Provided by: fhist_1.18-2build1_amd64 bug

NAME

       fhist - file history

SYNOPSIS

       fhist filename...  option...

       fhist -Help

       fhist -VERSion

DESCRIPTION

       The  fhist  program  is used to keep track of the successive versions of a file.  Using this program, you
       can remember all of your changes to a file, and get back any one of the old versions.  The uses  of  this
       ability are:

       1.  You  can  make  a  series of tentative edits to the file, and if necessary back up to the last "good"
           edit.

       2.  You can delete old subroutines and code from your file which are obsolete, but still be able  to  get
           them back in the future in case a need for them arises.

       3.  You can compare two versions of the file to see how you fixed some old problem, so that you can check
           up on the correctness of the fix at a later date.

       4.  You get a record of your remarks for each version, so that you can quickly know what bugs were fixed,
           and what features were implemented.

       5.  The date the file was last edited can be automatically stored in the file.

       The  fhist  program  manipulates  modules.   A  module is simply any text file that you are interested in
       keeping versions of.  For example, a source file doit.c is a module,  and  so  is  a  documentation  file
       howto.doc.   The  module  name  includes  the  suffix  of  the file (as in the above examples).  However,
       pathnames are not part of a module name, so that /usr/dbell/bar.c cannot  be  a  legal  module  name.   A
       module  name  is  limited to 12 characters since the fhist program needs two extra characters for its own
       purpose.

   Keyword Substitution
       It is possible to have information about the state of the file inserted into the file.  See  the  -Modify
       and -No‐Keywords options, below, for more infromation.

OPTIONS

       The following options are understood:

       -Path pathname
               Modules are stored in a directory, called the module storage directory.  The default directory is
               FHIST, and therefore is located relative to your current directory.  This is convenient when  you
               are  in  a  directory  containing many modules, and you want a local storage directory to contain
               just those modules.  If you use the -p option, then you can locate the storage directory anywhere
               you  choose.   This  is  useful  if you choose to have a common storage directory for all of your
               files, independent of where they actually are used.

               The files inside of the storage directory should not be changed by you.  Doing so  will  probably
               corrupt  your edit history, causing errors when you extract old revisions.  For your information,
               though, each module is stored as two files in the directory.  The one with the  .s  suffix  is  a
               copy of the newest version of the module, with one extra line at the beginning.  The one with the
               .e suffix is the edit history of the module, and  contains  the  information  needed  to  extract
               previous  revisions of the module.  Thus if the edit history is ever corrupted, you will at least
               have the most recent version of the module.

       -MaKe_Path
               This option may be used to request that the path directory be created automatically  if  it  does
               not  yet  exist.   This  works  for both the directory specified by the -Path option, and for the
               default.  Intermediate directories will also be created if necessary.

       -BINary This option may be used to specify that the file is binary, that it may contain  NUL  characters.
               It  is essential that you have consistent presence or absence of the -BINary option for each file
               when combined with the -CReate, -Update, -Conditional_Update and -Extract options.  Failure to do
               so  will  produce inconsistent results.  Note: this is different behaviour to the fcomp(1) option
               of the same name.  Note: the -BINary option does not imply the -No‐Keywords option.

       -CReate
               To use the fhist program for  the  first  time,  you  need  to  create  your  storage  directory.
               Therefore,  cd  to  the  directory  where  you  want  it  to  be, which is probably the directory
               containing the modules you want to save the revisions of.  Then create the  directory  FHIST  (or
               some other name if you don't want to use the default name).

               To  start  using  a  module under fhist, you must first use the -CReate option.  This creates the
               initial edit for that module in the storage directory, with the contents of the specified  module
               as the initial edit.  Thus, if you have a source file prog.c, then the command:
                      fhist prog.c -create
               creates  the  initial  edit  of  the  module.   As part of this process, you are asked to provide
               remarks about the file.  These remarks can be  seen  later  using  the  -List  option  (described
               below).   After  the  remarks  have been typed, the contents of the file are then saved.  You can
               then delete the file prog.c if desired, and fhist would be able to recreate it later.  Or you can
               leave it there as the working copy of the module.

               The  -CReate option may be combined with the -Update or -Conditional_Update options to create the
               file if required.

       -Update
               To save another revision of the module, you use the -Update option.  This updates  the  files  in
               the storage directory to include the latest changes.  Remarks are again asked for so that you can
               document why you made this edit.  Thus, to  continue  the  example,  after  editing  prog.c,  the
               command:
                      fhist prog.c -u
               will  save  the changes as a new edit.  This command compares the newest version of the module to
               the previous version, saves the differences in the .e file, and copies the new source to  the  .s
               file.   At  this  point, you can once again delete the prog.c file if desired, and later get back
               either of the two versions of the program.

