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sccs(CP)


sccs -- front end for the Source Code Control System (SCCS) subsystem

Syntax

sccs [-r] [-d prefixpath ] [-p sccspath] command [options] [file ... ]

Description

The sccs(CP) command is a front end to various commands in the Source Code Control System (SCCS) subsystem, a tool to track changes in a file.

The database files, or SCCS files, are kept by default in a subdirectory named ``SCCS'' in the current directory. sccs prefixes the string "SCCS/s." to its file argument before it passes the file argument to its command argument. This prefix may be customized using options -p and -d, or the environment variable PROJECTDIR.

The command argument can be one of the pseudo-commands or SCCS commands listed separately in the ``Pseudo-commands'' and ``SCCS commands'' subsections. Options and option arguments specific to the command being used must appear after the command argument and are passed to command by sccs(CP). Options to sccs itself must appear before the command argument.

Options

sccs(CP) supports three options, -r, -d, and -p.

-r
Run command as the real user, not as the effective user that sccs has been set to through setuid(S). Not every user can run command through sccs with setuid, as this would allow anyone to change the file authorizations. Those commands that are always run as the real user include admin, check, clean, diffs, info, rmdel, and tell.

-d prefixpath
Use prefixpath, instead of the current directory, as the root directory of the pathname for the SCCS files. If the environment variable PROJECTDIR is set, this option overrides the value set in that environment variable. See also -p below.

-p sccspath
Use sccspath, instead of SCCS, as the pathname of the directory in which the SCCS files are kept. Before sccs passes the modified filename to its command argument, it will insert sccspath before the final component of the argument file. For example, when the command:

sccs -p sccspath get b/file

is used in the directory /a, sccspath will be inserted before file and the command passed to the system is converted to:

get /a/b/sccspath/s.file

Without the -p option, the command passed to the system is:

get /a/b/SCCS/s.file

The difference between the -d and -p options is that prefixpath is prefixed to the entire pathname and sccspath is inserted before the final component of the pathname. If the sccs command is used with the -d option in the directory /a:

sccs -d /x get b/file

the pathname of the current directory /a is replaced by the prefix /x and the command passed to the system is:

get /x/b/SCCS/s.file

The options -d and -p can also be used together as in:

sccs -d /x -p sccspath get b/file

The command passed to the system from this sccs command is:

get /x/b/sccspath/s.file

Pseudo-commands

Several pseudo-commands are supported. These pseudo-commands can be used as the command argument to sccs. Options for these pseudo-commands should be given in the options argument to sccs, following command.

check
If there is any file being checked out for editing, check returns a non-zero exit status and prints a listing of files being edited. This is equivalent to info below. It is different from info only when nothing is being edited: check prints nothing and returns a zero exit status. This can be an useful install entry in a makefile in order to make sure that all changes are saved in the SCCS file before a version is installed.

clean
Remove all files from the current directory that can be reconstructed from SCCS files. Normally, files checked out for editing are not removed even if no changes have been made yet. However, branch deltas checked out for editing will be removed if option -b is used. Use this option carefully if branches are also kept in the current directory, because changes made to these branches since the last get will be lost.

create
Create a new SCCS file in the SCCS directory for each named file. Any valid option for admin is valid for create. The text from the file file constitutes the first delta of the SCCS file and the original file, file, will be renamed by prefixing its basename with a comma (,). Remove these renamed files after all SCCS files have been created successfully. Note that no subsequent get is performed on any SCCS files created.

delget
For each named file, first perform a delta and then a get. By default, the get is not for editing and the new version of the files will have their ID keywords expanded. Options -m, -p, -r, -s and -y given to delget will be passed to delta and options -b, -c, -e, -i, -k -l, -s and -x given to delget will be passed to get.

deledit
This is the same as delget, except that the get is for editing by default (get -e). deledit passes the same options to delta as delget does; except for -e, deledit passes all other options that delget passes to get to edit, another pseudo-command described below.

diffs
Compare the current version of the file being edited with the versions stored in the SCCS file. Options that can be given to diffs and passed to get are -r, -c, -i, -x and -t. Other options are passed to diff(C). These include -e, -f -h and -b.

edit
Check out a file for editing. This is the same as get -e.

fix -r SID
Remove the named delta from the SCCS file and keep a copy in the current directory. The file kept has all the changes that were in the removed delta. The -r option is required for fix. No audit trail is left by fix. Use it carefully.

info
Print a listing of all files being edited. Use the option -b to ignore branches in the listing. In other words, if the option -b is used, at most two components of SIDs are displayed in the listing. Use the option -u user to display a listing of all files being edited by the named user. The option -U is the same as -u current_user.

print
Print verbose information about the named files. print is the same as prs passed to sccs.

tell
Print a listing of all files being edited, one line per filename. Options -b, -u and -U may be used as in info and check. For example, to examine the changes made to all files being edited:

sccs diffs `sccs tell -U`

or to delta all files being edited:

sccs delta `sccs tell -U`


unedit
Discard any changes made to a file being edited since the last edit command (or get -e). No subsequent get is performed on the file.

