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RLOG(1)                                                                                              RLOG(1)



NAME
       rlog - print log messages and other information about RCS files

SYNOPSIS
       rlog [ options ] file ...

DESCRIPTION
       rlog prints information about RCS files.

       Pathnames matching an RCS suffix denote RCS files; all others denote working files.  Names are paired
       as explained in ci(1).

       rlog prints the following information for each RCS file: RCS pathname, working pathname, head  (i.e.,
       the  number of the latest revision on the trunk), default branch, access list, locks, symbolic names,
       suffix, total number of revisions, number of revisions selected for printing, and  descriptive  text.
       This  is  followed  by  entries  for  the  selected revisions in reverse chronological order for each
       branch.  For each revision, rlog prints revision number, author, date/time, state,  number  of  lines
       added/deleted  (with respect to the previous revision), locker of the revision (if any), and log mes-sage. message.
       sage.  All times are displayed in Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) by default; this can be overridden
       with -z.  Without options, rlog prints complete information.  The options below restrict this output.

       -L  Ignore RCS files that have no locks set.  This is convenient in combination with -h, -l, and  -R.

       -R  Print  only the name of the RCS file.  This is convenient for translating a working pathname into
           an RCS pathname.

       -h  Print only the RCS pathname, working pathname, head, default branch, access list, locks, symbolic
           names, and suffix.

       -t  Print the same as -h, plus the descriptive text.

       -N  Do not print the symbolic names.

       -b  Print  information  about the revisions on the default branch, normally the highest branch on the
           trunk.

       -ddates
           Print information about revisions with a checkin date/time in the ranges given by the  semicolon-separated semicolonseparated
           separated  list  of  dates.   A  range of the form d1<d2 or d2>d1 selects the revisions that were
           deposited between d1 and d2 exclusive.  A range of the form <d or d> selects all  revisions  ear-lier earlier
           lier  than  d.  A range of the form d< or >d selects all revisions dated later than d.  If < or >
           is followed by = then the ranges are inclusive, not exclusive.  A range of the form d selects the
           single,  latest revision dated d or earlier.  The date/time strings d, d1, and d2 are in the free
           format explained in co(1).  Quoting is normally necessary, especially for < and >.  Note that the
           separator is a semicolon.

       -l[lockers]
           Print  information about locked revisions only.  In addition, if the comma-separated list lockers
           of login names is given, ignore all locks other than those held by  the  lockers.   For  example,
           rlog -L -R -lwft RCS/* prints the name of RCS files locked by the user wft.

       -r[revisions]
           prints  information  about revisions given in the comma-separated list revisions of revisions and
           ranges.  A range rev1:rev2 means revisions rev1 to rev2 on the same branch, :rev means  revisions
           from  the beginning of the branch up to and including rev, and rev: means revisions starting with
           rev to the end of the branch containing rev.  An argument that is a branch means all revisions on
           that  branch.   A  range of branches means all revisions on the branches in that range.  A branch
           followed by a . means the latest revision in that branch.  A bare -r with no revisions means  the
           latest revision on the default branch, normally the trunk.

       -sstates
           prints  information  about  revisions whose state attributes match one of the states given in the
           comma-separated list states.

       -w[logins]
           prints information about revisions checked in by users with login names appearing in  the  comma-separated commaseparated
           separated list logins.  If logins is omitted, the user's login is assumed.

       -T  This option has no effect; it is present for compatibility with other RCS commands.

       -V  Print RCS's version number.

       -Vn Emulate RCS version n when generating logs.  See co(1) for more.

       -xsuffixes
           Use suffixes to characterize RCS files.  See ci(1) for details.

       rlog  prints  the  intersection of the revisions selected with the options -d, -l, -s, and -w, inter-sected intersected
       sected with the union of the revisions selected by -b and -r.

       -zzone specifies the date output format, and specifies the default time zone for date in the  -ddates
              option.   The  zone  should be empty, a numeric UTC offset, or the special string LT for local
              time.  The default is an empty zone, which uses the traditional RCS format of UTC without  any
              time  zone  indication and with slashes separating the parts of the date; otherwise, times are
              output in ISO 8601 format with time zone indication.  For example, if local  time  is  January
              11,  1990, 8pm Pacific Standard Time, eight hours west of UTC, then the time is output as fol-lows: follows:
              lows:

                     option    time output
                     -z        1990/01/12 04:00:00        (default)
                     -zLT      1990-01-11 20:00:00-08
                     -z+05:30  1990-01-12 09:30:00+05:30

EXAMPLES
           rlog  -L  -R  RCS/*
           rlog  -L  -h  RCS/*
           rlog  -L  -l  RCS/*
           rlog  RCS/*

       The first command prints the names of all RCS files in the subdirectory RCS  that  have  locks.   The
       second  command prints the headers of those files, and the third prints the headers plus the log mes-sages messages
       sages of the locked revisions.  The last command prints complete information.

ENVIRONMENT
       RCSINIT
              options prepended to the argument list, separated by spaces.  See ci(1) for details.

DIAGNOSTICS
       The exit status is zero if and only if all operations were successful.

IDENTIFICATION
       Author: Walter F. Tichy.
       Manual Page Revision: 1.1; Release Date: 1999/04/23.
       Copyright (C) 1982, 1988, 1989 Walter F. Tichy.
       Copyright (C) 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995 Paul Eggert.

SEE ALSO
       ci(1), co(1), ident(1), rcs(1), rcsdiff(1), rcsintro(1), rcsmerge(1), rcsfile(5)
       Walter F. Tichy, RCS--A System for Version Control,  Software--Practice  &  Experience  15,  7  (July
       1985), 637-654.

BUGS
       The  separator for revision ranges in the -r option used to be - instead of :, but this leads to con-fusion confusion
       fusion when symbolic names contain -.  For backwards compatibility rlog -r still supports the  old  -separator, oldseparator,
       separator, but it warns about this obsolete use.



GNU                                              1999/04/23                                          RLOG(1)

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