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The Source Integrity Professional Edition User Guide - MKS

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Managing Archives and Revisions<br />

For more information on<br />

using active issues, see<br />

“Integrated Version Control”<br />

on page 437.<br />

Viewing<br />

Revision<br />

Metadata With<br />

Archive<br />

Commands<br />

Active CI Issue. An active issue associated with the member<br />

revision. Active issues appear as hyperlinks with a brief<br />

description. To view the complete issue in the Change <strong>Integrity</strong><br />

Web interface, click on the hyperlink.<br />

You can view archive and revision metadata with the rlog command<br />

(there is an similar project command, pj rlog). Its syntax is<br />

rlog [options] file…<br />

where options is zero or more modifying arguments, and file is the<br />

name of one or more files whose metadata you want to see. <strong>The</strong> file<br />

entry may point to either working files or archives.<br />

When it is run with no options, the rlog command shows you all the<br />

archive and revision information contained in an archive.<br />

You can choose to view only archive related metadata by specifying<br />

the -t or -h options to the rlog command. <strong>Source</strong> <strong>Integrity</strong> can<br />

display the following pieces of information about each archive:<br />

name of the archive<br />

name of the associated working file<br />

revision number of the head revision<br />

number of the default branch (if defined)<br />

archive’s locking policy (strict or non-strict)<br />

names of users with locks on revisions<br />

names of users on the archive’s access list<br />

any labels assigned to revisions in the archive<br />

comment leader symbol<br />

total number of branches in the archive<br />

total number of revisions in the archive<br />

total number of branch revisions<br />

archive’s file format (text or binary)<br />

archive’s delta storage format (RCS or Reference)<br />

archive description<br />

Example<br />

For example, to see all the metadata about the prog.c archive and the<br />

revisions it contains, you would enter<br />

rlog prog.c<br />

180 <strong>Source</strong> <strong>Integrity</strong> <strong>Professional</strong> <strong>Edition</strong>

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