               The fhist program handles quota or disk full problems during a create or update operation without
               damage  occurring  to  the  edit  history  files.  If an edit cannot be completed because of such
               problems, the edit is backed out completely, and you will get an error  message  about  the  disk
               problem.   There  is  no need for any error recovery in this case, other than retrying the update
               when more disk space is available.  The fhist program also disables signals during  the  critical
               file  operations,  so  you  do not have to worry about damaging the edit history files because of
               attempts to quit out of the program.

               The -CReate option may be combined with the -Update or -Conditional_Update options to create  the
               file if required.

       -Input filename
               In  either  the  -CReate  or  -Update  options, the file containing the new version of the module
               defaults to the same name as the module.  In the example,  the  module  prog.c  was  created  and
               updated  from  the data in the file prog.c.  When you wish the data to come from some other file,
               you can use the -Input option, which specifies the input file to use for the data.  For  example,
               if you wanted to update prog.c, but from a filename called newprog.c, then the command:
                      fhist prog.c -u -i newprog.c
               would save a new revision of module prog.c, but with the data that was in the file newprog.c.  In
               this case, the file prog.c does not have to exist, and isn't referenced even  if  it  did  exist.
               Again, once the update is complete, you could delete the newprog.c file if desired and then later
               you can retrieve its contents.

       -Remarks
               Remarks can be read from a file instead of from the terminal.  The -Remarks option can be used to
               specify  a  file  name  containing  the remarks.  If there is no file name following the -Remarks
               option, then no remarks at all are used.  The command:
                      fhist prog.c -u -r
               would create a new revision of prog.c without asking for or saving any remarks about the edit.

       -Remark_String text
               It is also possible to specify the remarks directly on the command line.  You may only  use  this
               option once.

       -Extract [ edit ]
               To  retrieve  a  previous  revision  of  a module, you specify the name of the module and use the
               -Extract option to specify the edit  number  you  want  retrieved.   Edit  numbers  are  assigned
               sequentially  starting  with  1.   Thus  the initial version of the module has edit number 1, the
               first revision has edit number 2, and so on until the latest revision.  If the -Extract option is
               not  used,  or  if  no  edit number is supplied for it, then the latest edit number is extracted.
               Therefore, this is the default action if no options at all are specified.

               Edit numbers can also be zero, negative, or be a name with an optional offset.  The  number  zero
               represents  the latest edit number, and negative numbers indicate edit numbers backwards from the
               latest edit number.  Edit names represent edit numbers whose name had been set by using the -Name
               option.   For example, if edit number 10 was associated with the name foo, then the edit name foo
               represents 10, foo‐4 represents edit number6, and foo+2 represents edit number 12.   The  special
               reserved  names  oldest  and  newest refer to the oldest and newest versions of the module in the
               edit history.

               As an example of retrievals, assume that you have saved ten versions of the module  prog.c.   The
               following commands will then extract the versions of the file with the specified edit numbers:

               fhist prog.c
                       version 10 (the latest)

               fhist prog.c -e 9
                       version 9 (the version just prior)

               fhist prog.c -e oldest
                       version 1 (the oldest version)

               fhist prog.c -e -2
                       version 8 (latest version - 2)

               The  output  filename  is  again  defaulted  to  the  module  name.  So when the module prog.c is
               extracted, the specified version of the module is written to the prog.c file.

               In order to prevent accidental overwriting of a file, the fhist program will by default  ask  you
               if  overwriting  is  permitted if that would occur.  A common mistake is to edit prog.c, and then
               try to update the module, but forget to specify the -u option.  Then the fhist program would  try
               to  extract  the  newest version of the module, and thus overwrite the file with the new changes.
               Asking the question allows you to notice your mistake, and prevent the overwriting.

       -Output filename
               You can change the output filename using the -Output option.  Thus, the command:
                      fhist prog.c -o newprog.c
               will extract the latest version of the module prog.c, and put it into the file  newprog.c.   Once
               again, the file "prog.c" is ignored, whether or not it existed.

       -Force_Write
               This  option  will  force  overwriting  of  the  file,  thus  never  asking you if overwriting is
               permitted.  This is often useful in shell scripts,  or  when  you  are  sure  that  you  want  to
               overwrite any existing file.

