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NEWS for GNU RCS (Revision Control System)
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- 5.10.1 | 2022-02-02

  - distribution now .tar.lz only

    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 it.

  - bug fix: handle unexpected byte in edit script (rlog)

    Previously, a comma-v file w/ an unexpected (non-'a', non-'d')
    dispatch byte in the edit script would cause rlog to segfault.
    Now, rlog displays an error message w/ diagnostic and aborts.

    The segfault is a regression brought by RCS 5.8 (2011-08-30).
    RCS 5.7 (1995-06-16) would abort correctly, but used a different
    diagnostic message -- "bad diff output line" -- that did not
    include line number information.

    Thus, because of the new (line number) info, new test t303 fails
    for RCS 5.7 as well.  Test number 3xx is for rlog functionality
    and not a regression, even though the problem has regression
    nature, too.

  - portability fix: use ‘SIGSTKSZ’ more gingerly

    Some versions of this <sys/sigstack.h> element cannot be used
    in the CONDITION portion of a preprocessor-conditional (‘#if’)
    construct.  No problem, we found another way.

  - misc portability tweaks via gnulib

    As usual, GNU gnulib provides the right amount of buffer between
    the Ideal and the Real worlds.  Thanks, gnulib.

  - bootstrap/maintenance tools

    upgraded:

     GNU gnulib 2022-01-27 07:00:41
     GNU texinfo 6.8
     GNU Automake 1.16.5
     GNU Autoconf 2.71

    as before:

     (none)


- 5.10.0 | 2020-10-20

  - bug fixes

    - RCS file search skipped RCS/FILENAME by default

      The default set of candidate filenames for the RCS file is:

       RCS/FILENAME,v
       RCS/FILENAME
       FILENAME,v

      RCS 5.8 (released 2011-08-30) introduced a bug which caused the
      default RCS file search to skip RCS/FILENAME.  Regression fixed.

    - ‘rlog -w’ behaved like ‘rlog’ (sans ‘-w’)

      RCS 5.8 (released 2011-08-30) introduced a bug which caused
      ‘rlog -w’ (without any logins specified) to fail to default to
      the user login.  Instead it behaved as if option ‘-w’ were
      omitted entirely.

      The cases where logins are specified (e.g., ‘rlog -wjrhacker’)
      were not affected.

    - missing string in comma-v detected, diagnosed

      Previously, if foo,v contained fragment:

       1.1
       log
       text
       @@

      i.e., there was no string value following the ‘log’ keyword,
      then rlog (et al) would interpret that as an "empty log message"
      instead of as a violation of the RCS file format grammar, which
      stipulates that a string value must follow the keywords ‘desc’,
      ‘log’ and ‘text’ -- (info "(rcs) comma-v grammar").

      Now, such a situation causes rlog (et al) to abort w/ message
      "missing string after KEYWORD" (KEYWORD ∈ {desc, log, text}).

    - subsecond resolution maintained for ‘-d’, ‘-T’

      An RCS ‘delta’ includes a ‘date’ component w/ second (whole
      number) resolution.  Previously, on filesystems that support
      subsecond (fractional) resolution for the file modification time
      (aka "mtime"), RCS commands given the ‘-d’ and/or ‘-T’ options
      would disregard, on read, and specify 0 (zero), on write, the
      fractional mtime.

      Now, RCS preserves subsecond mtime in those cases.  More details
      in new manual section -- (info "(rcs) Stamp resolution").

  - portability fixes

    - now buildable under ‘gcc -std=c11’ (default for GCC 5)

      RCS previously failed to build under ‘-std=c11’, which happens
      to be the default mode of GCC 5.  In particular, ‘-std=c11’ is
      more strict about function attributes syntax than ‘-std=c99’.

      Now, the offending code has been rectified.  (Specifically,
      attribute ‘_Noreturn’ now is at the start of a func decl.)

    - threads support

      RCS itself is clueless about threads, but it uses gnulib, which
      may or may not require threads support.  This manifests as the
      configure script options ‘--enable-threads=MODEL’ as well as
      ‘--disable-threads’.

      Previously, "make" would ignore MODEL (even implicitly), acting
      as if ‘--disable-threads’ were specified.  Now, it takes into
      account MODEL by propagating makefile var ‘LIBTHREAD’.

    - consult ‘USER’ first if ‘LOGNAME’ read-only

      To determine the user (login) name in the absence of a specific
      command-line option, RCS normally checks first the env var
      ‘LOGNAME’ and second, ‘USER’.  Alas, this is unworkable under
      AIX, where ‘LOGNAME’ is read-only.  So now, if the configure
      script finds ‘LOGNAME’ to be read-only, it arranges to build RCS
      to check ‘USER’ first and then ‘LOGNAME’.  See README.

