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sccs-delta(1) |
User Commands |
sccs-delta(1) |
sccs-delta, delta - make a delta to an SCCS file
/usr/ccs/bin/delta
[-dfhknopsz]
[-g
sid-list
|
-gsid-list
]
[-m
mr-list
|
-mmr-list
]
[-q
[nsedelim]]
[-r
sid
|
-rsid
]
[-y
[comment]]
[-D
diff-file]
[-X
extended-options]
[-N
bulk-spec]
s.filename...
The delta utility checks in a record of the line-by-line differences made
to a checked-out version of a file under SCCS control. These changes
are taken from the writable working copy that was retrieved using the SCCS
get command (see sccs-get(1)). This working copy does not have the
`s.' prefix, and is also referred to as a g-file.
If a directory name is used in place of the s.filename
argument, the delta command applies to all s.files in that
directory. Unreadable s.files produce an error; processing continues
with the next file (if any). The use of `−' as the
s.filename argument indicates that the names of files are to be read
from the standard input, one s.file per line (requires -y, and
in some cases, -m).
delta may issue prompts on the standard output depending
upon the options specified and the flags that are set in the s.file
(see sccs-admin(1), and the -m and -y options below,
for details).
The following options are supported:
- -b
- Use command bdiff(1) instead of fsdiff(1). This version of
delta(1) by default uses fsdiff(1) that is faster than
bdiff(1) and does not slow down as much with larger file size.
- -d
- Use command diff(1) instead of bdiff(1). Returns exit status
2 instead of 1 if the s.filename argument is
not specified.
- -f
- In NSE mode, this option allows to enforce a delta even when no
p.file exists. The new SID is assigned using the same rules
as with get -e.
This option is usually used together with the -q and
-n options.
This option is an undocumented SUN extension that does
not exist in historic sccs implementations.
- -h
- In NSE mode, this option allows to use diffh(1) for large files.
This option is currently defunct.
This option is an undocumented SUN extension that does
not exist in historic sccs implementations.
- -k
- Suppresses expansion of ID keywords when delta(1) is doing
an implicit get(1) operation because -N+... was
specified.
This option is a SCHILY extension that does not exist
in historic sccs implementations.
- -n
- Retain the edited g-file, which is normally removed at the
completion of processing.
- -p
- Display line-by-line differences (in diff(1) format) on the
standard output.
- -q[nsedelim]
- Enable NSE mode. If NSE mode is enabled, several NSE
related extensions may be used. In this release, the value of
nsedelim is ignored.
In NSE mode, delta behaves as if the -o option
was specified and never issues a warning about missing id
keywords.
This option is an undocumented SUN extension that does
not exist in historic sccs implementations.
- -s
- Silent. Do not display warning or confirmation messages. Do not suppress
error messages (which are written to standard error).
- -g sid-list | -gsid-list
- Specify a list of deltas to omit when the file is accessed at the
SCCS version ID (SID) created by this delta. This
causes the file to be checked out later to differ from the checked in file
unless `get -isid-list' with the same sid-list is
specified during checkout. sid-list is a comma-separated list of
SIDs. To specify a range of deltas, use a `−'
separator instead of a comma, between two SIDs in the list.
- -m mr-list | -mmr-list
- If the SCCS file has the v flag set (see sccs-admin(1)), you
must supply one or more Modification Request (MR) numbers for the new
delta. When specifying more than one MR number on the command line,
mr-list takes the form of a quoted, space-separated list. If
-m is not used and the standard input is a terminal, delta
prompts with `MRs? ' for the list (before issuing the
`comments? ' prompt). If the v flag in the s.file has
a value, it is taken to be the name of a program to validate the MR
numbers. If that validation program returns a non-zero exit status,
delta terminates without checking in the changes.
- -o
- Use the original time of the edited file for the delta time when applying
the delta. In NSE mode this is the default behavior.
This option is a SCHILY extension that does not exist
in historic sccs implementations.
- -r sid | -rsid
- When two or more versions are checked out, specify the version to check
in. This SID value can be either the SID specified on the
get command line, or the SID of the new version to be
checked in as reported by get. A diagnostic results if the
specified SID is ambiguous, or if one is required but not
supplied.
- -y[comment]
- Supply a comment for the delta table (version log). A null comment is
accepted, and produces an empty commentary in the log. If -y is not
specified and the standard input is a terminal, delta prompts with
`comments? '. An unescaped NEWLINE terminates the comment.
