My version of RCS is 5.7. I am not sure if I downloaded it from the Purdue site (https://www.cs.purdue.edu/homes/trinkle/RCShome/) or if it is the binaries that were included with CS-RCS. (I think on one PC it is the former, and on the other it is the latter.)
I haven't had any version control after CS-RCS stopped working. (Not much coding lately. I have been creating manual backups, i.e. foo v1.4.txt.) CS-RCS saves files in the standard RCS format. When I set CS-RCS up, I chose a network drive as my repository because it gets backed up regularly. Now, trying RCS commands in a CMD prompt doesn't seem to find network locations. That is why I am looking for the correct syntax for specifying both the work file and RCS file. On Mon, Jun 4, 2018 at 12:33 PM, Thien-Thi Nguyen <[email protected]> wrote: > > () Jerry Griep <[email protected]> > () Mon, 4 Jun 2018 19:06:31 +0100 > > ci -l c:\my_dir\foo.txt \\my_server\my_stuff\c\my_dir\foo.txt,v > ci -l \\my_server\my_stuff\c\my_dir\foo.txt,v > ci -l \\my_server\my_stuff\c\my_dir\foo.txt,v c:\my_dir\foo.txt > > None of these work (given that I am currently in C:\my_dir). > RCS complains that it can't find the file(s). > > Which version of RCS are you using? (Use ‘rcs --version’ to > find out, if on 5.8 or later, otherwise ‘rcs -V’.) > > How about specifying working file name w/o dir: > > ci -l foo.txt > > Or RCS file name w/o dir: > > ci -l foo.txt,v > > If I create C:\my_dir\RCS, rcs commands work with this > structure. So I know that rcs is installed, and working > properly. > > OK, that's good to know. > > [used to use CS-RCS] > > Interesting. Is CS-RCS basically RCS? > > -- > Thien-Thi Nguyen ----------------------------------------------- > (defun responsep (query) ; (2018) Software Libero > (pcase (context query) ; = Dissenso Etico > (`(technical ,ml) (correctp ml)) > ...)) 748E A0E8 1CB8 A748 9BFA > --------------------------------------- 6CE4 6703 2224 4C80 7502 > >
