP
++You can use the \fB\-d\fP flag to request that your working copies of
++the source files be deleted if the \fBrelease\fP succeeds.
++.TP
++\fBremove\fP [\fB\-lR\fP] [\fIfiles\|.\|.\|.\fP]
++.I Requires:
++Working directory.
++.br
++.I Changes:
++Working directory.
++.br
++.I Synonyms:
++.BR rm ", " delete
++.br
++Use this command to declare that you wish to remove \fIfiles\fP from
++the source repository.  Like most
++.B cvs
++commands,
++.` "cvs remove"
++works on files in your working
++directory, not directly on the repository.  As a safeguard, it also
++requires that you first erase the specified files from your working
++directory.
++.SP
++The files are not actually removed until you apply your changes to the
++repository with
++.BR commit ;
++at that point, the corresponding
++.SM RCS
++files in the source repository are
++.I moved
++into the
++.` "Attic"
++directory (also within the source repository).
++.SP
++This command is recursive by default, scheduling all physically removed
++files that it finds for removal by the next
++.BR commit .
++Use the
++.B \-l
++option to avoid this recursion, or just specify that actual files that you
++wish remove to consider.
++.TP
++\fBrtag\fP [\fB\-f\|alnRQq\fP] [\fB\-b\fP] [\fB\-d\fP] [\fB\-r\fP \fItag\fP | \fB\-D\fP \fIdate\fP] \fIsymbolic_tag\fP \fImodules\|.\|.\|.\fP
++.I Requires:
++repository.
++.br
++.I Changes:
++repository.
++.br
++.I Synonym:
++.B rfreeze
++.br
++You can use this command to assign symbolic tags to particular,
++explicitly specified source versions in the repository.
++.` "cvs rtag"
++works directly on the repository contents (and requires no
++prior
++.BR checkout ).
++Use
++.` "cvs tag"
++instead, to base the selection of
++versions to tag on the contents of your working directory.
++.SP
++In general, tags (often the symbolic names of software distributions)
++should not be removed, but the
++.B \-d
++option is available as a means to remove completely obsolete symbolic names
++if necessary (as might be the case for an Alpha release, say).
++.SP
++.` "cvs rtag"
++will not move a tag that already exists.  With the \fB\-F\fP option,
++however,
++.` "cvs rtag"
++will re-locate any instance of \fIsymbolic_tag\fP that already exists
++on that file to the new repository versions.  Without the \fB\-F\fP
++option, attempting to use
++.` "cvs rtag"
++to apply a tag that already exists on that file will produce an error
++message.
++.SP
++The \fB-b\fP option makes the tag a ``branch'' tag, allowing
++concurrent, isolated development.
++This is most useful for creating a patch to a previously released software
++distribution.
++.SP
++You can use the standard \fB\-r\fP and \fB\-D\fP options to tag only those
++files that already contain a certain tag.  This method would be used
++to rename a tag: tag only the files identified by the old tag, then delete the
++old tag, leaving the new tag on exactly the same files as the old tag.
++.SP
++.B rtag
++executes recursively by default, tagging all subdirectories of
++\fImodules\fP you specify in the argument.  You can restrict its
++operation to top-level directories with the standard \fB\-l\fP option;
++or you can explicitly request recursion with \fB\-R\fP.
++.SP
++The modules database can specify a program to execute whenever a tag
++is specified; a typical use is to send electronic mail to a group of
++interested parties.  If you want to bypass that program, use the
++standard \fB\-n\fP option.
++.SP
++Use the
++.B \-a
++option to have
++.B rtag
++look in the
++.` "Attic"
++for removed files that contain the specified tag.
++The tag is removed from these files, which makes it convenient to re-use a
++symbolic tag as development continues (and files get removed from the
++up-coming distribution).
++.TP
++\fBstatus\fP [\fB\-lRqQ\fP] [\fB\-v\fP] [\fIfiles\fP\|.\|.\|.]
++.I Requires:
++working directory, repository.
++.br
++.I Changes:
++nothing.
++.br
++Display a brief report on the current status of \fIfiles\fP with
++respect to the source repository, including any ``sticky'' tags,
++dates, or \fB\-k\fP options.  (``Sticky'' options will restrict how
++.` "cvs update"
++operates until you reset them; see the
++description of
++.` "cvs update \-A\|.\|.\|.".)
++.SP
++You can also use this command to anticipate the potential impact of a
++.` "cvs update"
++on your working source directory.  If you do
++not specify any \fIfiles\fP explicitly, reports are shown for all
++files that \fBcvs\fP has placed in your working directory.  You can
++limit the scope of this search to the current directory itself (not
++its subdirectories) with the standard \fB\-l\fP option flag; or you
++can explicitly request recursive status reports with the \fB\-R\fP
++option.
++.SP
++The
++.B \-v
++option causes the symbolic tags for the
++.SM RCS
++file to be displayed as well.
++.TP
++\fBtag\fP [\fB\-lQqR\fP] [\fB\-F\fP] [\fB\-b\fP] [\fB\-d\fP] [\fB\-r\fP \fItag\fP | \fB\-D\fP \fIdate\fP] [\fB\-f\fP] \fIsymbolic_tag\fP [\fIfiles\fP\|.\|.\|.\|]
++.I Requires:
++working directory, repository.
++.br
++.I Changes:
++repository.
++.br
++.I Synonym:
++.B freeze
++.br
++Use this command to assign symbolic tags to the nearest repository
++versions to your working sources.  The tags are applied immediately to
++the repository, as with \fBrtag\fP.
++.SP
++One potentially surprising aspect of the fact that \fBcvs tag\fP
++operates on the repository is that you are tagging the checked-in
++revisions, which may differ from locally modified files in your working
++directory.  If you want to avoid doing this by mistake, specify the
++\fB-c\fP option to \fBcvs tag\fP.  If there are any locally modified files, CVS
++will abort with an error before it tags any files.
++.SP
++One use for tags is to record a ``snapshot'' of the current sources
++when the software freeze date of a project arrives.  As bugs are fixed
++after the freeze date, only those changed sources that are to be part
++of the release need be re-tagged.
++.SP
++The symbolic tags are meant to permanently record which revisions of which
++files were used in creating a software distribution.
++The
++.BR checkout ,
++.B export
++and
++.B update
++commands allow you to extract an exact copy of a tagged release at any time in
++the future, regardless of whether files have been changed, added, or removed
++since the release was tagged.
++.SP
++You can use the standard \fB\-r\fP and \fB\-D\fP options to tag only those
++files that already contain a certain tag.  This method would be used
++to rename a tag: tag only the files identified by the old tag, then delete the
++old tag, leaving the new tag on exactly the same files as the old tag.
++.SP
++Specifying the \fB\-f\fP flag in addition to the \fB\-r\fP or \fB\-D\fP
++flags will tag those files named on the command line even if they do not
++contain the old tag or did not exist on the specified date.
++.SP
++By default (without a \fB\-r\fP or \fB\-D\fP flag)
++the versions to be tagged are supplied
++implicitly by the \fBcvs\fP records of your working files' history
++rather than applied explicitly.
++.SP
++If you use
++.` "cvs tag \-d \fIsymbolic_tag\fP\|.\|.\|.",
++the
++symbolic tag you specify is
++.I deleted
++instead of being added.  \fIWarning\fP: Be very certain of your ground
++before you delete a tag; doing this effectively discards some
++historical information, which may later turn out to have been valuable.
++.SP
++.` "cvs tag"
++will not move a tag that already exists.  With the \fB\-F\fP option,
++however,
++.` "cvs tag"
++will re-locate any instance of \fIsymbolic_tag\fP that already exists
++on that file to the new repository versions.  Without the \fB\-F\fP
++option, attempting to use
++.` "cvs tag"
++to apply a tag that already exists on that file will produce an error
++message.
++.SP
++The \fB-b\fP option makes the tag a ``branch'' tag, allowing
++concurrent, isolated development.
++This is most useful for creating a patch to a previously released software
++distribution.
++.SP
++Normally,
++.B tag
++executes recursively through subdirectories; you can prevent this by
++using the standard \fB\-l\fP option, or specify the recursion
++explicitly by using \fB\-R\fP.
++.TP
++\fBupdate\fP [\fB\-ACdf\|lPpQqR\fP] [\fB\-d\fP] [\fB\-r\fP \fItag\fP|\fB\-D\fP \fIdate\fP] \fIfiles\|.\|.\|.\fP
++.I Requires:
++repository, working directory.
++.br
++.I Changes:
++working directory.
++.br
++After you've run
++.B checkout
++to create your private copy of source from the common repository,
++other developers will continue changing the central source.  From time
++to time, when it is convenient in your development process, you can
++use the
++.B update
++command
++from within your working directory to reconcile your work with any
++revisions applied to  the source repository since your last
++.B checkout
++or
++.BR update .
++.SP
++.B update
++keeps you informed of its progress by printing a line for each file,
++prefaced with one of the characters
++.` "U P A R M C ?"
++to indicate the status of the file:
++.TP 1i
++\fBU\fP \fIfile\fP
++The file was brought \fIup to date\fP with respect to the repository.
++This is done for any file that exists in the repository but not in
++your source, and for files that you haven't changed but are not the most
++recent versions available in the repository.
++.TP 1i
++\fBP\fP \fIfile\fP
++Like \fBU\fP, but the CVS server sends a patch instead of an entire file.
++This accomplishes the same thing as \fBU\fP using less bandwidth.
++.TP 1i
++\fBA\fP \fIfile\fP
++The file has been \fIadded\fP to your private copy of the sources, and
++will be added to the
++source repository when you run
++.` "cvs commit"
++on the file.
++This is a reminder to you that the file needs to be committed.
++.TP 1i
++\fBR\fP \fIfile\fP
++The file has been \fIremoved\fP from your private copy of the sources, and
++will be removed from the
++source repository when you run
++.` "cvs commit"
++on the file.
++This is a reminder to you that the file needs to be committed.
++.TP 1i
++\fBM\fP \fIfile\fP
++The file is \fImodified\fP 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
++\fImerged\fP successfully, without conflict, in your working
++directory.
++.TP 1i
++\fBC\fP \fIfile\fP
++A \fIconflict\fP was detected while trying to merge your changes to
++\fIfile\fP with changes from the source repository.  \fIfile\fP (the
++copy in your working directory) is now the result of merging
++the two versions; an unmodified copy of your file is also
++in your working directory, with the name `\fB.#\fP\fIfile\fP\fB.\fP\fIversion\fP',
++where
++.I version
++is the
++revision that your modified file started from.
++(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.)
++.TP 1i
++\fB?\fP \fIfile\fP
++\fIfile\fP is in your working directory, but does not correspond to
++anything in the source repository, and is not in the list of files
++for \fBcvs\fP to ignore (see the description of the \fB\-I\fP option).
++.PP
++.RS .5i
++.SP