- -z
- Enable CMF extensions for MR number handling.
This option is an undocumented SUN extension that does
not exist in historic sccs implementations.
- -Cdir
- Specify the base directory for the g-file relative to the current
working directory. By default, the g-file is searched for in the
current directory (independent from the location of the
s.file.
This option is a SCHILY extension that does not exist
in historic sccs implementations.
- -Ddiff-file
- Provide a file with prepared diff output to delta(1). If this
option is present, delta(1) will not get the previous file content
and call diff(1) on the previous file content and the current file
content, but read the diff-file instead.
This option is a SCHILY extension that does not exist
in historic sccs implementations.
- -Nbulk-spec
- Processes a bulk of SCCS history files. This option allows to do an
efficient mass processing of SCCS history files.
The bulk-spec parameter is composed from an optional
list of flag parameters followed by an optional path
specifier.
The following flag types are supported:
- +
- If bulk-spec is preceded by a `+', delta(1) removes
the original g-files and replaces them by file content that is retrieved
by a get(1) operation on the related s.file. This
option is ignored if -n has been specified.
- space
- This is a placeholder dummy flag that allows to use a prepared string for
the -N option and to replace the space character by one of the
supported flags on demand.
The following path specifier types are supported:
- -N
- The file name parameters to the delta command are not
s.filename files but the names of the g-files. The
s.filename names are automatically derived from the g-file names by
prepending s. to the last path name component. Both,
s.filename and the g-file are in the same directory.
- -Ns.
- The file name parameters to the delta command are s.filename
files. The the g-files names are automatically derived by removing
s. from the beginning of last path name component of the
s.filename. Both, s.filename and the g-file are in the same
directory.
- -Ndir
- The file name parameters to the delta command are not
s.filename files but the names of the g-files. The
s.filename names are put into directory dir, the names are
automatically derived from the g-file names by prepending
dir/s. to the last path name component.
- -Ndir/s.
- The file name parameters to the delta command are s.filename
files in directory dir. The the g-files names are automatically
derived by removing dir/s. from the beginning of last path
name component of the s.filename.
A typical value for dir is SCCS.
In order to overcome the limited number of exec(2)
arguments, it is recommended to use `−' as the file name
parameter for delta(1) and to send a list of path names to
stdin.
This option is a SCHILY extension that does not exist in
historic sccs implementations.
- -Xextended-options
- Specify extended options. The argument extended-options may be a
comma separated list of extended option names.
The following extended options are supported, they may be
abbreviated as long as the abbreviation is still unique:
- date=datetime
- Allows to overwrite the usual methods to determine the time stamp used for
a new delta. This is needed to e.g. convert a historic SCCS history into a
new project oriented bundle history. The format of the datetime
argument is the same as for cutoff times but nanoseconds and a time zone
offset are permitted in addition.
- gpath=g-path
- Specify a different path to the g-file instead of deriving the path
from the s-file using an algorithm that may not apply in a specific
case. This option is needed to manage the changeset file.
- nobulk
- Disables the -N (bulkmode) filename translations. This is needed to
disable a -N option that is automatically added by sccs(1)
in NewMode and would otherwise make it impossible to deal with the
changeset file ``.sccs/SCCS/s.changeset''.
- mail=address
- Set address as e-mail address in the delta table for the SID
just created.
- prepend
- Prepend the current content of the g-file to the previous content
of that file. With this option, there is no need to unpack the old
reference version and to diff the current version against that old
version. This causes a major performance win that is used for updating the
sccschangeset(4) file when in project mode.
- user=name
- Use a different user name for the programmer field in the delta
table. By the default, the logname is used for this field. Using a
different name may however later deny the permission to modify a delta by
programs like cdc(1).
- 0
- When reading filenames from stdin, triggered by a file name
argument `-', the filename separator is a null byte instead
of a newline. This allows to use long lists with arbitrary
filenames.
- help
- Print a short online help for available options.
The -X option is a SCHILY extension that does not
exist in historic sccs implementations.
- -V
- -version
- --version
- Prints the delta version number string and exists.
This option is a SCHILY extension that does not exist
in historic sccs implementations.
