The `modules' file records your definitions of names for
collections of source code.
cvs will use these definitions if
you use
cvs to check in a file with the right format to
`
$CVSROOT/CVSROOT/modules,v'.
The `modules' file may contain blank lines and comments (lines
beginning with `
#') as well as module definitions.
Long lines can be continued on the next line by specifying a backslash
(``\'') as the last character on the line.
A
module definition is a single line of the `modules' file,
in either of two formats. In both cases,
mname represents the
symbolic module name, and the remainder of the line is its definition.
mname -a aliases...
This represents the simplest way of defining a module
mname.
The `
-a' flags the definition as a simple alias:
cvs
will treat any use of
mname (as a command argument) as if the list
of names
aliases had been specified instead.
aliases may
contain either other module names or paths. When you use paths in
aliases, `
cvs checkout' creates all intermediate
directories in the working directory, just as if the path had been
specified explicitly in the
cvs arguments.
mname [ options ] dir [ files... ] [ &module... ]
In the simplest case, this form of module definition reduces to
`
mname dir'. This defines all the files in directory
dir as module
mname.
dir is a relative path (from
$CVSROOT) to a directory of source in one of the source
repositories. In this case, on
checkout, a single directory
called
mname is created as a working directory; no intermediate
directory levels are used by default, even if
dir was a path
involving several directory levels.
By explicitly specifying
files in the module definition after
dir, you can select particular files from directory
dir. The sample definition for
modules is an example of
a module defined with a single file from a particular directory. Here
is another example:
m4test unsupported/gnu/m4 foreach.m4 forloop.m4
With this definition, executing `
cvs checkout m4test'
will create a single working directory `m4test' containing the two
files listed, which both come from a common directory several levels
deep in the
cvs source repository.
A module definition can refer to other modules by including
`
&module' in its definition.
checkout creates
a subdirectory for each such
module, in your working directory.
New in
cvs 1.3;
avoid this feature if sharing module definitions with older versions
of
cvs.
Finally, you can use one or more of the following
options in
module definitions:
`
-d name', to name the working directory something
other than the module name.
New in
cvs 1.3;
avoid this feature if sharing module definitions with older versions
of
cvs.
`
-i prog' allows you to specify a program
prog
to run whenever files in a module are committed.
prog runs with a
single argument, the full pathname of the affected directory in a
source repository. The `commitinfo', `loginfo', and
`editinfo' files provide other ways to call a program on
commit.
`
-o prog' allows you to specify a program
prog
to run whenever files in a module are checked out.
prog runs
with a single argument, the module name.
`
-e prog' allows you to specify a program
prog
to run whenever files in a module are exported.
prog runs
with a single argument, the module name.
`
-t prog' allows you to specify a program
prog
to run whenever files in a module are tagged.
prog runs with two
arguments: the module name and the symbolic tag specified to
rtag.
`
-u prog' allows you to specify a program
prog
to run whenever `
cvs update' is executed from the top-level
directory of the checked-out module.
prog runs with a
single argument, the full path to the source repository for this module.