++Use the
++.B \-A
++option to reset any sticky tags, dates, or
++.B \-k
++options.  (If you get a working copy of a file by using one of the
++\fB\-r\fP, \fB\-D\fP, or \fB\-k\fP options, \fBcvs\fP remembers the
++corresponding tag, date, or \fIkflag\fP and continues using it on
++future updates; use the \fB\-A\fP option to make \fBcvs\fP forget these
++specifications, and retrieve the ``head'' version of the file).
++.SP
++The \fB\-j\fP\fIbranch\fP option 
++merges the changes made between the
++resulting revision and the revision that it is based on (e.g., if
++the tag refers to a branch,
++.B cvs
++will merge all changes made in
++that branch into your working file).
++.SP
++With two \fB-j\fP options,
++.B cvs
++will merge in the changes between the two respective revisions.
++This can be used to ``remove'' a certain delta from your working file.
++E.g., If the file foo.c is based on
++revision 1.6 and I want to remove the changes made between 1.3 and
++1.5, I might do:
++.SP
++.in +1i
++.ft B
++.nf
++example% cvs update -j1.5 -j1.3 foo.c	# note the order...
++.fi
++.ft P
++.in -1i
++.SP
++In addition, each \fB-j\fP option can contain on optional date
++specification which, when used with branches, can limit the chosen
++revision to one within a specific date.
++An optional date is specified by adding a colon (:) to the tag.
++.SP
++.in +1i
++.ft B
++.nf
++-jSymbolic_Tag:Date_Specifier
++.fi
++.ft P
++.in -1i
++.SP
++Use the
++.B \-d
++option to create any directories that exist in the repository if they're
++missing from the working directory.  (Normally, update acts only on
++directories and files that were already enrolled in your
++working directory.)  This is useful for updating directories
++that were created in the repository since the initial
++\fBcheckout\fP; but it has an unfortunate side effect.  If you
++deliberately avoided certain directories in the repository when you
++created your working directory (either through use of a module name or by
++listing explicitly the files and directories you wanted on the
++command line), then updating with
++.B \-d
++will create those directories, which may not be what you want.
++.SP
++Use \fB\-I\fP \fIname\fP to ignore files whose names match \fIname\fP
++(in your working directory) during the update.  You can specify
++\fB\-I\fP more than once on the command line to specify several files
++to ignore.  By default,
++\fBupdate\fP ignores files whose names match certain patterns; for
++an up to date list of ignored file names, see the Cederqvist manual (as
++described in the SEE ALSO section of this manpage).
++.SP
++Use
++.` "\-I !"
++to avoid ignoring any files at all.
++.SP
++Use the
++.` "\-C"
++option to overwrite locally modified files with clean copies from
++the repository (the modified file is saved in
++`\fB.#\fP\fIfile\fP\fB.\fP\fIrevision\fP', however).
++.SP
++The standard \fBcvs\fP command options \fB\-f\fP, \fB\-k\fP,
++\fB\-l\fP, \fB\-P\fP, \fB\-p\fP, and \fB\-r\fP
++are also available with \fBupdate\fP.
++.RE
++.SH "FILES"
++For more detailed information on
++.B cvs
++supporting files, see
++.BR cvs ( 5 ).
++.LP
++.I
++Files in home directories:
++.TP
++\&.cvsrc
++The
++.B cvs
++initialization file.  Lines in this file can be used to specify default
++options for each
++.B cvs
++command.  For example the line
++.` "diff \-c"
++will ensure that
++.` "cvs diff"
++is always passed the
++.B \-c
++option in addition to any other options passed on the command line.
++.TP
++\&.cvswrappers
++Specifies wrappers to be used in addition to those specified in the
++CVSROOT/cvswrappers file in the repository.
++.LP
++.I
++Files in working directories:
++.TP
++CVS
++A directory of \fBcvs\fP administrative files.
++.I
++Do not delete.
++.TP
++CVS/Entries
++List and status of files in your working directory.
++.TP
++CVS/Entries.Backup
++A backup of
++.` "CVS/Entries".
++.TP
++CVS/Entries.Static
++Flag: do not add more entries on
++.` "cvs update".
++.TP
++CVS/Root
++Pathname to the repository (
++.SM CVSROOT
++) location at the time of checkout.  This file is used instead
++of the
++.SM CVSROOT
++environment variable if the environment variable is not
++set.  A warning message will be issued when the contents of this
++file and the
++.SM CVSROOT
++environment variable differ.  The file may be over-ridden by the
++presence of the
++.SM CVS_IGNORE_REMOTE_ROOT
++environment variable.
++.TP
++CVS/Repository
++Pathname to the corresponding directory in the source repository.
++.TP
++CVS/Tag
++Contains the per-directory ``sticky'' tag or date information.
++This file is created/updated when you specify
++.B \-r
++or
++.B \-D
++to the
++.B checkout
++or
++.B update
++commands, and no files are specified.
++.TP
++CVS/Checkin.prog
++Name of program to run on
++.` "cvs commit".
++.TP
++CVS/Update.prog
++Name of program to run on
++.` "cvs update".
++.LP
++.I
++Files in source repositories:
++.TP
++$CVSROOT/CVSROOT
++Directory of global administrative files for repository.
++.TP
++CVSROOT/commitinfo,v
++Records programs for filtering
++.` "cvs commit"
++requests.
++.TP
++CVSROOT/cvswrappers,v
++Records
++.B cvs
++wrapper commands to be used when checking files into and out of the
++repository.  Wrappers allow the file or directory to be processed
++on the way in and out of CVS.  The intended uses are many, one
++possible use would be to reformat a C file before the file is checked
++in, so all of the code in the repository looks the same.
++.TP
++CVSROOT/editinfo,v
++Records programs for editing/validating
++.` "cvs commit"
++log entries.
++.TP
++CVSROOT/history
++Log file of \fBcvs\fP transactions.
++.TP
++CVSROOT/loginfo,v
++Records programs for piping
++.` "cvs commit"
++log entries.
++.TP
++CVSROOT/modules,v
++Definitions for modules in this repository.
++.TP
++CVSROOT/rcsinfo,v
++Records pathnames to templates used during a
++.` "cvs commit"
++operation.
++.TP
++CVSROOT/taginfo,v
++Records programs for validating/logging
++.` "cvs tag"
++and
++.` "cvs rtag"
++operations.
++.TP
++MODULE/Attic
++Directory for removed source files.
++.TP
++#cvs.lock
++A lock directory created by
++.B cvs
++when doing sensitive changes to the
++source repository.
++.TP
++#cvs.tfl.\fIpid\fP
++Temporary lock file for repository.
++.TP
++#cvs.rfl.\fIpid\fP
++A read lock.
++.TP
++#cvs.wfl.\fIpid\fP
++A write lock.
++.SH "ENVIRONMENT"
++.TP
++.SM CVSROOT
++Should contain the full pathname to the root of the
++.B cvs
++source repository (where the
++.SM RCS
++files are kept).  This information must be available to \fBcvs\fP for
++most commands to execute; if
++.SM CVSROOT
++is not set, or if you wish to override it for one invocation, you can
++supply it on the command line:
++.` "cvs \-d \fIcvsroot cvs_command\fP\|.\|.\|."
++You may not need to set
++.SM CVSROOT
++if your \fBcvs\fP binary has the right path compiled in.
++.TP
++.SM CVSREAD
++If this is set,
++.B checkout
++and
++.B update
++will try hard to make the files in your working directory read-only.
++When this is not set, the default behavior is to permit modification
++of your working files.
++.TP
++.SM CVSREADONLYFS
++If this is set, the
++.B \-R
++option is assumed, and
++.B cvs
++operates in read-only repository mode.
++.TP
++.SM RCSBIN
++Specifies the full pathname where to find
++.SM RCS
++programs, such as
++.BR co ( 1 )
++and
++.BR ci ( 1 )
++(CVS 1.9 and older).
++.TP
++.SM CVSEDITOR
++Specifies the program to use for recording log messages during
++.BR commit .
++If not set, the
++.SM VISUAL
++and
++.SM EDITOR
++environment variables are tried (in that order).
++If neither is set, a system-dependent default editor (e.g.,
++.BR vi )
++is used.
++.TP
++.SM CVS_CLIENT_PORT
++If this variable is set then
++.B cvs
++will use this port in
++\fIpserver mode\fP
++rather than the default port (cvspserver 2401).
++.TP
++.SM CVS_IGNORE_REMOTE_ROOT
++If this variable is set then
++.B cvs
++will ignore all references to remote repositories in the CVS/Root file.
++.TP
++.SM CVS_OPTIONS
++Specifies a set of default options for
++.B cvs.
++These options are interpreted before the startup file (\fI~/.cvsrc\fP) is read
++and can be overridden by explicit command line parameters.
++.TP
++.SM CVS_RSH
++.B cvs
++uses the contents of this variable to determine the name of the
++remote shell command to use when starting a
++.B cvs
++server.  If this variable is not set then
++.` "ssh"
++is used.
++.TP
++.SM CVS_SERVER
++.B cvs 
++uses the contents of this variable to determine the name of the
++.B cvs
++server command.  If this variable is not set then
++.` "cvs"
++is used.
++.TP
++.SM CVSWRAPPERS
++This variable is used by the
++.` "cvswrappers"
++script to determine the name of the wrapper file, in addition to the
++wrappers defaults contained in the repository
++.SM (CVSROOT/cvswrappers)
++and the user's home directory (~/.cvswrappers).
++.SH "AUTHORS"
++.TP
++Dick Grune
++Original author of the
++.B cvs
++shell script version posted to
++.B comp.sources.unix
++in the volume6 release of December, 1986.
++Credited with much of the
++.B cvs
++conflict resolution algorithms.
++.TP
++Brian Berliner
++Coder and designer of the
++.B cvs
++program itself in April, 1989, based on the original work done by Dick.
++.TP
++Jeff Polk
++Helped Brian with the design of the
++.B cvs
++module and vendor branch support and author of the
++.BR checkin ( 1 )
++shell script (the ancestor of
++.` "cvs import").
++.TP
++And many others too numerous to mention here.
++.SH "SEE ALSO"
++The most comprehensive manual for CVS is
++Version Management with CVS by Per Cederqvist et al.  Depending on
++your system, you may be able to get it with the
++.B info cvs
++command or it may be available as cvs.ps (postscript), cvs.texinfo
++(texinfo source), or cvs.html.
++.SP
++For CVS updates, more information on documentation, software related
++to CVS, development of CVS, and more, see:
++.in +1i
++.B http://cvshome.org
++.B http://www.loria.fr/~molli/cvs-index.html
++.in -1i
++.SP
++.BR ci ( 1 ),
++.BR co ( 1 ),
++.BR cvs ( 5 ),
++.BR cvsbug ( 8 ),
++.BR diff ( 1 ),
++.BR grep ( 1 ),
++.BR patch ( 1 ),
++.BR rcs ( 1 ),
++.BR rcsdiff ( 1 ),
++.BR rcsmerge ( 1 ),
++.BR rlog ( 1 ).
 Index: man/cvsbug.8
 diff -u src/contrib/cvs/man/cvsbug.8:1.1.1.4 src/contrib/cvs/man/cvsbug.8:1.3
 --- src/contrib/cvs/man/cvsbug.8:1.1.1.4	Mon Sep  2 14:50:19 2002
@@ -292,15 +2505,15 @@
      free (preload_update_dir);
      preload_update_dir = oldupdate;
 Index: src/client.c
-diff -u src/contrib/cvs/src/client.c:1.1.1.15 src/contrib/cvs/src/client.c:1.11
---- src/contrib/cvs/src/client.c:1.1.1.15	Thu Apr 15 10:01:55 2004
-+++ src/client.c	Thu Apr 15 10:17:26 2004
+diff -u src/contrib/cvs/src/client.c:1.1.1.16 src/contrib/cvs/src/client.c:1.12
+--- src/contrib/cvs/src/client.c:1.1.1.16	Fri Jun 11 04:05:37 2004
++++ src/client.c	Fri Jun 11 04:12:50 2004
 @@ -10,6 +10,10 @@
     MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
     GNU General Public License for more details.  */
  
