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CVS Commit History:


   2014-11-22 02:26:09 by Makoto Fujiwara | Files touched by this commit (2) | Package updated
Log message:
- 5.9.3 | 2014-09-17
  - compatibility w/ RCS 2.x file format dropped

    This was presaged w/ RCS 5.9.0 (released 2013-05-06), below.
    Effectively, the configure script no longer supports option
    «¤<80><98>--enable-compat2«¤<80><99>, and \ 
RCS programs will fail, reporting a
    syntax error, if given a comma-v file in 2.x format.

  - bug fixes

    - crash on co/ci without changes on a branch

      RCS 5.8 (released 2011-08-30) introduced a bug whereby a ci
      without changes (i.e., reversion) on a branch would crash,
      leaving a temporary files and corrupted comma-v file as well.
      This regression is now fixed.  See tests/t804, and also:
      http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-rcs/2014-01/msg00000.html

    - file corruption using stdio under Cygwin, Darwin

      RCS 5.8 (released 2011-08-30) introduced a bug when using stdio
      (e.g., with env var \ 
«¤<80><98>RCS_MEM_LIMIT«¤<80><99> set to \ 
"0") under Cygwin
      whereby ci with a sufficiently large working file would silently
      write a truncated comma-v file.  See tests/t805, and also:
      http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-rcs/2014-06/msg00000.html

      (Although the bug was initially discovered under Cygwin, the
      Hydra project reported the same problem for Darwin.)

  - portability fixes

    - don't recurse on `main'

      This is for the sake of Cygwin "make check".  See:
      http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-rcs/2014-08/msg00015.html

    - avoid C99 VLA elems in func decl, sometimes

      This is for the sake of Solaris 10 + GCC 3.4.3.  See:
      http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-rcs/2014-08/msg00002.html

  - new diff/diff3 cross-compilation support

    The configure script now assigns "optimistic defaults" to some
    diff/diff3-related vars when cross-compiling and invoked with
    vars «¤<80><98>DIFF«¤<80><99> and \ 
«¤<80><98>DIFF3«¤<80><99>.  See README.

  - maintenance tools updated
    - automake (GNU automake) 1.14.1
    - gnulib-tool (GNU gnulib 2014-09-16 19:26:48) 0.1.222-aa0c2
   2014-11-11 16:38:04 by Joerg Sonnenberger | Files touched by this commit (1)
Log message:
Forgotten file for fix up of C11 syntax.
   2014-11-10 19:05:45 by Joerg Sonnenberger | Files touched by this commit (3)
Log message:
Fix use of C11 _Noreturn.
   2013-11-29 19:23:45 by Thomas Klausner | Files touched by this commit (2) | Package updated
Log message:
Update to 5.9.2:

- 5.9.2 | 2013-11-28

  - bugfixes

    - avoid possibly failing command in backticks

      Some versions of Solaris /bin/sh would cause the extract-help
      build script to exit failurefully when the grep command in the
      backticks failed (in the presence of "set -e").  Sigh.

    - handle low-memory situations like RCS 5.7 (mostly)

      For reading comma-v files, RCS 5.7 tries mmap(2), in-core
      snarfing, and stdio access, falling back to slower methods
      on failure of the faster method.  RCS 5.8 maintained the order,
      but did not fall back; on failure, it gave up immediately.
      This change was originally viewed as a feature, but lately it
      seemed more like a bug.

      Now, RCS 5.7 behavior is for the most part restored.  The
      exception is when env var ‘RCS_MEM_LIMIT’ is set; in that case,
      failure of a fast method does not fall back to the slower one.

  - default for env var ‘RCS_MEM_LIMIT’ relaxed

    This used to be 256 kilobytes, a reasonable value a long time
    ago, but ridiculously low nowadays.  Now, it is "unlimited",
    which is more in line w/ the GNU philosophy, anyway:

     (info "(standards) Semantics")

    Since the env var is mostly intended for testing RCS, you can
    normally leave it unset.  (Probably it will be removed in a
    future release.)

