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PROGRAM:

NAME


aegis copy file - copy a file into a change

SYNOPSIS


aegis -CoPy_file [ option... ] filename...
aegis -CoPy_file -INDependent [ option... ] filename...
aegis -CoPy_file -List [ option... ]
aegis -CoPy_file -Help

DESCRIPTION


The aegis -CoPy_file command is used to copy a file into a change. The named files will
be copied from the baseline into the development directory, and added to the list of
files in the change. The version of files copied from the baseline is remembered.

This command may be used to copy tests into a change, not just source files. Tests are
treated just like any other source file, and are subject to the same process.

Warning: If there are files in the development directory of the same name they will be
overwritten by this command.

You may also name directories. All of the source files in the directories named, and all
directories below them, will be copied from the baseline into the development directory,
and added to the list of files in the change.

When copying files explicitly, it is an error if the file is already part of the change.
When you name a directory, all of the source files in the project below that directory
are copied, except any which are already in the change. It is an error if none of the
files implicitly named by the directory can be used.

If you want to change a copied source file to be executable (shell scripts, for example)
then you simply use the normal chmod(1) command; the reverse to make it not executable.
If any of the file's executable bits are set at aede(1) time the file is remembered as
executable and all execute bits (minus the project's umask) will be set by subsequent
aecp(1) commands.

File Name Interpretation
The aegis program will attempt to determine the project file names from the file names
given on the command line. All file names are stored within aegis projects as relative
to the root of the baseline directory tree. The development directory and the
integration directory are shadows of this baseline directory, and so these relative names
apply here, too. Files named on the command line are first converted to absolute paths
if necessary. They are then compared with the baseline path, the development directory
path, and the integration directory path, to determine a baseline-relative name. It is
an error if the file named is outside one of these directory trees.

The -BAse_RElative option may be used to cause relative filenames to be interpreted as
relative to the baseline path; absolute filenames will still be compared with the various
paths in order to determine a baseline-relative name.

The relative_filename_preference in the user configuration file may be used to modify
this default behavior. See aeuconf(5) for more information.

Process Side Effects
This command will cancel any build or test registrations, because adding another file
logically invalidates them. If the project configuration file was added, any diff
registration will also be canceled.

When the change files are listed (aegis -List Change_Files -TERse) the copied files will
appear in the listing. When the project files are listed with an explicit change number
(aegis -List Project_Files -TERse -Change N) none of the change's files, including the
copied files, will appear in the terse listing. These two features are very helpful when
calling aegis from within a DMT to generate the list of source files.

THE BASELINE LOCK


The baseline lock is used to ensure that the baseline remains in a consistent state for
the duration of commands which need to read the contents of files in the baseline.

The commands which require the baseline to be consistent (these include the aeb(1),
aecp(1) and aed(1) commands) take a baseline read lock. This is a non-exclusive lock, so
the concurrent development of changes is not hindered.

The command which modifies the baseline, aeipass(1), takes a baseline write lock. This
is an exclusive lock, forcing aeipass(1) to block until there are no active baseline read
locks.

It is possible that one of the above development commands will block until an in-progress
aegis -Integrate_PASS completes. This is usually of short duration while the project
history is updated. The delay is essential so that these commands receive a consistent
view of the baseline. No other integration command will cause the above development
commands to block.

When aegis' branch functionality is in use, a read (non-exclusive) lock is taken on the
branch baseline and also each of the "parent" baselines. However, a baseline write
(exclusive) lock is only taken on the branch baseline; the "parent" baselines are only
read (non-exclusive) locked.

TEST CORRELATIONS


The “aegis -Test -SUGgest” command may be used to have aegis suggest suitable regression
tests for your change, based on the source files in your change. This automatically
focuses testing effort to relevant tests, reducing the number of regression tests
necessary to be confident that you have not introduced a bug.

The test correlations are generated by the “aegis -Integrate_Pass” command, which
associates each test in the change with each source file in the change. Thus, each
source file accumulates a list of tests which have been associated with it in the past.
This is not as exact as code coverage analysis, but is a reasonable approximation in
practice.

