I've been using ...

cvs rdiff -s -r 0 . | grep 'Diffing'

to get a directory list of the repository..  I know it's a hack but it seems to
work good....

GaRy....

Dave Sherohman wrote:
> 
> On Fri, May 05, 2000 at 11:29:17AM -0600, Win32 M$ wrote:
> > Agree, it should. Or, should we have 'cvs ls' and 'cvs cd' and 'cvs pwd' to
> > "walk" the tree in the repository?
> 
> I like that solution.  (We already have 'cvs rm', after all...)
> 
> > This question comes back again and again simply because it is so very
> > natural and obvious to try to walk the tree in the repository that I think
> > everybody is shocked when they discover for the first time that is't not
> > available in CVS.
> 
> I sure was.  For that matter, I still am.
> 
> On the one hand, I can see the security (albeit purely by obscurity) factor
> in not allowing people to find out about projects other than by being
> explicitly told about them (either by direct contact ("Hey, Joe - grab the
> doc project!") or by putting them in CVSROOT/modules).  On the other hand,
> though, there's the nuisance factor of having to do the telling.
> 
> --
> The Shortest Windows Manual:  "Turn off the power switch."
> Geek Code 3.1:  GCS d- s+: a- C++ UL++$ P+>+++ L++>++++ E- W--(++) N+ o+ !K
> w---$ O M- !V PS+ PE Y+ PGP t 5++ X+ R++ tv- b++ DI++++ D G e* h+ r++ y+

-- 
Gary Pinkham                           
Reasoning, Inc.                         
One New England Executive Park          
Burlington, MA 01803                    Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to