sccs - Online in the Cloud

This is the command sccs that can be run in the OnWorks free hosting provider using one of our multiple free online workstations such as Ubuntu Online, Fedora Online, Windows online emulator or MAC OS online emulator

PROGRAM:

NAME


sccs — front end for the SCCS subsystem

SYNOPSIS


sccs [-r] [-d path] [-T] [-V] [--version] [-p path] [--prefix=path] [--cssc] command [flags]
[file ...]

DESCRIPTION


Sccs is a front end to the SCCS programs that helps them mesh more cleanly with the rest of
UNIX. It also includes the capability to run “set user id” to another user to provide
additional protection (but see the section entitled BUGS).

Basically, sccs runs the command with the specified flags and args. Each argument is
normally modified to be prepended with “SCCS/s.”.

Flags to be interpreted by the sccs program must be before the command argument. Flags to
be passed to the actual SCCS program must come after the command argument. These flags are
specific to the command and are discussed in the documentation for that command.

Besides the usual SCCS commands, several “pseudo-commands” can be issued. These are:

edit Equivalent to “get -e”.

delget Perform a delta on the named files and then get new versions. The new versions
will have id keywords expanded, and will not be editable. The -m, -p, -r, -s, and
-y flags will be passed to delta, and the -b, -c, -e, -i, -k, -l, -s, and -x flags
will be passed to get.

deledit Equivalent to delget except that the get phase includes the -e flag. This option
is useful for making a checkpoint of your current editing phase. The same flags
will be passed to delta as described above, and all the flags listed for get above
except -e and -k are passed to edit.

create Creates an SCCS file , taking the initial contents from the file of the same name.
Any flags to admin are accepted. If the creation is successful, the files are
renamed with a comma on the front. These should be removed when you are convinced
that the SCCS files have been created successfully.

fix Must be followed by a -r flag. This command essentially removes the named delta,
but leaves you with a copy of the delta with the changes that were in it. It is
useful for fixing small compiler bugs, etc. Since it doesn't leave audit trails,
it should be used carefully.

clean This routine removes everything from the current directory that can be recreated
from SCCS files. It will not remove any files being edited. If the -b flag is
given, branches are ignored in the determination of whether they are being edited;
this is dangerous if you are keeping the branches in the same directory.

unedit This is the opposite of an edit or a “get -e”. It should be used with extreme
caution, since any changes you made since the get will be irretrievably lost.

info Gives a listing of all files being edited. If the -b flag is given, branches
(i.e., SID´s with two or fewer components) are ignored. If the -u flag is given
(with an optional argument) then only files being edited by you (or the named user)
are listed.

check Like info except that nothing is printed if nothing is being edited, and a non-zero
exit status is returned if anything is being edited. The intent is to have this
included in an install entry in a makefile to insure that everything is included
into the SCCS file before a version is installed.

tell Gives a newline-separated list of the files being edited on the standard output.
Takes the -b and -u flags like info and check.

diffs Gives a diff listing between the current version of the program(s) you have out for
editing and the versions in SCCS format. The -r, -c, -i, -x, and -t flags are
passed to
get; the -l, -s, -e, -f, -h, -u, -n, -w, and -b options are passed to diff. The
-a, -B, -d, -H, -p, -q, -s, -v, and -y options are passed to diff but these options
are (usually) specific to GNU diff, and so may not be supported on systems other
than GNU. The -C flag is passed to diff as -c.

print This command prints out verbose information about the named files.

Certain commands (such as admin) cannot be run “set user id” by all users, since this would
allow anyone to change the authorizations. These commands are always run as the real user.

--cssc Returns a zero exit value (for the GNU version only). No other operation is
performed. This flag is used by the test suite to determine if it needs to
use the --prefix flag in order to find the correct subprograms (non-GNU
versions of sccs have the full pathnames for the subprograms hard-coded). In
this way, the CSSC test suite can be compiled ready for installation in a
particular directory, but the test suite can still be run before the suite has
been installed in its final position. This option is supported only by the
GNU version of sccs.

--prefix=foo Uses foo as the prefix for SCCS sub-commands. The default prefix is compiled
into the program and is usually “/usr/sccs”. You can discover the prefix
setting with the -V flag. This prefix is used without a final slash being
appended, so values like “/usr/local/bin/cssc-” can be used. This option is
disallowed if the program is installed setuid, and it is supported only by the
GNU version of sccs. This option is not equivalent to the -p flag.

--version Show version information; synonymous with the -V flag.

-r Runs sccs as the real user rather than as whatever effective user sccs is “set
user id” to.

-d Specifies a root directory for the SCCS files. The default is the current
directory. If environment variable PROJECTDIR is set, it will be used to
determine the -d flag.

-p Defines the pathname of the directory in which the SCCS files will be found;
“SCCS” is the default. The -p flag differs from the -d flag in that the -d
argument is prepended to the entire pathname and the -p argument is inserted
before the final component of the pathname. For example, “sccs -d/x -py get
a/b” will convert to “get /x/a/y/s.b”. The intent here is to create aliases
such as “alias syssccs sccs -d/usr/src” which will be used as “syssccs get
cmd/who.c”. Please note that the -p flag is (very) different in purpose from
the --prefix option.

-T This flag causes the program to emit a debugging trace on stdout. This flag
may be disabled at compile time.

-V Shows the version information for the sccs program, and the subcommand prefix
being used. This option is supported only by the GNU version of sccs.

EXAMPLES


To get a file for editing, edit it, and produce a new delta:

sccs get -e file.c
ex file.c
sccs delta file.c

To get a file from another directory:

sccs -p/usr/src/sccs/s. get cc.c

or

sccs get /usr/src/sccs/s.cc.c

To make a delta of a large number of files in the current directory:

sccs delta *.c

To get a list of files being edited that are not on branches:

sccs info -b

To delta everything being edited by you:

sccs delta `sccs tell -u`

In a makefile, to get source files from an SCCS file if it does not already exist:

SRCS = <list of source files>
$(SRCS):
sccs get $(REL) $@

MAINTAINER


This version of sccs is maintained by James Youngman, <jay@gnu.org>.

ENVIRONMENT


PROJECTDIR

The PROJECTDIR environment variable is checked by the -d flag. If it begins
with a slash, it is taken directly; otherwise, the home directory of a user of
that name is examined for a subdirectory “src” or “source”. If such a
directory is found, it is used.

DIAGNOSTICS


There are many error messages, mostly brief but fairly obvious. If all goes acording to
plan, the program's exit status is zero. Otherwise, it will be one of the following
values:-

0 No error; everything proceeded according to plan.

64 Command line usage error

69 Could not exec program

70 Internal software error. This should not happen.

71 System error (e.g., can't fork)

75 Temporary failure; retry later. This error is returned when the system runs out of
memory.

77 Permission denied. This error occurs when the program has been installed setuid, but
SCCSDIR was not configured in at compile time. This can also happen if something goes
wrong when the program tries to drop its setuid or setgid privileges. When a program
exits due to a fatal signal, the shell usually adds 128 to the signal number and uses
that as the return value. Some systems also produce values in this range if there
was a problem with the dynamic linker.

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