Provided by: simple-revision-control_1.26-2_all bug

NAME

       src - simple revision control

SYNOPSIS

       src [command] [revision-spec] [file...]

DESCRIPTION

       SRC (or src) is simple revision control, a version-control system for single-file projects
       by solo developers and authors. It modernizes the venerable RCS, hence the anagrammatic
       acronym. The design is tuned for use cases like all those little scripts in your "~/bin"
       directory, or a directory full of single-file HOWTOs.

       SRC revision histories are single, human-readable files beneath a hidden ".src"
       subdirectory in the directory where they live. There may be multiple histories under one
       directory; SRC treats them as separate projects, and history files can be moved elsewhere
       at any time.

       SRC gives you simple, consecutive integer revision numbers. It supports tags and
       branching. It does not show committer information, because the committer is always you.
       The command set is intended to look familiar if you have ever used Subversion, Mercurial,
       or Git.

       SRC is lightweight and fast. It uses two small self-contained executables, with no
       libraries and no complications.

       SRC interprets the EDITOR variable in the usual way, using it to spawn an editor instance
       when you perform a commit or amend.

       SRC is fully supported in Emacs VC mode.

COMMAND SUMMARY

       A "revision" is a 1-origin integer, or a tag name designating an integer revision, or a
       branch name designating the tip revision of its branch. Revision numbers always increase
       in commit-date order.

       A revision range is a single revision, or a pair of revisions "M-N" (all revisions
       numerically from M to N) or "M..N" (all revisions that are branch ancestors of N and
       branch successors of M).

       If SRC complains that your revision spec looks like a nonexistent filename, you can prefix
       it with "@" (this is always allowed). "@" by itself means the current (checked-out)
       revision.

       Unless otherwise noted under individual commands, the default revision is the tip revision
       on the current branch and the default range is all revisions on the current branch.

       The token "--" tells the command-line interpreter that subcommands, switches, and
       revision-specs are done - everything after it is a filename, even if it looks like a
       subcommand or revision number.

       src help [command]
           Displays help for commands.

       src commit [-|-m string|-f file|-e] [file...]
           Enters a commit for specified files. Separately to each one. A history is created for
           the file if it does not already exist. With -, take comment text from stdin; with -m
           use the following string as the comment; with -f take from a file. With -e, edit even
           after -, -f or -m. "ci" is a synonym for "commit".

       src amend [-|-m string|-f file|-e] [revision] [file...]
           Amends the stored comment for a specified revision, defaulting to the latest revision
           on the current branch. Flags are as for commit. "am" is a synonym for "amend".

       src checkout [revision] [file...]
           Refresh the working copy of the file(s) from their history files. "co" is a synonym
           for "checkout".

       src cat [revision] [file...]
           Send the specified revision of the files to standard output.

       src status [-a] [file...]
           "A" = added, "=" = unmodified, "M" = modified, "!" = missing, "?" = not tracked, "I" =
           ignored, "L" = locked (recover with "src checkout"). The "A" and "L" statuses should
           only occur if you have used RCS directly on a file. Normally "?" and "I" files are not
           listed; this changes if you either give the -a switch or specify which files to look
           at. "st" is a synonym for "status".

       src tag [list|-l|create|-c|delete|del|-d] [name] [revision] [file...]
           List tags, create tags, or delete tags. Create/delete takes a revision, defaulting to
           the current branch tip. List defaults to all revisions.

       src branch [list|-l|create|-c|delete|del|-d] [name] [file...]
           List, create, or delete branches. When listing, the active branch is first in the
           list. The default branch is "trunk". Create/delete takes a singleton revision,
           defaulting to the current branch tip. List defaults to all revisions, including 0 (the
           trunk root phantom revision).

       src rename [tag|branch] [oldname] [newname] [file...]
           Rename a tag or branch. Refuses to step on an existing symbol or rename a nonexistent
           one. "rn" is a synonym for "rename".

       src list [(-<n>|-l <n>)] [-f fmt] [revision-range] [file...]
           Sends summary information about the specified commits to standard output. The summary
           line tagged with "*" is the state that the file would return to on checkout without a
           revision-spec. See help list for information about custom formats. Use -<n> or -l <n>,
           where <n> is a number, to limit the listing length. Default range is the current
           branch, reversed. "li" is a synonym for "list".

