On Fri, Oct 27, 2000 at 10:48 -0400, Larry Jones wrote:
> Gerhard Sittig writes:
> >
> > You pushed me in the right direction! Although -n means "don't
> > actually do it", I found out about the (general) -R option for
> > "the repo is on a ro medium".
>
> There's no such option in standard CVS -- you should use -n (which
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
> means ``don't modify stuff on the disk'', not ``don't do it'', and also
> frequently means ``don't bother locking''.
What does that mean? I researched this on a FreeBSD 4.1 system with
----- cvs --version ---------------------------------------------
Concurrent Versions System (CVS) 1.10.7 (client/server)
Copyright (c) 1989-1998 Brian Berliner, david d `zoo' zuhn,
Jeff Polk, and other authors
CVS may be copied only under the terms of the GNU General Public License,
a copy of which can be found with the CVS distribution kit.
Specify the --help option for further information about CVS
----- cvs --version ---------------------------------------------
The manpage has no hint about any customization or "difference to
the original". Should I expect to not everywhere find what I'm
getting used to working with this program in this environment?
Until now I thought the "$FreeBSD$" macro to be the only special
thing about this version. Where can I learn about those
"issues"? And should there be any kind of flag in the --version
output as soon as any patch not in the "standard distro" went in?
I'm sorry to ask this here on the list, but I don't have success
to any other platform with another 1.10.7 cvs from here.
PS: Having "cvs -n diff | ... >> $FILE" does its job as well in
the $CVSEDITOR script. :)
virtually yours 82D1 9B9C 01DC 4FB4 D7B4 61BE 3F49 4F77 72DE DA76
Gerhard Sittig true | mail -s "get gpg key" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
--
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