See environ(5) for descriptions of the following
environment variables that affect the execution of delta(1):
LANG, LC_ALL, LC_COLLATE, LC_CTYPE,
LC_MESSAGES, and NLSPATH.
- SCCS_NO_HELP
- If set, delta(1) will not automatically call help(1) with
the SCCS error code in order to print a more helpful error message.
Scripts that depend on the exact error messages of SCCS commands should
set the environment variable SCCS_NO_HELP and set LC_ALL=C.
If the -s option was not specified, delta prints
statistics about file activities in the following format:
new-sid
nn inserted
nn deleted
nn unchanged
The following exit values are returned:
- 0
- Successful completion.
- 1
- An error occurred and the -d option had not been specified.
- 2
- An error occurred, the -d option had been specified, and the
s.filename argument was not specified.
- d.file
- temporary file created by the delta(1) program with the content of
the previous version, used to compute differences to the current version
- e.file
- temporary file to hold an uuencoded version of the g-file in case
of an encoded history file
- p.file
- permission (lock) file for checked-out versions. See sccs-get(1)
for a description of the layout of the p.file.
- q.file
- temporary copy of the p.file; renamed to the p.file after
completion
- s.file
- SCCS history file, see sccsfile(4).
- x.file
- temporary copy of the s.file; renamed to the s.file after
completion
- z.file
- temporary lock file contains the binary process id in host byte order
followed by the host name
- dump.core
- If the file dump.core exists in the current directory and a fatal
signal is received, a coredump is initiated via abort(3).
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
ATTRIBUTE
TYPE |
ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
Availability |
SUNWsprot |
sccs(1), sccs-add(1), sccs-admin(1), sccs-branch(1),
sccs-cdc(1), sccs-check(1), sccs-clean(1),
sccs-comb(1), sccs-commit(1), sccs-create(1),
sccs-cvt(1), sccs-deledit(1), sccs-delget(1),
sccs-diffs(1), sccs-edit(1), sccs-editor(1),
sccs-enter(1), sccs-fix(1), sccs-get(1),
sccs-help(1), sccs-histfile(1), sccs-info(1),
sccs-init(1), sccs-istext(1), sccs-ldiffs(1),
sccs-log(1), sccs-print(1), sccs-prs(1),
sccs-prt(1), sccs-rcs2sccs(1), sccs-remove(1),
sccs-rename(1), sccs-rmdel(1), sccs-root(1),
sccs-sact(1), sccs-sccsdiff(1), sccs-status(1),
sccs-tell(1), sccs-unedit(1), sccs-unget(1),
sccs-val(1), bdiff(1), diff(1), fsdiff(1),
what(1), sccschangeset(4), sccsfile(4),
attributes(5), environ(5), standards(5).
Use the SCCS help command for explanations (see sccs-help(1)).
Lines beginning with an ASCII SOH character (binary 001) cannot be placed
in the SCCS file if the SCCS v4 history file format is used,
unless the SOH is escaped. This character has special meaning to
SCCS (see sccsfile(4)) and produces an error in SCCS v4
mode. SCCS v6 automatically escapes such characters and thus allows to
use ASCII SOH at any place in a file.
If delta(1) is used in force mode (using `delta -q -f -n
s.file'), using the option -gsid-list
in addition will result in unexpected behavior. This is because the
file content used for delta(1), differs from what is extracted
using get(1). As in force delta mode, get(1) is usually not
used, the next delta will revert the effect of the `delta -g...'
call.
The SCCS suite was originally written by Marc J. Rochkind at Bell Labs in
1972. Release 4.0 of SCCS, introducing new versions of the programs
admin(1), get(1), prt(1), and delta(1) was
published on February 18, 1977; it introduced the new text based
SCCS v4 history file format (previous SCCS releases used
a binary history file format). The SCCS suite was later maintained by
various people at AT&T and Sun Microsystems. Since 2006, the SCCS
suite is maintained by Joerg Schilling.
A frequently updated source code for the SCCS suite is included in the
schilytools project and may be retrieved from the schilytools
project at Sourceforge at:
http://sourceforge.net/projects/schilytools/
The download directory is:
http://sourceforge.net/projects/schilytools/files/
Check for the schily-*.tar.bz2 archives.
Less frequently updated source code for the SCCS suite is
at:
http://sourceforge.net/projects/sccs/files/
Separate project informations for the SCCS project may be
retrieved from:
http://sccs.sf.net
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