SCCS Commands

The following SCCS commands can be passed to the SCCS front end, sccs. Options for these SCCS commands should be given in the options argument to sccs, following command. For descriptions of these options, see the manual pages for each individual command. Below is the usage summary of these SCCS commands.

admin
Create new SCCS files or change parameters of existing SCCS files. For creating new SCCS files, it is perhaps easier to use sccs create. Use sccs admin for other administrative tasks on existing SCCS files.

delta
Make a delta (change) to an SCCS file retrieved for editing.

get
Retrieve a version of an SCCS file. When the option -e is used, the ID keywords in the file are not expanded. The retrieved file may be edited and the changes made to the file saved later by delta. The sccs pseudo-commands sccs delget or sccs deledit combine the delta and get commands into one.

prs
Print information about an SCCS file.

rmdel
Remove a delta from an SCCS file. The delta to be removed must not be the SID of the next delta if the file is currently checked out for editing.

sact
Print a summary of editing activity for named files. The information includes the SID of the delta that currently exists in the SCCS file and the SID of the next delta, the date and time when the command get -e was executed, and the user who executed the command.

unget
Discard changes made to a file that is checked out for editing.

val
Validate parameters, such as SID and the %M% and %Y% keywords, stored in SCCS files.

what
Display identification information formed by expanding the ID keyword %Z%.

Environment variables

Several environment variables may be used to change the default behavior of sccs and provide a default value for prefixpath. Additional environment variables may also be used to change the default behavior of specific SCCS commands. For descriptions of these additional environment variables, see the manual pages for each individual command. Listed below are environment variables used with sccs:

LANG
Set the default value for all internationalization variables (of the form LC_*) that are either null or have not been set a value. The default value for LANG is taken from the system configured default locale, and this default value is used if LANG is null or has not been set. See locale(M) for how to set a system default locale. If any one of the internationalization variables has been set incorrectly, sccs treats all these internationalization variables as if they have not been set.

LC_ALL
If LC_ALL has been set to a non-empty string, it is the locale used for all other internationalization variables even when they are set.

LC_CTYPE
Use this locale in mapping sequences of bytes (in both arguments and input text files) to characters. The mapping follows the character classifications defined in the named locale.

LC_MESSAGES
Use this locale for standard error messages. The conventions are defined by the message catalogs for this locale. Both the format and contents of diagnostic messages may be affected by LC_MESSAGES.

NLSPATH
A pathname template for message catalogs.

PROJECTDIR
The default value for prefixpath. If PROJECTDIR is an absolute pathname (starts with a slash), it is used as prefixpath. If it is a relative pathname, sccs will first treat PROJECTDIR as a username and search in that user's home directory for a subdirectory named src or source. If such a subdirectory exists, the name of that directory will be used by sccs as prefixpath. Otherwise, sccs will use the value of PROJECTDIR for prefixpath. For example, if a user johns has a src directory under his home directory /u/johns:

/u/johns/src

and PROJECTDIR has been set to johns, the command:

sccs get prog.c

will be converted to:

get /u/johns/src/SCCS/s.prog.c

regardless of the directory in which the sccs command is issued.

Exit values

The sccs command returns an exit value of 0 if no error occurred, otherwise it returns a value greater than zero.

Diagnostics

See the description for the specified command.

Examples

  1. This example shows how to put a file named prog.c under SCCS control for the first time. First create an SCCS subdirectory if it does not exist, and then enter the file into the SCCS database, as in:

    mkdir SCCS
    sccs create prog.c

    After verifying that prog.c has been entered successfully, remove the back up copy of the file whose name now starts with a comma:

    rm ,prog.c

  2. This example shows how to get a copy of prog.c for editing, edit the file using the vi(C) editor, and then check it back into the SCCS database, getting a read-only version of the file for later use:

    sccs edit prog.c
    vi prog.c
    sccs delget prog.c

  3. This example shows how to update a large number of SCCS database files which all have the same change in this delta, and get a read-only copy for each of the files:

    sccs delget *.c < reason

    The text file, reason, describes the change that has been made, and provides delta with the comment text directly. The user is not asked interactively for the delta comments at the comments? prompt in this example.

Files


/usr/bin/sccs

See also

admin(CP), chmod(C), delta(CP), get(CP), locale(M), make(CP), prs(CP), rmdel(CP), sact(CP), setuid(S), unget(CP), val(CP), what(CP)

Standards conformance

sccs is conformant with: X/Open CAE Specification, Commands and Utilities, Issue 4, 1992
© 2005 The SCO Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
SCO OpenServer Release 6.0.0 -- 02 June 2005