       -No_Write
               This  option is the no‐overwrite option, and will cause any existing files to not be overwritten,
               again without asking you.  This is useful if you  already  have  some  of  the  modules  in  your
               directory,  and  you  want  to  extract  the rest of the modules without overwriting the ones you
               already have.  Specifying both -Fore_Write and -No_Write is an error.

       -Terminal [ edit ]
               This option is used to output an extracted module to the standard output, instead of  writing  it
               to  a file.  This is useful in order to view the beginning of a version of the file.  This can be
               interrupted if you do not want to see the whole file.

       -Modify number
               When extracting a file, the fhist program looks for and updates special  character  sequences  in
               the  first  few  lines of the file.  These special sequences are used for documentation purposes,
               such as describing the edit number the file is from.  For speed of extraction and updating, these
               sequences  are  usually  limited  to the first 25 lines of the file, since the fhist program then
               does not have to examine the entire file.  The -Modify option can be used to change the number of
               lines  to be modified from the default value of 25.  Specifying zero totally disables the special
               character sequences, whereas specifying a very large  number  will  cause  the  sequences  to  be
               checked for each line of the file (and thus slow the fhist program down).

               Each  special  sequence  is  of the form [# keyword value, keyword value, ..., keyword value #] ,
               where each keyword describes an item, and each value is the value for the preceding keyword.  The
               keywords  can  be  in upper or lower case, or both.  The single space following the [#, following
               each comma, and preceding the #] must be present.  If the sequence is wrong, an  unknown  keyword
               is  used,  the  line is longer than 200 characters, or more than four keywords are used, then the
               whole line will not be changed.  The current keywords which can be used are the following:

               edit    The edit number

               date    The date that the edit was created

               user    The user name of the user who created the edit

               module  The module name

               In order to use this special character sequence, you simply insert it into your module inside  of
               a  comment  (within the first few lines).  When this is done, the value parts of the sequence can
               be null.  For example, if you want to put a special sequence into a program called delete.c, then
               you could edit the first few lines as follows:
                      /*
                       * Delete - program to delete files
                       * [# Edit, Date #]
                       */
               When  an  extract  is done, the proper edit number and date are automatically inserted as the new
               values.  Thus, if you extract edit 23 of the module delete.c which had been created on  8  August
               89, then the resulting file would begin:
                      /*
                       * Delete - program to delete files
                       * [# Edit 23, Date 8‐Aug‐89 #]
                       */

               When  updating a module, it is never necessary to edit these sequences, as any old values will be
               removed and replaced with the new ones.  Also, when  using  the  -d  or  -du  options  (described
               below),  lines  with  these sequences compare as if the values were null, and thus will not cause
               spurious differences.

               During an update, the special character sequences are read and any edit value found  is  compared
               against  the  current  edit  number  of the module.  If they differ, then the update fails.  This
               provides an interlock check for the case of two users extracting the  same  version  of  a  file,
               editing  it, and then both updating it without knowledge of each other.  In this case, the second
               user would fail, and then he can merge his edits with the previous user's edit and then retry the
               update.   This checking is disabled if there is no special character sequence containing the edit
               keyword, the edit number value is null, or if the -Forced_Update option is used to indicate  that
               the check is not needed.

       -No_Keywords
               This  option  may be used to disable the use of the keyword special character sequences described
               above.  Text containing keyword sequences is treated  as  plain  text.   Note:  the  -No_Keywords
               option does not imply the -BINary option.

       -Name string
               This  option  is  used  to  associate a name for the newest version of a module.  It can be given
               along with the -CReate, -Update, or -Difference_Update options, to specify a  name  for  the  new
               version  of the module.  It can also be given by itself in order to specify a name for the newest
               version of a module.  Each edit number can have many names associated with it, so this  will  not
               remove any previously defined name for the edit.  This option is useful to correlate many modules
               together.  For example, when a new version of a program is ready to be released, you  could  give
               each  module  of  the  program  the same name release1.  Then in the future, you can recreate the
               sources making up that release by extracting the edits with the name release1 for  every  module.
               Edit  names  cannot  begin  with  a  digit,  and cannot contain plus or minus signs.  These rules
               prevent ambiguous parsing of edit numbers for the -Extract, -Terminal, -ALL, and -List options.

       -List [ edit1 [ edit2 ]]
               This option prints a list of edits for the module, giving the user name, date, user remarks,  and
               names  specified  for  the  edits.   If no edit number is supplied, then all edits are printed in
               reverse order.  If a single edit number is supplied, then only that edit number is  printed.   If
               two  edit  numbers  are  supplied, then all edits in the specified range are printed.  The output
               from this option defaults to the terminal.  You can use the -Output option to save the results to
               a file.

