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NAMEget — get a version of an SCCS file SYNOPSISget
[-r
SID]
[-c
cutoff]
[-e]
[-b]
[-i
list]
[-x
list]
[-k]
[-l[p]]
[-p]
[-s]
[-m]
[-n]
[-g]
[-t]
[-w
string]
[-a
seq-number]
file ... DESCRIPTIONThe
get
command generates an
ASCII
text file from each named
SCCS
file according to the specifications given by
its option arguments, which begin with
-.
The arguments can be specified in any order,
but all option arguments apply to all named
SCCS
files.
If a directory is named,
get
behaves as if each file in the directory was specified as a named file,
except that non-SCCS
files (last component of the path name does not begin with
s.)
and unreadable files are silently ignored.
If a file name of
-
is given, the standard input is read and each line of
the standard input is assumed to be the name of an
SCCS
file to be processed.
Again, non-SCCS
files and unreadable files are silently ignored. The generated text is normally written into a file called the
g-file
whose name is derived from the
SCCS
file name by simply removing the
s.
prefix (see
FILES
below). OptionsExplanation of the option arguments below
is based on processing only one
SCCS
file.
When processing multiple
SCCS
files, the effects of any option argument
applies independently to each named file.
- -rSID
The
SCCS IDentification
string
(SID)
of the version (delta) of an
SCCS
file to be retrieved.
Table 1 shows, for the most useful cases, which version of an
SCCS
file is retrieved (as well as the
SID
of the version to be eventually created by
delta
if the
-e
option is also used), as a function of the
SID
specified (see
delta(1)). - -ccutoff
cutoff
date-time,
in the form:
No changes (deltas) to the
SCCS
file which were created after the specified
cutoff
date-time are included in the generated
ASCII
text file.
Units omitted from the date-time default
to their maximum possible values; that is,
-c7502
is equivalent to
-c750228235959.
Any number of non-numeric characters
can separate the various 2-digit pieces of the
cutoff
date-time.
This feature allows one to specify a
cutoff
date in the form:
-c77/2/2 9:22:25.
Note that this implies that one can use the
%E%
and
%U%
identification keywords (see below) for nested
gets
within a
command:
- -e
Indicates that the
get
is for the purpose of editing or making a change (delta) to the
SCCS
file via a subsequent use of
delta.
The
-e
option used in a
get
for a particular version
(SID)
of the
SCCS
file prevents further
gets
for editing on the same
SID
until
delta
is executed or the
j
(joint edit) flag is set in the
SCCS
file (see
admin(1)).
Concurrent use of
get -e
for different
SIDs is always allowed.
Note, however, that only one user is permitted to do a concurrent
get -e
(see
admin(1)). If the
g-file
generated by
get
with an
-e
option is accidentally ruined in the process of editing it,
it can be regenerated by re-executing the
get
command with the
-k
option in place of the
-e
option. SCCS
file protection specified via the
ceiling, floor, and authorized user list
stored in the
SCCS
file (see
admin(1))
are enforced when the
-e
option is used. - -b
Used with the
-e
option to indicate that the new delta should have an
SID
in a new branch as shown in Table 1.
This option is ignored if the
b
flag is not present in the file (see
admin(1))
or if the retrieved
delta
is not a leaf
delta.
(A leaf
delta
is one that has no successors on the
SCCS
file tree.) Note: A branch
delta
can always be created from a non-leaf
delta. - -ilist
A
list
of deltas to be included (forced to be applied)
in the creation of the generated file.
The
list
has the following syntax:
list ::= range | list, range
range ::= SID | SID - SID SID,
the
SCCS
Identification of a delta,
can be in any form shown in the "SID Specified" column
of Table 1.
Partial
SIDs
are interpreted as shown in the "SID Retrieved"
column of Table 1.
See
WARNINGS. - -xlist
A
list
of deltas to be excluded (forced not to be applied)
in the creation of the generated file.
See the
-i
option for the
list
format. - -k
Suppresses replacement of identification keywords (see below)
in the retrieved text by their value.
The
-k
option is implied by the
-e
option. - -l[p]
Causes a delta summary to be written into an
l-file.
If
-lp
is used, an
l-file
is not created;
the delta summary is written on the standard output instead.
See
FILES
for the format of the
l-file.
The user must have
s-file
read permission in order to use the
-l
option. - -p
Causes the text retrieved from the
SCCS
file to be written on the standard output.
No
g-file
is created.