  - maintenance tools updated
    - automake (GNU automake) 1.14
    - gnulib-tool (GNU gnulib 2013-11-28 08:46:06) 0.1.21-37f8a
   2013-10-22 14:21:03 by OBATA Akio | Files touched by this commit (1)
Log message:
Prevent to regenerate of man pages. PR pkg/48331.

configure script will be modified automatically by pkgsrc framework,
but man pages will be generated with package version and release date,
they will be pulled from configure script.
Prevent the behavior by syncing time stamp of configure with man/REL,
it contains package version and released date from configure script.
   2013-10-04 23:26:31 by Thomas Klausner | Files touched by this commit (3) | Package updated
Log message:
Update to 5.9.1:

- 5.9.1 | 2013-10-04

  - bugfixes

    - specify ‘diff --binary’ consistently for non-POSIX systems

      On non-POSIX systems, in some cases, ‘rcs frob’ used to omit
      ‘--binary’ from the command-line to the underlying diff(1).
      Now, that is done in all cases.

    - portability fixes

      - avoid ‘grep -q’

        GNU grep understands ‘grep -q’ but some others do not.

         (info "(autoconf) Limitations of Usual Tools")

      - avoid ‘$<’ in makefile

        GNU make understands ‘$<’ but some others do not.

         (info "(autoconf) $< in Ordinary Make Rules")

      - avoid backslash in backticks

        The /bin/sh scripts used in "make" and "make check" \ 
now avoid
        using a backslash in backticks, which can cause problems for
        Solaris 9 /bin/sh (and maybe other /bin/sh implementations).

  - ‘PROGRAM --help’ shows home page / "gethelp" info

    This is for compliance w/ the GNU coding standards.

     (info "(standards) --help")

  - maintenance tools updated
    - automake (GNU automake) 1.13.4
    - gnulib-tool (GNU gnulib 2013-10-03 04:59:38) 0.0.8036-28df8
   2013-09-03 16:26:51 by Joerg Sonnenberger | Files touched by this commit (2)
Log message:
Fix handling of info page. Bump revision.
   2013-06-01 16:03:33 by Ryo ONODERA | Files touched by this commit (3)
Log message:
Bump PKGREVISION.

Fix build on Solaris 10, PR pkg/47865.

* Do not make man pages, use shipped version.
  Generating man pages required groff's soelim and pic.
* Use pdksh for build-aux/extract-help script.
  Solaris's /bin/sh does not work properly with it.
   2013-05-22 23:53:09 by Thomas Cort | Files touched by this commit (1)
Log message:
devel/rcs: pull in diffutils dep on Minix.

Minix lacks a native diff3 tool. For rcs to work properly, it needs diff3.
Having diffutils provide diff3 fixes the situation.

OK by agc@
   2013-05-19 05:30:44 by Ryo ONODERA | Files touched by this commit (6) | Package updated
Log message:
Update to 3.9.0

* Use gmake.
* MAKE_JOBS_SAFE=yes (at least, with MAKE_JOBS=5)

Changelog:
NEWS for GNU RCS (Revision Control System)
See the end for copying conditions.

- 5.9.0 | 2013-05-06

  - distribution now .tar.lz and .tar.xz

	If you have GNU tar, you can use "tar xf" and it will DTRT.
	If not, you can use "lzip -dc TARBALL | tar xf -" to unpack
	the .tar.lz, or "xz -dc TARBALL | tar xf -" for the .tar.xz.

  - planned retirement

    - configure option ‘--enable-compat2’

	This option enables reading of files written by RCS 2.x (before
	RCS was GNU, even), but the file format became obsolete in 1982.
	Support for it WILL BE REMOVED in a near future GNU RCS release.

    - common option ‘-V’

	This option is obsoleted by ‘--version’ (since 5.8, 2011-08-30).
	Support for it WILL BE REMOVED in some future GNU RCS release.
	Its use now produces a warning to stderr.

