Tim Cook writes: > > I wanted to see what changes were made between each label so I attempted to > get a specific > release using "cvs co -r blah00 ..." and "cvs co -r blah01 ..." so I could > do a comparison between them.
It would be a lot simpler to use "cvs diff" with two -r options. > What I actually got checked out was different from what I expected. I'd > assumed if I specified a tag > ie "-r blah01" then I would get all versions with that tag. What I seemed > to get was the latest versions > on that branch. It's possible that blah01, etc. are also branch tags rather than revision tags, but it's hard to tell without more information. What does "cvs status -v" say about one of the files that doesn't behave as you expected? -Larry Jones I sure wish I could get my hands on some REAL dynamite. -- Calvin _______________________________________________ Info-cvs mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mail.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/info-cvs
