sccsfile(4) manual page
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sccsfile - format of an SCCS history file
An SCCS
file
is an ASCII
file consisting of six logical parts:
- checksum
- character count
used for error detection
- delta table
- log containing version info and statistics
about each delta
- usernames
- login names and/or group ID
s of users who may
add deltas
- flags
- definitions of internal keywords
- comments
- arbitrary descriptive
information about the file
- body
the actual text lines intermixed with control
lines
Each section is described in detail below.
Throughout an
SCCS file there are lines which begin with the ASCII SOH
(start of heading)
character (octal 001). This character is hereafter referred to as the control
character, and will be represented as ‘^A’. If a line described below is not
depicted as beginning with the control character, it cannot do so and still
be within SCCS
file format.
Entries of the form ddddd represent a five digit
string (a number between 00000 and 99999).
The checksum is the first
line of an SCCS
file. The form of the line is:
- ^A hddddd
The value of the
checksum is the sum of all characters, except those contained in the first
line. The ^Ah provides a magic number of (octal) 064001.
The delta
table consists of a variable number of entries of the form:
^As inserted/deleted/unchanged
^Ai include-list
^Ax exclude-list
^Ag ignored-list
^Am mr-number
...
^Ac comments ...
...
^Ae
The first line (^As) contains the number of lines inserted/deleted/unchanged
respectively. The second line (^Ad) contains the type of the delta (normal:
D, and removed: R), the SCCS ID
of the delta, the date and time of creation
of the delta, the user-name corresponding to the real user ID
at the time
the delta was created, and the serial numbers of the delta and its predecessor,
respectively.
The ^Ai, ^Ax, and ^Ag lines contain the serial numbers of deltas included,
excluded, and ignored, respectively. These lines do not always appear.
The
^Am lines (optional) each contain one MR number associated with the delta;
the ^Ac lines contain comments associated with the delta.
The ^Ae line ends
the delta table entry.
The list of user-names and/or numerical group ID
s of users who
may add deltas to the file, separated by NEWLINE
characters. The lines containing
these login names and/or numerical group ID
s are surrounded by the bracketing
lines ^Au and ^AU. An empty list allows anyone to make a delta.
Flags
are keywords that are used internally (see sccs-admin(1)
for more information
on their use). Each flag line takes the form:
- ^Af flag
optional text
The
following flags are defined in order of appearance:
- ^Af t
- type-of-program
Defines the replacement for the %T% ID keyword.
- ^Af v
- program-name
Controls prompting for MR numbers in addition to comments; if the optional
text is present it defines an MR number validity checking program.
- ^Af i
- Indicates that the ‘No id keywords’ message is to generate an error that
terminates the SCCS
command. Otherwise, the message is treated as a warning
only.
- ^Af b
- Indicates that the -b option may be used with the SCCS
get command
to create a branch in the delta tree.
- ^Af m
- module name
Defines the first choice for the replacement text of the %M% ID keyword.
- ^Af f
- floor
Defines the ‘floor’ release; the release below which no deltas may be added.
- ^Af c
- ceiling
Defines the ‘ceiling’ release; the release above which no deltas may be added.
- ^Af d
- default-sid
The d flag defines the default SID to be used when none is specified on
an SCCS
get command.
- ^Af n
- The n flag enables the SCCS
delta command to insert
a ‘null’ delta (a delta that applies no changes) in those releases that are
skipped when a delta is made in a new release (for example, when delta
5.1 is made after delta 2.7, releases 3 and 4 are skipped).
- ^Af j
- Enables the
SCCS
get command to allow concurrent edits of the same base SID.
- ^Af l
- lock-releases
Defines a list of releases that are locked against editing.
- ^Af q
- user defined
Defines the replacement for the %Q% ID keyword.
- ^Af e
- 0|1
The e flag indicates whether a source file is encoded or not. A 1 indicates
that the file is encoded. Source files need to be encoded when they contain
control characters, or when they do not end with a NEWLINE
. The e flag
allows files that contain binary data to be checked in.
Arbitrary
text surrounded by the bracketing lines ^At and ^AT. The comments section
typically will contain a description of the file’s purpose.
The body
consists of text lines and control lines. Text lines do not begin with the
control character, control lines do. There are three kinds of control lines:
insert, delete, and end, represented by:
^AI ddddd^AD ddddd^AE ddddd
respectively. The digit string is the serial number
corresponding to the delta for the control line.
sccs-admin(1)
, sccs-cdc(1)
,
sccs-comb(1)
, sccs-delta(1)
, sccs-get(1)
, sccs-help(1)
, sccs-prs(1)
, sccs-prt(1)
,
sccs-rmdel(1)
, sccs-sact(1)
, sccs-sccsdiff(1)
, sccs-unget(1)
, sccs-val(1)
, sccs(1)
,
what(1)
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