All output that normally goes to the standard output
goes to file descriptor 2 (standard error) instead,
unless the
-s
option is used, in which case it disappears. - -s
Suppresses all output normally written on the standard output.
However, fatal error messages
(which always go to file descriptor 2) remain unaffected. - -m
Causes each text line retrieved from the
SCCS
file to be preceded by the
SID
of the delta that inserted the text line in the
SCCS
file.
The format is:
SID,
followed by a horizontal tab, followed by the text line. - -n
Causes each generated text line to be preceded with the
%M%
identification keyword value (see below).
The format is:
%M%
value,
followed by a horizontal tab,
followed by the text line.
When both the
-m
and
-n
options are used,
the format is:
%M%
value,
followed by a horizontal tab,
followed by the
-m
option-generated format. - -g
Suppresses the actual retrieval of text from the
SCCS
file.
It is primarily used to generate an
l-file,
or to verify the existence of a particular
SID. - -t
Used to access the most recently created
("top") delta in a given release (e.g.,
-r1),
or release and level (e.g.,
-r1.2). - -w string
Substitute
string
for all occurrences of
@%M%
when
getting
the file. - -aseq-number
The delta sequence number of the
SCCS
file delta (version) to be retrieved (see
sccsfile(4)).
This option is used by the
comb
command (see
comb(1));
it is not a generally useful option,
and should be avoided.
If both the
-r
and
-a
options are specified, the
-a
option is used.
Care should be taken when using the
-a
option in conjunction with the
-e
option, because the
SID
of the delta to be created may not be what one expects.
The
-r
option can be used with the
-a
and
-e
options to control the naming of the
SID
of the delta to be created.
For each file processed,
get
responds (on the standard output) with the
SID
being accessed and with the number of lines retrieved from the
SCCS
file. If the
-e
option is used, the
SID
of the delta to be made appears after the
SID
accessed and before the number of lines generated.
If there is more than one named file,
or if a directory or standard input is named,
each file name is printed (preceded by a new-line)
before it is processed.
If the
-i
option is used included deltas are listed
following the notation "Included".
If the
-x
option is used, excluded deltas are listed
following the notation "Excluded".
Notes for Table 1
- *
"R", "L", "B", and "S" are the "release", "level",
"branch", and "sequence" components of the SID, respectively;
"m" means "maximum".
Thus, for example, "R.mL" means "the maximum
level number within release R";
"R.L.(mB+1).1" means
"the first sequence number on the
new
branch (i.e., maximum branch number plus
one) of level L within release R".
Note that if the SID specified is of the form "R.L",
"R.L.B", or "R.L.B.S", each of the
specified components
must
exist. - **
"hR" is the highest
existing
release that is lower than
the specified,
nonexistent,
release R. - ***
This is used to force creation of the
first
delta in a
new
release. - #
Successor. - %
The
-b
option is effective only if the
b
flag (see
admin(1))
is present in the file.
An entry of
-
means "irrelevant". - %%
This case applies if the
d
(default
SID) flag is
not
present in the file.
If the
d
flag
is
present in the file, then the
SID
obtained from the
d
flag is interpreted as if it had been specified on the command line.
Thus, one of the other cases in this table applies.
Identification KeywordsIdentifying information
is inserted into the text retrieved from the
SCCS
file by replacing
identification keywords
with their value wherever they occur.
The following keywords can be used in the text stored in an
SCCS
file:
- Keyword
Value - %M%
Module name:
either the value of the
m
flag in the file
(see
admin(1)),
or if absent,
the name of the
SCCS
file with the
leading
s.
removed. - %I%
SCCS
identification
(SID)
(%R%.%L%.%B%.%S%)
of the retrieved text. - %R%
Release. - %L%
Level. - %B%
Branch. - %S%
Sequence. - %D%
Current date
(YY/MM/DD). - %H%
Current date
(MM/DD/YY). - %T%
Current time
(HH:MM:SS). - %E%
Date newest applied delta was created
(YY/MM/DD). - %G%
Date newest applied delta was created
(MM/DD/YY). - %U%
Time newest applied delta was created
(HH:MM:SS). - %Y%
Module type: value of the
t
flag in the
SCCS
file (see
admin(1)). - %F%
SCCS
file name. - %P%
Fully qualified
SCCS
file name. - %Q%
The value of the
q
flag in the file (see
admin(1)). - %C%
Current line number.
This keyword is intended for identifying messages
output by the program such as
"this should not have happened"
type errors.
It is
not
intended to be used on every line to provide sequence numbers. - %Z%
The 4-character string
@(#)
recognizable by
what
(see
what(1)). - %W%
A shorthand notation for constructing
what
strings for
HP-UX
system program files.