 +/*
-+ * FreeBSD: src/contrib/cvs/src/client.c,v 1.11 2004/04/15 01:17:26 peter Exp $
++ * FreeBSD: src/contrib/cvs/src/client.c,v 1.12 2004/06/10 19:12:50 peter Exp $
 + */
 +
  #ifdef HAVE_CONFIG_H
@@ -344,30 +2557,30 @@
  	if (args->no_contents
  	    && supported_request ("Is-modified"))
 Index: src/commit.c
-diff -u src/contrib/cvs/src/commit.c:1.1.1.13 src/contrib/cvs/src/commit.c:1.14
---- src/contrib/cvs/src/commit.c:1.1.1.13	Thu Apr 15 10:01:55 2004
-+++ src/commit.c	Thu Apr 15 10:17:26 2004
+diff -u src/contrib/cvs/src/commit.c:1.1.1.14 src/contrib/cvs/src/commit.c:1.15
+--- src/contrib/cvs/src/commit.c:1.1.1.14	Fri Jun 11 04:05:37 2004
++++ src/commit.c	Fri Jun 11 04:12:50 2004
 @@ -12,6 +12,7 @@
   *
   * The call is: cvs commit [options] files...
   *
-+ * FreeBSD: src/contrib/cvs/src/commit.c,v 1.14 2004/04/15 01:17:26 peter Exp $
++ * FreeBSD: src/contrib/cvs/src/commit.c,v 1.15 2004/06/10 19:12:50 peter Exp $
   */
  