       src log [-v] [(-<n>|-l <n>)] [(-p|-u|-c) [-b|-w]] [revision-range] [file...]
           Sends log information about the specified commits to standard output. Use -<n> or -l
           <n>, where <n> is a number, to limit the listing length. Default range is the current
           branch, reversed. The --patch, -p or -u option additionally sends a unified format
           diff listing to standard output for each revision against its immediate ancestor
           revision; -c emits a context diff instead. When generating a diff, -b ignores changes
           in whitespace, and -w ignores all whitespace. Histories imported via fast-import (when
           not using its -p option) have RFC-822-style headers inserted into the log comment to
           preserve metadata not otherwise representable in SRC, such as distinct author and
           committer identifications and dates. These headers are normally suppressed by log,
           however, -v shows a summarized view of important headers; -v -v shows all headers
           as-is.

       src diff [(-u|-c) [-b|-w]] [revision-range] [file...]
           Sends a diff listing to standard output. With no revision spec, diffs the working copy
           against the last version checked in. With one revno, diffs the working copy against
           that stored revision; with a range, diff between the beginning and end of the range.
           The actual difference generation is done with diff(1). The default diff format is -u
           (unified), but if you specify a -c option after the verb a context diff will be
           emitted.  -b ignores changes in the amount of whitespace, and -w ignores all
           whitespace. "di" is a synonym for "diff".

       src ls
           List all registered files.

       src visualize
           Emit a DOT visualization of repository structures. To use this, install the graphviz
           package and pipe the output to something like "dot -Tpng | display -". "vis" is a
           synonym for "visualize".

       src move old new
           Rename a workfile and its history. Refuses to step on existing workfiles or histories.
           "mv" is a synonym for "move".

       src copy old new
           Copy a file and its master. Refuses to step on existing files or masters. "cp" is a
           synonym for "copy".

       src fast-export [revision-range] [file...]
           Export one or more projects as a Git fast-import stream. For a history originally
           imported from elsewhere, author and committer identification is gleaned from the
           RFC-822-style headers inserted into the commit comment by fast-import (if its -p
           option was not used). Otherwise, this information is copied from your Git
           configuration.

       src fast-import [-p] [files...]
           Parse a git-fast-import stream from standard input. The modifications for each
           individual file become separate SRC histories. Mark, committer and author data, and
           mark cross-references to parent commits, are preserved in RFC-822-style headers on log
           comments unless the -p (plain) option is given, in which case this metadata is
           discarded. Give arguments to restrict the files imported.

       src release [file...]
           Release locks on files. This is never necessary in a normal workflow, which will be
           repeated edit-commit cycles, but it may be handy if you have to interoperate with
           other tools that expect RCS masters to be in their normal (unlocked) state.

       src srcify Move a directory from being RCS- or SCCS-managed to being SRC-managed. That is:
       if the current directory contains an RCS directory, rename it to .src (but leave any SCCS
       directory in place). Then check out all masters for editing that are not already checked
       out.

       src version
           Report the versions of SRC, the underlying Python, and the back end.

       The omission of "src remove" is a deliberate speed bump.

       If no files are specified, all eligible files are operated on in sequence.

NOISE CONTROL

       Silence is golden. When you have selected only one file to operate on, and the command is
       not a report generator (status, cat, log, list, fast-export, the listing modes of tag and
       branch, ls) you will see a reply only if the operation failed.

       Other commands (commit, checkout, tag creation and deletion) give you a success message
       per file when operating on multiple files, so you will not be in doubt about which
       operation succeeded. This behavior can be suppressed with the -q option, placed before the
       subcommand word.

       If your directory contains a file named ".srcignore", each line that is neither blank nor
       begins with a "#" is interpreted as an ignore pattern. It is expanded with glob(3), and
       files in the expansion are omitted from src status - unless the file is named as an
       argument, of the status command, in which case its status is "I". Thus, for example, a
       line reading "*.html" will cause all files with an HTML extension to be omitted from the
       output of "src status", but the output of src status * will list them with status "I".

BACKWARD COMPATIBILITY

       SRC history files are (normally) RCS master files. SRC maintains no permanent state other
       than these files.