       -Difference [ edit1 [ edit2 ]]
               This  option is used to display the differences between two versions of a module, or a file and a
               version of a module.  There are three modes for this action, depending on how many  edit  numbers
               are supplied.  These modes are illustrated by the following examples:

               fhist foo.c -d
                       Compare latest version against file "foo.c"

               fhist foo.c -d 3
                       Compare version 3 against file "foo.c"

               fhist foo.c -d 3 4
                       Compare version 3 against version 4

               This  option  accepts  the  -Input  option  to  specify  the file to be compared.  When using the
               -Difference option, the output defaults to the terminal.  Therefore, you must use -Output if  you
               wish  the  differences  saved  to a file.  Using -Quick with -Difference will only output a quick
               summary of the changes, instead of the detailed changes.  This summary only supplies  the  number
               of  lines  inserted, deleted, and unchanged between the files.  Using -What with -Difference will
               display all of both files, showing in detail what the differences are using change bars.

               The -Difference option may need to write one or two temporary  files  in  order  to  extract  old
               versions  of  a  module  to be compared.  These files have names like T$n_nnn .  They are deleted
               again just before differences are output, so that stopping the output before it is complete  will
               not  leave these files around.  The temporary files are usually written to the current directory.
               If this is not reasonable because of permission or quota  problems,  then  you  can  specify  the
               directory  for writing the temporary files into.  This is done by defining the TMPDIR environment
               variable to be the path of the directory.

       -Difference_Update
               This option combines the effects of  the  -Difference  and  -Update  options.   It  displays  the
               differences  between a file and the latest version of a module.  If there are any differences, it
               then proceeds to perform an update of the module with that file, asking  for  remarks  as  usual.
               This  option  is  very  useful  when used with wildcarded module names.  Then you can update just
               those modules which were changed by an edit session, and see the changes for each  module  before
               typing the appropriate remark for each module.

               You  may  specify  both  of the -Difference and -Update options, or you may use this option.  The
               results are identical.

       -Conditional_Update
               This option conditionally updates a module.  That is, it will only do an update if there are  any
               differences  between  a file and the latest version of a module.  This is convenient when related
               changes are made to many modules in a directory, and one command using wildcards can update  just
               those modules that were changed.

               The  -CReate option may be combined with the -Update or -Conditional_Update options to create the
               file if required.

       -CLean
               This option is used to remove files which match the newest versions of modules.  If a file exists
               which  matches  the  newest  version of a module, then the file is deleted, otherwise it is kept.
               This option is used to clean up a work directory after building a new version of a product.  This
               option  is  especially  useful  when  used  with the -ALL option.  It will also accept the -Input
               option to specify a directory containing the files to be cleaned.

       -CHeck
               This option is used to find out if a file does not match the latest version of a module.  If  so,
               a  message  is  given.   If the file does match, no output occurs.  This option is thus useful to
               determine which files have been modified and in need of updating.  The -ALL option  is  defaulted
               for this option, since it is usually used for all modules.  For example,
                      fhist -CHeck
               will  report  on  all files which are different than the latest modules.  If -Quick is specified,
               then the output will consist of the module names with no other output.  This is  useful  for  the
               backquote  operator  in  shell  scripts  for  referencing the modules which are out of date.  The
               -CHeck option will also accept the -Input option.

       -PRune edit
               This option is used to permanently remove early edits from an edit history.  This  is  useful  if
               you  wish to cut down on the amount of disk space taken by an edit history file, or when you want
               to start another release of a file, and want a copy  of  the  edit  history  file  for  that  new
               release.   The  option  takes  an edit number to preserve, and all edits in the edit history file
               before that edit are deleted, and can no longer be referenced.  For example,  to  keep  only  the
               current edit plus the previous 10 edits of the module file, you could use the command:
                      fhist file -prune -10
               Since  the  -PRune option is unrecoverable (unless backup files are available), the fhist program
               asks the user to verify that the prune is really wanted.  The -Forced_Update option can  be  used
               to bypass this verification.

       -ALL
               This  option  can be used with any of the action options.  It means perform the operation for all
               modules in the module storage directory.  Alternatively, you can specify multiple module names on
               the  command line, and the actions will be performed with those modules.  You cannot specify both
               -ALL and module names.