  #include <assert.h>
 Index: src/cvs.h
-diff -u src/contrib/cvs/src/cvs.h:1.1.1.14 src/contrib/cvs/src/cvs.h:1.19
---- src/contrib/cvs/src/cvs.h:1.1.1.14	Thu Apr 15 10:01:55 2004
-+++ src/cvs.h	Thu Apr 15 10:41:05 2004
+diff -u src/contrib/cvs/src/cvs.h:1.1.1.15 src/contrib/cvs/src/cvs.h:1.20
+--- src/contrib/cvs/src/cvs.h:1.1.1.15	Fri Jun 11 04:05:38 2004
++++ src/cvs.h	Fri Jun 11 04:12:50 2004
 @@ -9,6 +9,7 @@
  /*
   * basic information used in all source files
   *
-+ * FreeBSD: src/contrib/cvs/src/cvs.h,v 1.19 2004/04/15 01:41:05 peter Exp $
++ * FreeBSD: src/contrib/cvs/src/cvs.h,v 1.20 2004/06/10 19:12:50 peter Exp $
   */
  
  
-@@ -190,6 +191,7 @@
+@@ -194,6 +195,7 @@
  #define CVSROOTADM_WRITERS	"writers"
  #define CVSROOTADM_PASSWD	"passwd"
  #define CVSROOTADM_CONFIG	"config"
@@ -375,7 +2588,7 @@
  
  #define CVSNULLREPOS		"Emptydir"	/* an empty directory */
  
-@@ -259,6 +261,8 @@
+@@ -263,6 +265,8 @@
  #define	CVSREAD_ENV	"CVSREAD"	/* make files read-only */
  #define	CVSREAD_DFLT	0		/* writable files by default */
  
@@ -384,7 +2597,7 @@
  #define	TMPDIR_ENV	"TMPDIR"	/* Temporary directory */
  
  #define	EDITOR1_ENV	"CVSEDITOR"	/* which editor to use */
-@@ -368,6 +372,7 @@
+@@ -372,6 +376,7 @@
  extern int use_editor;
  extern int cvswrite;
  extern mode_t cvsumask;
@@ -392,7 +2605,7 @@
  