       SRC takes over the little-used "description" field of RCS (and SCCS) master files to store
       some state that makes status checks faster. If you try to use SRC to edit a pre-existing
       RCS- or SCCS-registered file with a non-empty description field, SRC will refuse to step
       on the old description; you must clear it manually.

       In order to maintain complete backwards compatibility, one other compromise was made: any
       commit comment containing a string exactly matching an RCS log delimiter (a long string of
       "-" characters) will be rejected as malformed.

       The RCS back end will be automatically selected when there is an ".src" or "RCS"
       subdirectory.

       You can explicitly select the RCS back end by making the first command keyword on the src
       command line be rcs. This should only be necessary when your working directory contains
       two or more of the subdirectories ".src", "RCS", and "SCCS".

       By default, history files are kept in a hidden subdirectory named ".src". But if you have
       an RCS subdirectory and no ".src", SRC will quietly operate on the files in the RCS
       directory in a completely backward-compatible way.

WORKING WITH SCCS

       Using SCCS as a back end is also supported, with some limits due to missing features in
       SCCS implementations:

       ·   SCCS tags are an SRC-only extension that won’t be visible from SCCS running natively.

       ·   All commands relating to branches throw an error in the SCCS back end.

       ·   In CSSC SCCS, src cat does not necessarily pipe out binary data correctly. This has
           been fixed in the SunOS and Schilling versions.

       ·   The exec bit is not propagated between master and workfile. This has been fixed in the
           SunOS and Schilling versions.

       ·   The CSSC and SunOS SCCS backends have a Y2.1K problem that SRC cannot effectively work
           around and will probably not be fixed. The Schilling version has repaired this.

       The SCCS back end will be automatically selected when there is an "SCCS" subdirectory and
       no ".src" or "RCS" subdirectory.

       You can explicitly select the SCCS back end by making the first command keyword on the src
       command line be sccs. This should only be necessary when your working directory contains
       none or two or more of the subdirectories ".src", "RCS", and "SCCS".

       Working with SCCS requires an "SCCS" subdirectory; SRC will quietly create one, if
       required, then operate on the files in the "SCCS" directory in a completely
       backward-compatible way.

       Fast-import to SCCS is not supported.

       The SCCS mode is not recommended unless you have a specific need to work with legacy SCCS
       repositories. Up-converting them to something less Paleolithic would be a better idea; in
       truth, the SCCS support exists mainly because it’s hilarious (for obscure hacker values of
       hilarious).

DEBUGGING OPTIONS

       These will be of interest mainly to developers.

       A -d (debug) option before the main command word turns on debugging messages. Just one
       "-d" gives you complete visibility about what commands the back end is running. It can be
       repeated for higher debugging levels that expose more of src’s internal computation.

       A -S (sandbox) option can be used to set the repository directory to something other than
       its default of ".src".

       A -T option sets up an artificial clock that ticks once on each revision and fixes the
       user information to be used in fast-export; It also attributes all commits to "J. Random
       Hacker". It is for regression testing.

REQUIREMENTS

       SRC is written in Python and requires 2.7 or later; it will run under Python 3.x for x >
       2.

       If you wish to use the RCS support (recommended), the RCS tools at version 5.7 or later
       must be installed and accessible in your path.

       If you wish to use the SCCS support, some implementation of SCCS must be accessible. GNU’s
       CSSC (Compatibly Stupid Source Control) will work; so will the SunOS and Schilling forks
       of AT&T SCCS.

       The rcs-fast-import(1) tool at version 1.0 or later is required to support the src
       fast-import command.

       src will die gracefully with a useful error message when it fails due to a missing back
       end.

LIMITATIONS

       Branch deletions change the revision numbers of revisions downstream of the branch join.

       To avoid some confusing error cases, src will bail out if both .src and RCS directories
       exist.

       In src fast-export dumps of repositories with tags, branch labels may not exactly match
       what git fast-export would emit.

REPORTING BUGS

       Report bugs to Eric S. Raymond <esr@thyrsus.com>. The project page is at
       http://catb.org/~esr/src

SEE ALSO

       rcs(1), rcs-fast-import(1), sccs(1), svn(1), git(1), dot(1).

                                            08/16/2019                                     SRC(1)