    - configure script avoids ‘date -r’

      Unfortunately ‘date -r’ is not POSIX.  This made AIX unhappy.

    - other AIX accomodation

      The AIX compiler complains about the implicit casting that
      occurs when returning a pointer from a function whose return
      type is ‘bool’.  So, we are now explicit.

  - documentation improvements

    - docfix: add "Log message option" to Detailed Node Listing

      Probably Emacs by now has some automagic way to sync the
      ‘@detailmenu’ section w/ the text body... hmmm.

    - style change due to ‘-zZONE’ option

      Specifying option ‘-zZONE’ to ‘rcs log’ changes the date output
      style to use hyphens (ISO) instead of slashes (YYYY/MM/DD).

    - rlog, use with CVS

      Since RCS 5.8 (released 2011-08-30), there have been sporadic
      reports of rlog (aka "rcs log") failing with CVS files.  The
      manual now addresses this -- (info "(rcs) comma-v particulars").

    - delim-separated list

      GNU RCS has always supported comma to separate items in a list
      (e.g., ‘rcs frob -o1.1,2.2’ to remove (or "outdate") revisions
      1.1 and 2.2).  But did you know that most places a comma is
      welcome and you can use other delimiter characters as well?
      Read all about it -- (info "(rcs) Delim-separated list").

    - (style) pargraphs no longer indented

      This looks nicer (IMHO) for Info and Text output formats.

  - testing improvements

    Many new tests and test cases for existing tests were added, to
    catch regressions and exercise infrequent code paths.  For "make
    check" (locally), function coverage is 97.3% (considered "high")
    and line coverage is 84.9% (considered "medium"), per lcov.

  - bootstrap/maintenance tools

    upgraded:

     GNU gnulib 2020-10-19 23:37:09
     GNU texinfo 6.7
     GNU Automake 1.16.2
     GNU Autoconf 2.69c

    as before:

     (none)


- 5.9.4 | 2015-01-22

  - portability fix in "make check" for OSX

    We now avoid ‘head -N’, where N is a number, since that
    construct is not portable.  See:
    http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-rcs/2014-11/msg00000.html

  - doc improvements

    - index ‘rcs -o’ better

      It seems the term "outdate" is itself outdated, nowadays (sigh).
      This command is now indexed under "deleting" and "removing", as
      well as "outdating".

    - move ‘@cindex’ before ‘@item’ in tables

      The tables of substitution mode options and common options are
      now indexed such that selecting the indexed item in Emacs leaves
      point on the item's line and not the one after.

    - new index entries

      For concepts (locking, implicit checkout, branching-related
      stuff) and keywords.

    - introspective stuff moved into chapter "Hacking"

      These former chapters have been moved into chapter "Hacking":
      "File format", "Still missing", "Reporting bugs".  As a nice
      side-effect, the table of contents of the PDF now is one page.

    - ‘RCS_MEM_LIMIT’ on manpages updated

      RCS 5.9.2 (released 2013-11-28) changed how ‘RCS_MEM_LIMIT’
      works.  The Texinfo docs were updated but not the manpages.

  - maintenance tools

    upgraded:

     GNU Automake 1.15
     GNU gnulib 2015-01-20 09:09:03
     GNU texinfo 5.2

    as before:

     GNU Autoconf 2.69


- 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
    ‘--enable-compat2’, 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 ‘RCS_MEM_LIMIT’ 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 ‘DIFF’ and ‘DIFF3’.  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


- 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


- 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


- 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) compatibility, 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
      compatibility, 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.



- 5.7 | 1995-06-16

  Here is a brief summary of user-visible changes since 5.6.

    New options:
      ‘-kb’ supports binary files.
      ‘-T’ preserves the modification time of RCS files.
      ‘-V’ prints the version number.
      ‘-zLT’ causes RCS to use local time in working files and logs.
      ‘rcsclean -n’ outputs what rcsclean would do, without actually doing it.
      ‘rlog -N’ omits symbolic names.
    There is a new keyword ‘Name’.
    Inserted log lines now have the same prefix as the preceding ‘$Log’ line.

  Most changes for RCS version 5.7 are to fix bugs and improve portability.
  RCS now conforms to GNU configuration standards and to Posix 1003.1b-1993.

  Features new to RCS version 5.7, and possibly incompatible
  in minor ways with previous practice, include:

  - Inserted log lines now have the same prefix as the preceding ‘$Log’
    line.  E.g. if a $Log line starts with ‘// $Log’, log lines are
    prefixed with ‘// ’.  RCS still records the (now obsolescent)
    comment leader inside RCS files, but it ignores the comment leader
    unless it is emulating older RCS versions.  If you plan to access a
    file with both old and new versions of RCS, make sure its comment
    leader matches its ‘$Log’ line prefix.  For backwards compatibility
    with older versions of RCS, if the log prefix is ‘/*’ or ‘(*’
    surrounded by optional white space, inserted log lines contain ‘ *’
    instead of ‘/*’ or ‘(*’; however, this usage is obsolescent and
    should not be relied on.