  
  
-@@ -386,7 +391,9 @@
+@@ -390,7 +395,9 @@
  
  extern int trace;		/* Show all commands */
  extern int noexec;		/* Don't modify disk anywhere */
@@ -402,7 +2615,7 @@
  
  extern int top_level_admin;
  
-@@ -494,6 +501,7 @@
+@@ -498,6 +505,7 @@
  char *strcat_filename_onto_homedir PROTO ((const char *, const char *));
  char *cvs_temp_name PROTO ((void));
  FILE *cvs_temp_file PROTO ((char **filename));
@@ -410,7 +2623,7 @@
  
  int numdots PROTO((const char *s));
  char *increment_revnum PROTO ((const char *));
-@@ -572,6 +580,7 @@
+@@ -576,6 +584,7 @@
  void WriteTag PROTO ((const char *dir, const char *tag, const char *date,
                        int nonbranch, const char *update_dir,
                        const char *repository));
@@ -418,6 +2631,25 @@
  void cat_module PROTO((int status));
  void check_entries PROTO((char *dir));
  void close_module PROTO((DBM * db));
+Index: src/cvsbug.in
+diff -u src/contrib/cvs/src/cvsbug.in:1.1.1.3 src/contrib/cvs/src/cvsbug.in:1.2
+--- src/contrib/cvs/src/cvsbug.in:1.1.1.3	Thu Apr 15 10:01:55 2004
++++ src/cvsbug.in	Wed Sep  7 22:39:44 2005
+@@ -109,14 +109,12 @@
+     /usr/bin/ypcat passwd 2>/dev/null | cat - /etc/passwd | grep "^$LOGNAME:" |
+       cut -f5 -d':' | sed -e 's/,.*//' > $TEMP
+     ORIGINATOR="`cat $TEMP`"
+-    rm -f $TEMP
+   fi
+ fi
+ 
+ if [ "$ORIGINATOR" = "" ]; then
+   grep "^$LOGNAME:" /etc/passwd | cut -f5 -d':' | sed -e 's/,.*//' > $TEMP
+   ORIGINATOR="`cat $TEMP`"
+-  rm -f $TEMP
+ fi
+ 
+ if [ -n "$ORGANIZATION" ]; then
 Index: src/diff.c
 diff -u src/contrib/cvs/src/diff.c:1.1.1.12 src/contrib/cvs/src/diff.c:1.21
 --- src/contrib/cvs/src/diff.c:1.1.1.12	Thu Apr 15 10:01:55 2004
@@ -608,12 +2840,10 @@
  #include "cvs.h"
  #include "getline.h"
  
-@@ -633,6 +636,72 @@
-     /* put the node into the list */
-     addnode (list, p);
+@@ -635,6 +638,72 @@
      return (p);
-+}
-+
+ }
+ 
 +static char *root_template;
 +
 +static int
@@ -678,19 +2908,21 @@
 +	}
 +    }
 +    free(tmp);
- }
- 
++}
++
  /*
+  * Write out/Clear the CVS/Tag file.
+  */
 Index: src/filesubr.c
-diff -u src/contrib/cvs/src/filesubr.c:1.1.1.11 src/contrib/cvs/src/filesubr.c:1.11
---- src/contrib/cvs/src/filesubr.c:1.1.1.11	Thu Apr 15 10:01:55 2004
-+++ src/filesubr.c	Thu Apr 15 10:17:27 2004
+diff -u src/contrib/cvs/src/filesubr.c:1.1.1.12 src/contrib/cvs/src/filesubr.c:1.12
+--- src/contrib/cvs/src/filesubr.c:1.1.1.12	Fri Jun 11 04:05:37 2004
++++ src/filesubr.c	Fri Jun 11 04:12:50 2004
 @@ -17,6 +17,10 @@
     definitions under operating systems (like, say, Windows NT) with different
     file system semantics.  */
  
 +/*
-+ * FreeBSD: src/contrib/cvs/src/filesubr.c,v 1.11 2004/04/15 01:17:27 peter Exp $
++ * FreeBSD: src/contrib/cvs/src/filesubr.c,v 1.12 2004/06/10 19:12:50 peter Exp $
 + */
 +
  #include <assert.h>
@@ -763,31 +2995,64 @@
  	return 0;
  
      /* we only do one directory at a time for read locks! */
-@@ -483,6 +485,11 @@
- 
+@@ -484,6 +486,11 @@
      if (noexec)
  	return 0;
-+
+ 
 +    if (readonlyfs) {
 +	error (0, 0, "write lock failed - read-only repository");
 +	return (1);
 +    }
- 
++
      /* We only know how to do one list at a time */
      if (locklist != (List *) NULL)
+     {
+Index: src/log.c
+diff -u src/contrib/cvs/src/log.c:1.1.1.12 src/contrib/cvs/src/log.c:1.2
+--- src/contrib/cvs/src/log.c:1.1.1.12	Fri Jun 11 04:05:37 2004
++++ src/log.c	Tue Jul  6 17:10:38 2004
+@@ -10,6 +10,8 @@
+  * Prints the RCS "log" (rlog) information for the specified files.  With no
+  * argument, prints the log information for all the files in the directory
+  * (recursive by default).
++ *
++ * FreeBSD: src/contrib/cvs/src/log.c,v 1.2 2004/07/06 08:10:38 des Exp $
+  */
+ 
+ #include "cvs.h"
+@@ -1605,8 +1607,8 @@
+ 		   &sec);
+     if (year < 1900)
+ 	year += 1900;
+-    sprintf (buf, "%04d/%02d/%02d %02d:%02d:%02d", year, mon, mday,
+-	     hour, min, sec);
++    sprintf (buf, "%04d%c%02d%c%02d %02d:%02d:%02d",
++	     year, datesep, mon, datesep, mday, hour, min, sec);
+     cvs_output (buf, 0);
+ 
+     cvs_output (";  author: ", 0);
 Index: src/login.c
-diff -u src/contrib/cvs/src/login.c:1.1.1.9 src/contrib/cvs/src/login.c:1.8
+diff -u src/contrib/cvs/src/login.c:1.1.1.9 src/contrib/cvs/src/login.c:1.9
 --- src/contrib/cvs/src/login.c:1.1.1.9	Thu Apr 15 10:01:55 2004
-+++ src/login.c	Thu Apr 15 10:17:27 2004
++++ src/login.c	Sat Apr 23 02:58:25 2005
 @@ -5,6 +5,8 @@
   * specified in the README file that comes with CVS.
   * 
   * Allow user to log in for an authenticating server.
 + *
-+ * FreeBSD: src/contrib/cvs/src/login.c,v 1.8 2004/04/15 01:17:27 peter Exp $
++ * FreeBSD: src/contrib/cvs/src/login.c,v 1.9 2005/04/22 17:58:25 simon Exp $
   */
  