	Please note that ‘-VN’ (N ∈ {3,4,5}) is a separate issue.

  - bugs fixed

    - ‘rcsmerge --help’ mentions ‘-A’, ‘-E’, \ 
‘-e’

	These options are accepted and internally passed to diff3(1).

    - ‘ident -VN’ and ‘merge -VN’ now signal error

	For these commands, the argument to ‘-V’ has no meaning.
	Previously, such invocations would display version info,
	ignoring the arg.  Now they signal a "bad option" error.

  - new features

    - ident(1) recognizes Subversion "fixed-width keyword syntax"

	In addition to the normal keyword pattern, for Subversion 1.2
	(and later) compatability, ident(1) also recognizes patterns
	having one of the forms:

	$KEYWORD:: TEXT $
	;; two colons and space after keyword
	;; space before ending $

	$KEYWORD:: TEXT#$
	;; two colons and space after keyword
	;; hash before ending $

    - new co(1) option ‘-S’ for "self-same" mode

	In this mode, the owner of a lock is unimportant, just that it
	exists.  Effectively, this prevents you from checking out the
	same revision twice.

	$ whoami
	  ttn

	$ co -l -f z
	  RCS/z,v  -->  z
	  revision 1.1 (locked)
	  done

	$ co -S -l -f z
	  RCS/z,v  -->  z
	  co: RCS/z,v: Revision 1.1 is already locked by ttn.

    - several RCS commands "internalized" into rcs(1)

	As part of an ongoing effort to modernize the command-line
	interface of GNU RCS, the previously standalone programs:

	  ci, co, rcs, rcsclean, rcsdiff, rcsmerge, rlog

	can now be invoked as "rcs PROGRAM".  In this case, we call
	PROGRAM a "command", and also provide some aliases.  E.g., you
	can type "rcs diff" in addition to "rcs rcsdiff" (and \ 
"rcsdiff",
	of course).  We plan to support standalone (w/o "rcs" prefix)
	invocation from the shell at least through the 5.x series of
	releases -- not indefinitely, but for a good while, yet.

	The rcs(1) program itself now supports ‘--commands’ to list all
	the commands, ‘--aliases’ to list their aliases, as well as
	‘--help COMAMND’ to show the help for COMMAND.

	Note that programs ident(1) and merge(1) remain standalone.

	Lastly, in the manual, section "Invoking rcs" now describes both
	"modern" and "legacy" usages.  Also, the internalized commands
	invocations mentions both "rcs COMMAND" and "PROGRAM" styles.

    - ‘--help’ output includes a one-line description

	E.g., "merge --help" says: "Three-way file merge".

    - most long options can be recognized if partially specified

	With the exception of "rcs --help COMMAND", where "--help" must
	be spelled out in full, all long options can now be recognized
	even if partially specified.  For example, "rcs --al" is
	recognized as "rcs --aliases".

    - updated portability

	Several more Gnulib (http://www.gnu.org/software/gnulib) modules
	are now in use.

    - new cross-compilation support

	The configure script now assigns "pessimistic defaults" when
	cross-compiling.  See new section "cross-compilation" in README.

    - effects of ‘-VN’ (N ∈ {3,4,5}) documented

	See (info "(rcs) Misc common options").

  - maintenance tools updated
    - gnulib-tool (GNU gnulib 2013-05-01 06:14:19) 0.0.7913-5191

- 5.8.2 | 2013-04-04

  - Bugs fixed

    - Wrong symbolic name dereference

	RCS 5.8 introduced a bug whereby commands would incorrectly
	dereference a symbolic name (into a numerical revision number)
	in the presence of multiple symbolic names that share a common
	prefix.  See tests/t803.

    - ‘integrity’ value syntax better specified

	The ‘integrity’ value (if present) is a string composed of a
	system part followed by an optional user part, with formfeed
	(^L, U+0C) separating the two.  Unlike other string values, the
	‘integrity’ string (either part) must NOT contain '@' (U+40).
	If it does, RCS displays a "spurious '@' in `integrity' value"
	error message and exits failurefully.