The aecp(1) and aenf(1) commands are used to associate files with a change. While they
do not actively perform the association, these are the files used by aeipass(1) and
aet(1) to determine which source files are associated with which tests.

Test Correlation Accuracy
Assuming that the testing correlations are accurate and that the tests are evenly
distributed across the function space, there will be a less than 1/number chance that a
relevant test has not been run by the “aegis -Test -SUGgest number” command. A small
amount of noise is added to the test weighting, so that unexpected things are sometimes
tested, and the same tests are not run every time.

Test correlation accuracy can be improved by ensuring that:

· Each change should be strongly focused, with no gratuitous file inclusions. This
avoids spurious correlations.

· Each item of new functionality should be added in an individual change, rather than
several together. This strongly correlates tests with functionality.

· Each bug should be fixed in an individual change, rather than several together. This
strongly correlates tests with functionality.

· Test correlations will be lost if files are moved. This is because correlations are by
name.

The best way for tests to correlate accurately with source files is when a change
contains a test and exactly those files relating to the functionality under test. Too
many spurious files will weaken the usefulness of the testing correlations.

Notification
The copy_file_command in the project config file is run, if set. The project_file_‐
command is also run, if set, and if there has been an integration recently. See
aepconf(5) for more information.

File Action Adjustment
When this command runs, it first checks the change files against the projects files. If
there are inconsistencies, the file actions will be adjusted as follows:

create If a file is being created, but another change set is integrated which also
creates the file, the file action in the change set still being developed will be
adjusted to "modify".

modify If a file is being modified, but another change set is integrated which removes
the file, the file action in the change set still being developed will be
adjusted to "create".

remove If a file is being removed, but another change set is integrated which removes
the file, the file will be dropped from the change set still being developed.

OPTIONS


The following options are understood:

-BAse_RElative
This option may be used to cause relative filenames to be considered relative to
the base of the source tree. See aeuconf(5) for the corresponding user
preference.

-CUrrent_RElative
This option may be used to cause relative filenames to be considered relative to
the current directory. This is usually the default. See aeuconf(5) for the
corresponding user preference.

-BRanch number
This option may be used to specify a different branch for the origin file, rather
than the baseline. (See also -TRunk option. Please Note: the -BRanch option
does not take a project name, just the branch number suffix.

-GrandParent
This option may be used to specify the grandparent branch (one up from the
current branch) for the origin file, rather than the baseline. (The -grandparent
option is the same as the “-branch ..” option.)

-Change number
This option may be used to specify a particular change within a project. See
aegis(1) for a complete description of this option.

-DELta number
This option may be used to specify a particular delta in the project's history to
copy the file from, rather than the most current version. If the delta has been
given a name (see aedn(1) for how) you may use a delta name instead of a delta
number. It is an error if the delta specified does not exist. Delta numbers
start from 1 and increase; delta 0 is a special case meaning “when the branch
started”.

-DELta_Date string
This option may be used to specify a particular date and time in the project's
history to copy the file from, rather than the most current version. It is an
error if the string specified cannot be interpreted as a valid date and time.
Quote the string if you need to use spaces.

-DELta_From_Change number
This option may be used to specify a particular project delta from its change
number.

-Help
This option may be used to obtain more information about how to use the aegis
program.

-INDependent
This option is used to specify that the copy is to be run independent of any
particular change. The files will be copied relative to the current directory.

-Keep
This option may be used to retain files and/or directories usually deleted or
replaced by the command. Defaults to the user's delete_file_preference if not
specified, see aeuconf(5) for more information.

-No_Keep
This option may be used to ensure that the files and/or directories are deleted
or replaced by the command. Defaults to the user's delete_file_preference if not
specified, see aeuconf(5) for more information.

-List
This option may be used to obtain a list of suitable subjects for this command.
The list may be more general than expected.