  #include "cvs.h"
+@@ -114,7 +116,7 @@
+ 
+ 	if (isspace(*(linebuf + 1)))
+ 	    /* special case since strtoul ignores leading white space */
+-	    entry_version = 0;
++	    q = linebuf + 1;
+ 	else
+ 	    entry_version = strtoul (linebuf + 1, &q, 10);
+ 
 Index: src/logmsg.c
 diff -u src/contrib/cvs/src/logmsg.c:1.1.1.10 src/contrib/cvs/src/logmsg.c:1.12
 --- src/contrib/cvs/src/logmsg.c:1.1.1.10	Thu Apr 15 10:01:55 2004
@@ -811,14 +3076,14 @@
      if (repository != NULL)
  	/* tack templates on if necessary */
 Index: src/main.c
-diff -u src/contrib/cvs/src/main.c:1.1.1.13 src/contrib/cvs/src/main.c:1.24
+diff -u src/contrib/cvs/src/main.c:1.1.1.13 src/contrib/cvs/src/main.c:1.25
 --- src/contrib/cvs/src/main.c:1.1.1.13	Thu Apr 15 10:01:55 2004
-+++ src/main.c	Thu Apr 15 10:17:27 2004
++++ src/main.c	Tue Jul  6 17:10:38 2004
 @@ -10,10 +10,12 @@
   * Credit to Dick Grune, Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam, for writing
   * the shell-script CVS system that this is based on.
   *
-+ * FreeBSD: src/contrib/cvs/src/main.c,v 1.24 2004/04/15 01:17:27 peter Exp $
++ * FreeBSD: src/contrib/cvs/src/main.c,v 1.25 2004/07/06 08:10:38 des Exp $
   */
  
  #include <assert.h>
@@ -934,11 +3199,10 @@
  	    }
  
  #ifdef CLIENT_SUPPORT
-@@ -1165,4 +1202,62 @@
-     for (; *cpp; cpp++)
+@@ -1166,3 +1203,64 @@
  	(void) fprintf (stderr, *cpp);
      error_exit ();
-+}
+ }
 +
 +void
 +parseopts(root)
@@ -973,6 +3237,9 @@
 +	    if (q)
 +		*q = '\0';
 +
++	    if (!strcmp(buf, "iso8601")) {
++		datesep = '-';
++	    }
 +	    if (!strncmp(buf, "tag=", 4)) {
 +		char *what;
 +		char *rcs_localid;
@@ -996,7 +3263,7 @@
 +	}
 +	fclose(fp);
 +    }
- }
++}
 Index: src/mkmodules.c
 diff -u src/contrib/cvs/src/mkmodules.c:1.1.1.12 src/contrib/cvs/src/mkmodules.c:1.13
 --- src/contrib/cvs/src/mkmodules.c:1.1.1.12	Thu Apr 15 10:01:55 2004
@@ -1026,11 +3293,10 @@
   */
  
  #include "cvs.h"
-@@ -349,6 +351,25 @@
- 		error (0, 0, "unrecognized value '%s' for SystemAuth", p);
+@@ -350,6 +352,25 @@
  		goto error_return;
  	    }
-+	}
+ 	}
 +	else if (strcmp (line, "tag") == 0) {
 +		RCS_setlocalid(p);
 +	}
@@ -1049,23 +3315,73 @@
 +		(void) setrlimit(RLIMIT_DATA, &rl);
 +	    }
 +#endif /* BSD */
- 	}
++	}
  	else if (strcmp (line, "PreservePermissions") == 0)
  	{
+ 	    if (strcmp (p, "no") == 0)
+Index: src/patch.c
+diff -u src/contrib/cvs/src/patch.c:1.1.1.13 src/contrib/cvs/src/patch.c:1.2
+--- src/contrib/cvs/src/patch.c:1.1.1.13	Thu Apr 15 10:01:55 2004
++++ src/patch.c	Sat Apr 23 02:58:25 2005
+@@ -10,6 +10,8 @@
+  * Create a Larry Wall format "patch" file between a previous release and the
+  * current head of a module, or between two releases.  Can specify the
+  * release as either a date or a revision number.
++ *
++ * FreeBSD: src/contrib/cvs/src/patch.c,v 1.2 2005/04/22 17:58:25 simon Exp $
+  */
+ 
+ #include <assert.h>
+@@ -385,6 +387,7 @@
+     struct utimbuf t;
+     char *vers_tag, *vers_head;
+     char *rcs = NULL;
++    char *rcs_orig = NULL;
+     RCSNode *rcsfile;
+     FILE *fp1, *fp2, *fp3;
+     int ret = 0;
+@@ -415,7 +418,7 @@
+     if ((rcsfile->flags & VALID) && (rcsfile->flags & INATTIC))
+ 	isattic = 1;
+ 
+-    rcs = xmalloc (strlen (finfo->file) + sizeof (RCSEXT) + 5);
++    rcs_orig = rcs = xmalloc (strlen (finfo->file) + sizeof (RCSEXT) + 5);
+     (void) sprintf (rcs, "%s%s", finfo->file, RCSEXT);
+ 
+     /* if vers_head is NULL, may have been removed from the release */
+@@ -757,8 +760,8 @@
+ 	free (vers_tag);
+     if (vers_head != NULL)
+ 	free (vers_head);
+-    if (rcs != NULL)
+-	free (rcs);
++    if (rcs_orig)
++	free (rcs_orig);
+     return ret;
+ }
+ 
 Index: src/rcs.c
-diff -u src/contrib/cvs/src/rcs.c:1.1.1.14 src/contrib/cvs/src/rcs.c:1.26
+diff -u src/contrib/cvs/src/rcs.c:1.1.1.14 src/contrib/cvs/src/rcs.c:1.28
 --- src/contrib/cvs/src/rcs.c:1.1.1.14	Thu Apr 15 10:01:55 2004
-+++ src/rcs.c	Thu Apr 15 10:17:27 2004
++++ src/rcs.c	Sat Apr 23 02:58:25 2005
 @@ -6,6 +6,8 @@
   * 
   * The routines contained in this file do all the rcs file parsing and
   * manipulation
 + *
-+ * FreeBSD: src/contrib/cvs/src/rcs.c,v 1.26 2004/04/15 01:17:27 peter Exp $
++ * FreeBSD: src/contrib/cvs/src/rcs.c,v 1.28 2005/04/22 17:58:25 simon Exp $
   */
  