	This change restores interop play-space for third-party tools
	that was stricken w/ the RCS 5.8 top-level grammar freeze.  Left
	unspecified is how such tools should divvy up the user part.

  - New manual chapter: RCS file format

	This documents the RCS file format grammar and particulars,
	adapted from rcsfile(5).

  - Manpages refer to info documentation

	They now recommend using "info rcs" for full documentation.

  - Script to trim "junk at end of file" posted

	The "junk at end of file" error occurs for some files due to RCS
	5.8 being more strict about the syntax it accepts.  You can use
	‘trimrcs’ by Warren Jones:

	http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/help-rcs/2013-01/msg00006.html

	to remedy such files while we figure out how best to move such
	functionality into RCS proper.

  - Maintenance tools updated
    - automake (GNU Automake) 1.13.1
    - gnulib-tool (GNU gnulib 2013-03-19 16:08:47) 0.0.7899-34f84
    - makeinfo (GNU Texinfo) 5.1

- 5.8.1 | 2012-06-05

  - Bugs fixed

    - Debug output removed

	Due to an oversight, release 5.8 rlog included code to write
	debugging output to stderr for invocations using the ‘-d’ option
	and a date range (e.g., ‘rlog -d 2010<2012’).

    - Criteria for avoiding read-only checks refined

	For "make check", some test cases are inhibited if the user
	running the test is not effectively blocked from writing a
	purportedly read-only file, such as when "make check" is run by
	the super user, or for certain (weird) NFS situations.

	Previously, to determine this condition, we considered only the
	operating system type, a very crude (and incomplete) proxy.
	Now, we explicitly check with a shell sequence comprising the
	umask(1) and test(1) commands, plus output-redirection.

    - Regression in ‘-zLT’ handling

	On a 64-bit x86 system, RCS 5.8 introduced a regression whereby:

	 rlog -zLT -d>2011-05-04

	would select the correct entry but display its date always with
	default (01) month and day, i.e., YYYY-01-01.  This is now fixed
	(see also tests/t320).

    - Regression in ‘ci -d -T’ handling

	RCS 5.8 introduced a regression whereby:

	  ci -l -d -T FILE

	would set the mtime of RCS/FILE,v (the comma-v file) to the
	epoch.  This is now fixed (see also tests/t810).

  - Use ‘diff --label’ instead of ‘diff -L’

	Previously, RCS used GNU diff's ‘-L’ option.  According to Paul
	Eggert (a GNU diffutils maintainer):

	  That option has been undocumented since diffutils 2.8
	  (released in March 2002) and the option is intended to
	  be replaced sometime soon with a different meaning.

	Now, RCS uses ‘diff --label’, thus immune to the planned change.

  - Miscellaneous changes
    - Make help extraction noisy (on failure)
    - Silence some compiler warnings
    - Increase coverage of "make check"

  - Documentation improvements

    - Manpage rcsintro(1) dropped

	This manpage is redundant, and (arguably) should not have been
	in section 1 in the first place.

    - Use "Invoking COMMAND" instead of "COMMAND" as node names

	This makes it easier for ‘info --usage COMMAND’ to DTRT, and
	makes GNU (info "(standards) Manual Structure Details") happy.

    - explicitly UTF-8

	This is to prepare for a (future) GNU Texinfo release that
	renders @code in a more pretty way when the encoding is UTF-8.
	If you're reading this (from the future) with such a Texinfo at
	hand, feel free to regenerate the docs in doc/ prior to install.

    - CVS is not GNU

	Previously, we incorrectly said "GNU CVS", succumbing to a
	common misunderstanding.  Now we know better.

  - TAGS file no longer distributed

	To create, configure normally and do "make TAGS".

  - New configure script option ‘--enable-coverage’

	Specifying ‘--enable-coverage’ causes ‘_Exit’ to be an alias for
	‘exit’ and CFLAGS to append ‘--coverage’ if the compiler is GCC.
	This is needed because the coverage machinery writes the .gcda
	files only on ‘exit’.