               When using multiple modules or the -ALL option, the -Input and -Output options  have  a  slightly
               different  meaning.   In these cases, the -Input and -Output arguments are a directory name which
               contains filenames with the same name as the module names.  If the argument is not  a  directory,
               then an error is given.  This feature is useful for example, to extract all the modules and place
               them into some remote directory, as in:
                      fhist -all -e -o tempdir

               You should be careful when specifying numeric edit numbers for multiple modules.  Most  probably,
               a  particular edit number is not appropriate for multiple modules, since changes corresponding to
               a particular edit number are not usually related.  Using named edits avoids these  problems.   As
               an example, if you wanted to extract every module which had an edit that was named rev3, then you
               could use the command:
                      fhist -all -e rev3

               Some other useful examples of commands which use multiple modules are:
                      fhist *.c -create
                      fhist -check -all
                      fhist -cu -all

       -Verbose
               This option can be specified with any other action, and  outputs  status  information  about  the
               progress of the action.  This is useful for debugging of problems, or just for amusement when the
               system is slow or a large file is being processed.  It accepts a numeric argument to indicate the
               verbosity for output.  The levels are as follows:

               0   No output at all (except for errors).

               1   Single‐line output describing action (default).

               2   Detailed status as action proceeds.

       -Help
               Give some help on how to use the fhist program.

       -VERSion
               Show what version of fhist is running.

       All  options may be abbreviated; the abbreviation is documented as the upper case letters, all lower case
       letters and underscores (_) are optional.  You must use consecutive sequences of optional letters.

       All options are case insensitive, you may type them in upper case or lower case or a combination of both,
       case is not important.

       For  example:  the  arguments "-help, "-HELP" and "-h" are all interpreted to mean the -Help option.  The
       argument "-hlp" will not be understood, because consecutive optional characters were not supplied.

       Options and other command line arguments may be mixed arbitrarily on the command line.

       The GNU long option names are understood.  Since all option names for fhist are long, this means ignoring
       the extra leading '-'.  The "-option=value" convention is also understood.

FILE NAME EXPANSION

       As  a  convenience,  if a pathname begins with a period and a environment variable exists with that name,
       then the value of the environment variable will be used as  the  actual  pathname.   For  example,  if  a
       environment variable of .FOO has the value this.is.a.long.name, then the command
              fhist -o .FOO
       is actually equivilant to the command
              fhist -o this.is.a.long.name
       If  you  want  to  prevent  the  expansion  of a pathname which begins with a period, then you can use an
       alternate form for the pathname, as in:
              fhist -o ./.FOO

BINARY FILES

       In general, fhist can handle all text files you  throw  at  it,  even  international  text  with  unusual
       encodings.  However, fhist is unable to cope elegantly with files which contain the NUL character.

       The  fcomp(1)  program  simply  prints  a  warning,  and continues, you need to know that it converts NUL
       characters into an 0x80 value before performing the comparison.

       The fmerge(1) program also converts the NUL character to an 0x80 value before merging, after  a  warning,
       and any output file will contain this value, rather than the original NUL character.

       The  fhist(1)  program, however, generates a fatal error if any input file contains NUL characters.  This
       is intended to protect your source files for unintentional  corruption.   Use  -BINary  for  files  which
       absolutely must contain NUL characters.

EXIT STATUS

       The  fhist  program  will  exit with a status of 1 on any error.  The fhist program will only exit with a
       status of 0 if there are no errors.

REFERENCES

       This program is based on the algorithm in
              An O(ND) Difference Algorithm and  Its  Variations,  Eugene  W.  Myers,  TR  85‐6,  10‐April‐1985,
              Department of Computer Science, The University of Arizona, Tuscon, Arizona 85721.
       See also:
              A  File  Comparison  Program,  Webb  Miller and Eugene W. Myers, Software Practice and Experience,
              Volume 15, No. 11, November 1985.

COPYRIGHT

       fhist version 1.18.D001
       Copyright (C) 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003,  2004,  2005,
       2006, 2008, 2009 Peter Miller;

       This program is derived from a work
       Copyright (C) 1990 David I. Bell.

       This  program  is  free  software;  you  can  redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU
       General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License,  or
       (at your option) any later version.

       This  program  is  distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even
       the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the GNU General  Public
       License for more details.

       You  should  have  received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program. If not, see
       <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.

AUTHORS

       Peter Miller       Web:   http://miller.emu.id.au/pmiller/
       /\/\*           E‐Mail:   pmiller@opensource.org.au

       David I. Bell      Web:   http://www.canb.auug.org.au/~dbell
                       E‐Mail:   dbell@canb.auug.org.au