  #include <assert.h>
-@@ -134,6 +136,8 @@
+@@ -24,6 +26,7 @@
+ # endif
+ #endif
+ 
++int datesep = '/';
+ int preserve_perms = 0;
+ 
+ /* The RCS -k options, and a set of enums that must match the array.
+@@ -134,6 +137,8 @@
     evaluates its arguments multiple times.  */
  #define STREQ(a, b) (*(char *)(a) == *(char *)(b) && strcmp ((a), (b)) == 0)
  
@@ -1074,7 +3390,7 @@
  /*
   * We don't want to use isspace() from the C library because:
   *
-@@ -2502,13 +2506,25 @@
+@@ -2502,13 +2507,25 @@
      char *rev;
  {
      int rev_num;
@@ -1102,6 +3418,16 @@
      {
  	/* see if the physical branch exists */
  	(void) sprintf (xrev, "%s.%d", rev, rev_num);
+@@ -3024,8 +3041,7 @@
+     if (retval != NULL)
+ 	return (retval);
+ 
+-    if (!force_tag_match ||
+-	(vers != NULL && RCS_datecmp (vers->date, date) <= 0))
++    if (vers && (!force_tag_match || RCS_datecmp (vers->date, date) <= 0))
+ 	return xstrdup (vers->version);
+     else
+ 	return NULL;
 @@ -3481,27 +3497,31 @@
  {
      const char *string;
@@ -1159,6 +3485,17 @@
  
  /* Convert an RCS date string into a readable string.  This is like
     the RCS date2str function.  */
+@@ -3527,8 +3549,8 @@
+ 		   &sec);
+     if (year < 1900)
+ 	year += 1900;
+-    sprintf (buf, "%04d/%02d/%02d %02d:%02d:%02d", year, mon, mday,
+-	     hour, min, sec);
++    sprintf (buf, "%04d%c%02d%c%02d %02d:%02d:%02d",
++	     year, datesep, mon, datesep, mday, hour, min, sec);
+     return xstrdup (buf);
+ }
+ 
 @@ -3689,7 +3711,8 @@
  	slen = s - srch;
  	for (keyword = keywords; keyword->string != NULL; keyword++)
@@ -1205,11 +3542,41 @@
  		    free (date);
  		    free_value = 1;
  		}
-@@ -8619,4 +8654,106 @@
- 	(void) sprintf (label, "-L%s\t%s", path, datebuf);
+@@ -4103,7 +4138,7 @@
+     size_t len;
+     int free_value = 0;
+     char *log = NULL;
+-    size_t loglen;
++    size_t loglen = 0;
+     Node *vp = NULL;
+ #ifdef PRESERVE_PERMISSIONS_SUPPORT
+     uid_t rcs_owner = (uid_t) -1;
+@@ -7421,7 +7456,7 @@
+ 
+ 		for (ln = 0; ln < headlines.nlines; ++ln)
+ 		{
+-		    char buf[80];
++		    char *buf;
+ 		    /* Period which separates year from month in date.  */
+ 		    char *ym;
+ 		    /* Period which separates month from day in date.  */
+@@ -7432,10 +7467,12 @@
+ 		    if (prvers == NULL)
+ 			prvers = vers;
+ 
++		    buf = xmalloc (strlen (prvers->version) + 24);
+ 		    sprintf (buf, "%-12s (%-8.8s ",
+ 			     prvers->version,
+ 			     prvers->author);
+ 		    cvs_output (buf, 0);
++		    free (buf);
+ 
+ 		    /* Now output the date.  */
+ 		    ym = strchr (prvers->date, '.');
+@@ -8620,3 +8657,105 @@
      }
      return label;
-+}
+ }
 +
 +void
 +RCS_setlocalid (arg)
@@ -1311,21 +3678,21 @@
 +	    CVSname = (*pathstore);
 +    }
 +    return CVSname;
- }
++}
 Index: src/rcs.h
-diff -u src/contrib/cvs/src/rcs.h:1.1.1.10 src/contrib/cvs/src/rcs.h:1.10
+diff -u src/contrib/cvs/src/rcs.h:1.1.1.10 src/contrib/cvs/src/rcs.h:1.11
 --- src/contrib/cvs/src/rcs.h:1.1.1.10	Thu Apr 15 10:01:55 2004
-+++ src/rcs.h	Thu Apr 15 10:17:27 2004
++++ src/rcs.h	Tue Jul  6 17:10:38 2004
 @@ -6,6 +6,8 @@
   * specified in the README file that comes with the CVS source distribution.
   * 
   * RCS source control definitions needed by rcs.c and friends
 + *
-+ * FreeBSD: src/contrib/cvs/src/rcs.h,v 1.10 2004/04/15 01:17:27 peter Exp $
++ * FreeBSD: src/contrib/cvs/src/rcs.h,v 1.11 2004/07/06 08:10:38 des Exp $
   */
  
  /* Strings which indicate a conflict if they occur at the start of a line.  */
-@@ -244,6 +246,8 @@
+@@ -244,8 +246,11 @@
  void RCS_deltas PROTO ((RCSNode *, FILE *, struct rcsbuffer *, const char *,
  			enum rcs_delta_op, char **, size_t *,
  			char **, size_t *));
@@ -1333,7 +3700,10 @@
 +void RCS_setlocalid PROTO ((const char *arg));
  char *make_file_label PROTO ((const char *, const char *, RCSNode *));
  
++extern int datesep;
  extern int preserve_perms;
+ 
+ /* From import.c.  */
 Index: src/rcscmds.c
 diff -u src/contrib/cvs/src/rcscmds.c:1.1.1.10 src/contrib/cvs/src/rcscmds.c:1.10
 --- src/contrib/cvs/src/rcscmds.c:1.1.1.10	Thu Apr 15 10:01:55 2004
@@ -1360,15 +3730,15 @@
  
  #include "cvs.h"
 Index: src/server.c
-diff -u src/contrib/cvs/src/server.c:1.1.1.15 src/contrib/cvs/src/server.c:1.21
---- src/contrib/cvs/src/server.c:1.1.1.15	Thu Apr 15 10:01:55 2004
-+++ src/server.c	Thu Apr 15 10:17:27 2004
+diff -u src/contrib/cvs/src/server.c:1.1.1.18 src/contrib/cvs/src/server.c:1.24
+--- src/contrib/cvs/src/server.c:1.1.1.18	Fri Jun 11 04:05:38 2004
++++ src/server.c	Fri Jun 11 04:12:50 2004
 @@ -8,6 +8,10 @@
     MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
     GNU General Public License for more details.  */
  