	This option is for maintainers; most people can ignore it.

  - Portability improvements
    - Use more gnulib modules
    - Use portable Makefile subst-ref variable syntax
    - Use portable shell command-output interpolation syntax
  - Maintenance tools upgraded
    - GNU Automake 1.12
    - GNU Autoconf 2.69
    - gnulib-tool (GNU gnulib 2012-06-03 16:29:00) 0.0.7432-f6c24-modified

- 5.8 | 2011-08-30

  - License now GPLv3+ (see COPYING)

  - Change in terminology: from "path" to "file name" (or \ 
"file-name")

	However, if "path" intends "search path", we say so explicitly.

  - Changes to the RCS package

    - New documentation in Info format

	On "make install", rcs.info is installed in $(infodir), with
	title "GNU RCS <VERSION>" in dircategory "Version \ 
control".
	The doc source is texinfo (released under GNU FDL 1.3), so you
	can easily create output in HTML, PDF, etc.

    - Dropped configure option: --with-diffutils

	To specify non-GNU diffutils programs diff(1) and diff3(1), name
	them using variables on the configure command-line.  See README.

    - Configuration more strict in some ways, more lax in others.

	Before, part of the configuration was done at compile time.
	Now, all of it is done by the configure script.  Here are the
	set of conditions which will cause the configure script to fail
	(with a "could not find..." message):

	 - for --enable-mailer=PROG, ‘PROG’ not absolute;
	 - for diff(1), value of env var ‘DIFF’ not absolute;
	 - diff(1) not GNU diffutils compatible;
	 - for diff3(1), value of env var ‘DIFF3’ not absolute;
	 - for ed(1), value of env var ‘ED’ not absolute;
	 - no C99-capable compiler.

	Here, "absolute" means "specified as an absolute filename".
	On the flip side, configuration no longer checks for some
	situations such as ‘sigaction’ yes, but ‘SA_SIGINFO’ no.

	Most of the portability duties are now handled by gnulib.

    - New configure option: --enable-suid[=setreuid]

	This builds RCS with setuid support (the default).  Optional
	arg ‘setreuid’ means use setreuid(2) instead of seteuid(2).

    - New configure option: --disable-mmap

	This builds RCS without mmap(2), even if available.  See README.

    - New configure option: --enable-mailer=PROG

	The feature whereby ci(1) sends mail when breaking a lock is now
	disabled by default.  To enable, specify ‘--enable-mailer=PROG’
	to the configure script.  See README.

    - New configure option: --enable-compat2

	This preponderantly unlikely to be used option allows RCS
	commands to read RCS files written by RCS 2.  See README.

    - You can "make check" prior to "make install".

	Doing "make check" automatically prepends to the ‘PATH’ env var
	the value of ‘$(abs_top_builddir)/src’, so that the programs
	co, rcsdiff, and rcsmerge can find their peers (co and merge).

	Likewise, "make installcheck" prepends ‘$(DESTDIR)$(bindir)’.

	Previously, you had to "make install" first and then arrange
	for ‘$(DESTDIR)$(bindir)’ to be on ‘PATH’ "manually".

	See tests/README for more info on the test suite.

  - Bug fixes

    - Remove all edit info when removing all revisions.

	Previously, "rcs -o" (outdating) all revisions failed to
	leave the RCS file in a consistent state; edit info (i.e.,
	log message + diff(1) output) remained for the deleted revisions.

	For example, this sequence of commands:
	  echo foo > foo
	  ci -q -i -t-desc -mHELLO foo
	  rcs -q -o1.1: foo
	  grep '@H' foo,v
	used to display "@HELLO" to stdout.

	Now, all revisions are completely removed.

    - Code no longer uses mktemp(3).

	Using mktemp(3) is a security risk.  We use mkstemp(3) now.
	Likewise, rcsfreeze.sh now uses mktemp(1).

    - Misc manpage tweaks / fixes.