%W%=%Z%%M%horizontal-tab%I% - %A%
Another shorthand notation for constructing
what
strings for non-HP-UX
system program files.
EXTERNAL INFLUENCESEnvironment VariablesLC_CTYPE
determines the interpretation of text as single-
and/or multi-byte characters. LC_MESSAGES
determines the language in which messages are displayed. If
LC_CTYPE
or
LC_MESSAGES
is not specified in the environment or is set to
the empty string, the value of
LANG
is used as a default for each
unspecified or empty variable. If
LANG
is not specified or is set to the empty string,
a default of "C" (see
lang(5))
is
used instead of
LANG.
If any internationalization variable contains an invalid setting,
get
behaves as if all internationalization variables are set to "C".
See
environ(5). International Code Set SupportSingle- and multi-byte character code sets are supported. DIAGNOSTICSUse
sccshelp
for explanations. WARNINGSIf the effective user has write permission
(either explicitly or implicitly)
in the directory containing the
SCCS
files, but the real user does not,
then only one file can be named when the
-e
option is used. Unexpected results occur when using the
-i
option to merge changes into sections of a file
that have been (perhaps inadvertently) deleted
and subsequently re-inserted into a file. An
l-file
cannot be generated when
-g
is used.
In other words,
-g -l
does not work. FILESSeveral auxiliary files can be created by
get.
These files are known generically as the
g-file,
l-file,
p-file,
and
z-file.
The letter before the hyphen is called the tag.
An auxiliary file name is formed from the
SCCS
file name: the last component of all
SCCS
file names must be of the form
s.module-name,
the auxiliary files are named by replacing the leading
s
with the tag.
The
g-file
is an exception to this scheme:
the
g-file
is named by removing the
s.
prefix.
For example,
s.xyz.c,
the auxiliary file names would be
xyz.c,
l.xyz.c,
p.xyz.c,
and
z.xyz.c,
respectively. The
g-file,
which contains the generated text,
is created in the current directory (unless the
-p
option is used).
A
g-file
is created in all cases,
whether or not any lines of text were generated by the
get.
It is owned by the real user.
If the
-k
option is used or implied its mode is 644;
otherwise its mode is 444.
Only the real user need have write permission
in the current directory. The
l-file
contains a table showing which deltas were applied
in generating the retrieved text.
The
l-file
is created in the current directory if the
-l
option is used;
its mode is 444 and it is owned by the real user.
Only the real user need have write permission
in the current directory. Lines in the
l-file
have the following format:
A blank character if the delta was applied;
*
otherwise. A blank character if the delta was applied or was not applied and ignored;
*
if the delta was not applied and was not ignored. A code indicating a "special" reason
why the delta was or was not applied:
- I:
Included. - X:
Excluded. - C:
Cut off (by a
-c
option).
Blank. SCCS
identification (SID). Tab character. Creation date and time (in the form
YY/MM/DD HH:MM:SS). Blank. Login name of person who created
delta.
The comments and
MR
data follow on subsequent lines,
indented one horizontal tab character.
A blank line terminates each entry.
The
p-file
is used to pass information resulting from a
get
with an
-e
option along to
delta.
Its contents are also used to prevent a subsequent execution of
get
with an
-e
option for the same
SID
until
delta
is executed or the joint edit flag,
j,
(see
admin(1))
is set in the
SCCS
file.
The
p-file
is created in the directory containing the
SCCS
file and the effective user must have write permission
in that directory.
Its mode is 644 and it is owned by the effective user.
The format of the
p-file
is:
the gotten
SID,
followed by a blank,
followed by the
SID
that the new delta will have when it is made,
followed by a blank,
followed by the login name of the real user,
followed by a blank,
followed by the date-time the
get
was executed, followed by a blank and the
-i
option argument if it was present,
followed by a blank and the
-x
option argument if it was present,
followed by a new-line.
There can be an arbitrary number of lines in the
p-file
at any time; no two lines can have the same new delta
SID. The
z-file
serves as a
lock-out
mechanism against simultaneous updates.
Its contents are the binary (2 bytes) process
ID
of the command (i.e.,
get)
that created it.
The
z-file
is created in the directory containing the
SCCS
file for the duration of
get.
The same protection restrictions as those for the
p-file
apply for the
z-file.
The
z-file
is created mode 444. STANDARDS CONFORMANCEget: SVID2, SVID3, XPG2, XPG3, XPG4
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