 +/*
-+ * FreeBSD: src/contrib/cvs/src/server.c,v 1.21 2004/04/15 01:17:27 peter Exp $
++ * FreeBSD: src/contrib/cvs/src/server.c,v 1.24 2004/06/10 19:12:50 peter Exp $
 + */
 +
  #include <assert.h>
@@ -1384,7 +3754,7 @@
      path = xmalloc (strlen (current_parsed_root->directory)
  		   + sizeof (CVSROOTADM)
  		   + 2);
-@@ -5508,7 +5515,10 @@
+@@ -5602,7 +5609,10 @@
         password file.  If so, that's enough to authenticate with.  If
         not, we'll check /etc/passwd. */
  
@@ -1396,16 +3766,39 @@
  				    &host_user);
  
      if (rc == 2)
+Index: src/tag.c
+diff -u src/contrib/cvs/src/tag.c:1.1.1.12 src/contrib/cvs/src/tag.c:1.2
+--- src/contrib/cvs/src/tag.c:1.1.1.12	Thu Apr 15 10:01:55 2004
++++ src/tag.c	Fri Aug  6 02:47:35 2004
+@@ -10,6 +10,8 @@
+  * Add or delete a symbolic name to an RCS file, or a collection of RCS files.
+  * Tag uses the checked out revision in the current directory, rtag uses
+  * the modules database, if necessary.
++ *
++ * FreeBSD: src/contrib/cvs/src/tag.c,v 1.2 2004/08/05 17:47:35 des Exp $
+  */
+ 
+ #include "cvs.h"
+@@ -1199,6 +1201,9 @@
+ 	|| strcmp (name, TAG_HEAD) == 0)
+ 	return;
+ 
++    if (readonlyfs)
++	return;
++
+     /* FIXME: This routine doesn't seem to do any locking whatsoever
+        (and it is called from places which don't have locks in place).
+        If two processes try to write val-tags at the same time, it would
 Index: src/update.c
-diff -u src/contrib/cvs/src/update.c:1.1.1.14 src/contrib/cvs/src/update.c:1.13
---- src/contrib/cvs/src/update.c:1.1.1.14	Thu Apr 15 10:01:55 2004
-+++ src/update.c	Thu Apr 15 10:17:28 2004
+diff -u src/contrib/cvs/src/update.c:1.1.1.15 src/contrib/cvs/src/update.c:1.14
+--- src/contrib/cvs/src/update.c:1.1.1.15	Fri Jun 11 04:05:38 2004
++++ src/update.c	Fri Jun 11 04:12:50 2004
 @@ -31,6 +31,8 @@
   * versions, these are updated too.  If the -d option was specified, new
   * directories added to the repository are automatically created and updated
   * as well.
 + *
-+ * FreeBSD: src/contrib/cvs/src/update.c,v 1.13 2004/04/15 01:17:28 peter Exp $
++ * FreeBSD: src/contrib/cvs/src/update.c,v 1.14 2004/06/10 19:12:50 peter Exp $
   */
  
  #include "cvs.h"
@@ -1467,7 +3860,7 @@
  
      /* free the space Make_Date allocated if necessary */
      if (date != NULL)
-@@ -429,7 +436,7 @@
+@@ -431,7 +438,7 @@
  int
  do_update (argc, argv, xoptions, xtag, xdate, xforce, local, xbuild, xaflag,
  	   xprune, xpipeout, which, xjoin_rev1, xjoin_rev2, preload_update_dir,
@@ -1476,7 +3869,7 @@
      int argc;
      char **argv;
      char *xoptions;
-@@ -445,7 +452,7 @@
+@@ -447,7 +454,7 @@
      char *xjoin_rev1;
      char *xjoin_rev2;
      char *preload_update_dir;
@@ -1485,7 +3878,7 @@
      char *repository;
  {
      int err = 0;
-@@ -460,7 +467,7 @@
+@@ -462,7 +469,7 @@
      aflag = xaflag;
      update_prune_dirs = xprune;
      pipeout = xpipeout;
@@ -1494,7 +3887,7 @@
  
      /* setup the join support */
      join_rev1 = xjoin_rev1;
-@@ -602,7 +609,7 @@
+@@ -604,7 +611,7 @@
  	&& tag != NULL
  	&& finfo->rcs != NULL)
      {
@@ -1503,7 +3896,7 @@
  	if (rev != NULL
  	    && !RCS_nodeisbranch (finfo->rcs, tag))
  	    nonbranch = 1;
-@@ -948,7 +955,7 @@
+@@ -950,7 +957,7 @@
  			     via WriteTag.  */
  			  0,
  			  0,
@@ -1512,19 +3905,19 @@
  	    rewrite_tag = 1;
  	    nonbranch = 0;
  	    Subdir_Register (entries, (char *) NULL, dir);
-@@ -1005,6 +1012,12 @@
- 	    WriteTag (dir, tag, date, 0, update_dir, repository);
- 	    rewrite_tag = 1;
+@@ -1009,6 +1016,12 @@
  	    nonbranch = 0;
-+	}
-+
+ 	}
+ 
 +	/* keep the CVS/Template file current */
 +	if (pull_template) 
 +	{
 +	    WriteTemplate (dir, update_dir);
- 	}
- 
++	}
++
  	/* initialize the ignore list for this directory */
+ 	ignlist = getlist ();
+     }
 Index: src/update.h
 diff -u src/contrib/cvs/src/update.h:1.1.1.4 src/contrib/cvs/src/update.h:1.3
 --- src/contrib/cvs/src/update.h:1.1.1.4	Thu Apr 15 10:01:55 2004
@@ -1547,7 +3940,7 @@
  extern int isemptydir PROTO ((const char *dir, int might_not_exist));
 Index: src/prepend_args.c
 diff -u /dev/null src/gnu/usr.bin/cvs/cvs/prepend_args.c:1.3
---- /dev/null	Fri Apr 16 06:29:14 2004
+--- /dev/null	Fri Oct  6 12:14:41 2006
 +++ src/prepend_args.c	Mon Sep  2 15:09:03 2002
 @@ -0,0 +1,86 @@
 +/* prepend_args.c - utilility programs for manpiulating argv[]
@@ -1638,7 +4031,7 @@
 +}
 Index: src/prepend_args.h
 diff -u /dev/null src/gnu/usr.bin/cvs/cvs/prepend_args.h:1.2
---- /dev/null	Fri Apr 16 06:29:14 2004
+--- /dev/null	Fri Oct  6 12:14:41 2006
 +++ src/prepend_args.h	Mon Sep  2 15:09:03 2002
 @@ -0,0 +1,26 @@
 +/* prepend_args.h - utilility programs for manpiulating argv[]
--- patch-cvs+ipv6 ends here ---


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