	Document ‘rlog -q’; fix small merge.1 omission; add branch
	labels in rcsfile.5; say "GNU RCS <VERSION>" in footer.

  - Other changes

    - All commands accept ‘--help’ and ‘--version’.

	The help output includes an email address for bug reports.
	For continuity, option ‘-V’ is now a synonym for ‘--version’.

	Relatedly, commands no longer display usage info if given
	a bad or malformed option.  You can use ‘--help’ for that.

    - A string of all digits is now valid for author, state.

	This means you can set the author or state to, for example,
	"000000" or "42".  Previously, these would have caused a
	"invalid identifier" or "invalid symbol" error.

    - Env var RCS_MEM_LIMIT controls stdio threshold.

	For speed, RCS uses memory-based routines for files up to
	256 kilobytes, and stream-based (stdio) routines otherwise.
	You can change this threshold value by setting the environment
	variable ‘RCS_MEM_LIMIT’ to a non-negative integer, measured in
	kilobytes.  An empty ‘RCS_MEM_LIMIT’ value is silently ignored.

    - RCS can now work with files larger than 2 gigabytes.

	RCS now uses large file offsets (#define _FILE_OFFSET_BITS 64).

    - Pass-through for RCS file ‘commitid SYMBOL’ now builtin.

	Due to GNU CVS (Concurrent Versions System) using a compatible
	file format as RCS for the RCS file, you can use RCS commands
	to view and manipulate its contents.  (Note, however, the next
	NEWS item.)

	This works well enough except for a small annoyance: CVS adds a
	per-revision field called the "commitid" with an opaque (to RCS)
	symbolic value.  Previously, RCS commands would emit a warning
	"unrecognized phrases" (unless given ‘-q’ on the command-line).

	RCS commands now automatically support pass-through handling of
	‘commitid SYMBOL’ (so ‘-q’ is no longer necessary).

    - RCS file top-level grammar frozen.

	The RCS file top-level grammar is now frozen; RCS no longer
	supports pass-through operation of unrecognized key/data pairs
	(called "newphrases" in the RCS 5.7 rcsfile(5) manpage).

	To avoid painting ourselves into a corner, the grammar now
	includes a new key ‘integrity’ with @-string value, whose
	sub-grammar is not yet specified.  (We intend to keep checksums
	and other compacted redundancies in this field, for manipulation
	by the commands in a future RCS 5.x release.)  For upward
	compatability, the commands in this release do not change this
	field, although they silently read and write it (pass-through),
	if present.

    - RCS file syntax-validated earlier, completely.

	Previously, RCS file syntax was validated lazily, and trailing
	garbage was not detected (see bugfix above).  Now, a top-level
	validation is done on each access.

    - Possible to specify an empty log message with ci -m, rcs -m.

	The commands "ci -m" and "rcs -m" no longer error on an
	empty log message.  Their non-interactive behavior is now
	consistent with the interactive invocation.

	was: ci -m file < /dev/null   # use stdin to avoid error
	now: ci -m file               # works fine, like so

	Note that these commands actually store as the log message
	the string: "*** empty log message ***".

    - Date option accepts some more date-only formats

	Date format ‘YYYY-DDD’ specifies a year and a day (1-366),
	while format ‘YYYY-wWW-D’ specifies a year, an ISO week number
	(0-53, 0 is a GNU RCS extension), and a day number (1-7, for
	Monday through Sunday).

    - Changes to rcsdiff

      - New handling for option: -U N

	This arranges to output N lines of unified-diff context.
	Relatedly, the list of possible options passed to the underlying
	diff(1) appears in both "rcsdiff --help" and in the manual.

      - Refined "same-revision don't call diff" optimization

	Normally, if the two revisions specified are the same, we avoid
	calling the underlying diff(1) on the theory that it will
	produce no output.  This does not hold generally for ‘-y’
	(--side-by-side) and ‘-D’ (--ifdef), such as when the revision
	specified is by different symbolic names, so for those options
	the optimization is disabled.

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