-Not_Logging
This option may be used to disable the automatic logging of output and errors to
a file. This is often useful when several aegis commands are combined in a shell
script.

-Output filename
This option may be used to specify an output file of a file being copied from the
baseline. Only one baseline file may be named when this option is used. The
file name "-" is understood to mean the standard output. This option does not
add the file to the set of change files. No locks are taken when this option is
used, not even the baseline read lock.

-OverWriting
This option may be used to force overwriting of files. The default action is to
give an error if an existing file would be overwritten.

-Project name
This option may be used to select the project of interest. When no -Project
option is specified, the AEGIS_PROJECT environment variable is consulted. If
that does not exist, the user's $HOME/.aegisrc file is examined for a default
project field (see aeuconf(5) for more information). If that does not exist,
when the user is only working on changes within a single project, the project
name defaults to that project. Otherwise, it is an error.

-Read_Only
This option may be used to specify that the file is to be used to insulate the
change from the baseline. The user does not intend to edit the file. These
files must be uncopied before development may end.

-REScind
This option may be used to rescind (roll back) a completed change. The change to
rescind (roll back) is specified in the usual way, with one of the --delta
options.

-TERse
This option may be used to cause listings to produce the bare minimum of
information. It is usually useful for shell scripts.

-TRunk
This option may be used to specify the project trunk for the origin file, rather
than the baseline. (See also -BRanch option, the -trunk option is the same as
the “-branch -” option.)

-Verbose
This option may be used to cause aegis to produce more output. By default aegis
only produces output on errors. When used with the -List option this option
causes column headings to be added.

-Wait This option may be used to require Aegis commands to wait for access locks, if
they cannot be obtained immediately. Defaults to the user's lock_wait_preference
if not specified, see aeuconf(5) for more information.

-No_Wait
This option may be used to require Aegis commands to emit a fatal error if access
locks cannot be obtained immediately. Defaults to the user's
lock_wait_preference if not specified, see aeuconf(5) for more information.

See also aegis(1) for options common to all aegis commands.

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 "-project, "-PROJ" and "-p" are all interpreted to mean the
-Project option. The argument "-prj" 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,
after the function selectors.

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

RECOMMENDED ALIAS


The recommended alias for this command is
csh% alias aecp 'aegis -cp \!* -v'
sh$ aecp(){aegis -cp "$@" -v}

ERRORS


It is an error if the change is not in the being developed state.
It is an error if the change is not assigned to the current user.
It is an error if the file is already in the change and the -OverWrite option is not
specified.

EXIT STATUS


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

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES


See aegis(1) for a list of environment variables which may affect this command. See
aepconf(5) for the project configuration file's project_specific field for how to set
environment variables for all commands executed by Aegis.

EXAMPLES


Here are some simple examples. Remember that most commands are relative to the current
directory, even though these examples assume you are at the base of the development
directory tree.

Copy Whole Project
To copy the whole project into your change, use the command
aecp .
The trailing dot is part of the command, it means "the currect directory and everything
below it". This works for any directory in your project source tree, if you want to be
more seledctive.

Prroduce Earlier Project Version
You you wish to exactly reproduces the sources for an earlier version of your project,
you need to know the edelta number (use ael proj-history to find it). Then use this
command:
aecp -delta n .
where n is the delta number from the project history. Again, the trailing dot is part of
the command. By using the $version substitution (see aesub(5) for more information) you
can embed this delta number into your program before distributing it.

It is also possible to give a previous change number, instead, using this command:
aecp -delta-from-change n .
where n is the change number of interest. Again, the trailing dot is part of the
command.

Rescind a Change
When you need to rescind (back out) a completed change, it will probably have been some
time ago, so you need to know the delta number or change number. Use this command:
aecp -delta n -rescind .
where n is the delta number of interest. All of the other -delta variantrs also work, so
if you know the change number, you can be more selective about which files to copy:
aecp -delta-from-change n `aegis -l cf -ter -c n`
where n is the change number of interest. This only copies the files which were in the
offending change.

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