The label collectively identifies the files and their individual revisions. The label alone is useless in an audit.
Bert > -----Original Message----- > From: Donald Sharp [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Sent: Friday, October 31, 2003 4:11 PM > To: Katherine King > Cc: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]' > Subject: Re: revision/version numbers > > > Why do you need this? What is important is the label! > > If you can't convince them that it's not terribly important > pull a workspace over the release label and do a cvs status -R > and parse the output. > > donald > On Fri, Oct 31, 2003 at 03:56:47PM -0500, Katherine King wrote: > > Hi, > > > > I am pretty much a beginner to CVS, but somehow "becoming" > the expert on the > > team, and this is now causing me to need to ask for some > help. We have a > > CVS repository, and we are working with branches and tags, > no problem. But > > we need a little more information about revision numbers > for the quality > > assurance team. I have been able to get this for the main > branch by locking > > the tree - this shows the version/revision numbers (cvs > admin -l), but I > > need the version/revision numbers for all the files with a > certain tag. Is > > there a way to do this? > > > > Sorry if this is a silly question, but I haven't been able > to find it. > > > > Thanks > > Kate > > > > > > _______________________________________________ > > Info-cvs mailing list > > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > http://mail.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/info-cvs > > > _______________________________________________ > Info-cvs mailing list > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > http://mail.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/info-cvs > _______________________________________________ Info-cvs mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mail.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/info-cvs