  - $Log string ‘Revision’ times now use the same format as other times.

  - Log lines are now inserted even if -kk is specified; this simplifies
    merging.

  - ci's -rR option (with a nonempty R) now just specifies a revision
    number R.  In some beta versions, it also reestablished the default
    behavior of releasing a lock and removing the working file.  Now,
    only the bare -r option does this.

  - With an empty extension, any appearance of a directory named ‘RCS’
    in a pathname identifies the pathname as being that of an RCS file.
    For example, ‘a/RCS/b/c’ is now an RCS file with an empty extension.
    Formerly, ‘RCS’ had to be the last directory in the pathname.

  - rlog's -d option by default now uses exclusive time ranges.
    E.g. ‘rlog -d"<T"’ now excludes revisions whose times equal T
    exactly.  Use ‘rlog -d"<=T"’ to get the old behavior.

  - merge now takes up to three -L options, one for each input file.
    Formerly, it took at most two -L options, for the 1st and 3rd input
    files.

  - ‘rcs’ now requires at least one option; this is for future expansion.

  Other features new to RCS version 5.7 include:

  - merge and rcsmerge now pass -A, -E, and -e options to the subsidiary
    diff3.

  - rcs -kb acts like rcs -ko, except it uses binary I/O on working
    files.  This makes no difference under Posix or Unix, but it does
    matter elsewhere.  With -kb in effect, rcsmerge refuses to merge;
    this avoids common problems with CVS merging.

  - The following is for future use by GNU Emacs 19's version control
    package:

    - rcs's new -M option causes it to not send mail when you break
      somebody else's lock.  This is not meant for casual use; see
      rcs(1).

    - ci's new -i option causes an error if the RCS file already exists.
      Similarly, -j causes an error if the RCS file does not already
      exist.

  - The new keyword ‘Name’ is supported; its value is the name, if any,
    used to check out the revision.  E.g. ‘co -rN foo’ causes foo's
    $Name...$ keyword strings to end in ‘: N $’.

  - The new -zZONE option causes RCS to output dates and times using ISO
    8601 format with ZONE as the time zone, and to use ZONE as the
    default time zone for input.  Its most common use is the -zLT
    option, which causes RCS to use local time externally.  You can also
    specify foreign time zones; e.g. -z+05:30 causes RCS to use India
    time (5 hours 30 minutes east of UTC).  This option does not affect
    RCS files themselves, which always use UTC; it affects only output
    (e.g. rlog output, keyword expansion, diff -c times) and
    interpretation of options (e.g. the -d option of ci, co, and rlog).
    Bare -z restores the default behavior of UTC with no time zone
    indication, and the traditional RCS date separator ‘/’ instead of
    the ISO 8601 ‘-’.  RCSINIT may contain a -z option.  ci -k parses
    UTC offsets.

  - The new -T option of ci, co, rcs, and rcsclean preserves the
    modification time of the RCS file unless a revision is added or
    removed.  ci -T sets the RCS file's modification time to the new
    revision's time if the former precedes the latter and there is a new
    revision; otherwise, it preserves the RCS file's modification time.
    Use this option with care, as it can confuse ‘make’; see ci(1).

  - The new -N option of rlog omits symbolic names from the output.

  - A revision number that starts with ‘.’ is considered to be relative
    to the default branch (normally the trunk).  A branch number
    followed by ‘.’  stands for the last revision on that branch.

  - If someone else already holds the lock, rcs -l now asks whether you
    want to break it, instead of immediately reporting an error.

  - ci now always unlocks a revision like 3.5 if you check in a revision
    like 3.5.2.1 that is the first of a new branch of that revision.
    Formerly it was inconsistent.

  - File names may now contain tab, newline, space, and '$'.  They are
    represented in keyword strings with \t, \n, \040, and \044.  \ in a
    file name is now represented by \\ in a keyword string.

  - Identifiers may now start with a digit and (unless they are symbolic
    names) may contain ‘.’.  This permits author names like ‘john.doe’
    and ‘4tran’.

  - A bare -V option now prints the current version number.

  - rcsdiff outputs more readable context diff headers if diff -L works.

  - rcsdiff -rN -rN now suppresses needless checkout and comparison
    of identical revisions.

  - Error messages now contain the names of files to which they apply.

  - Mach style memory mapping is now supported.

  - The installation procedure now conforms to the GNU coding standards.

  - When properly configured, RCS now strictly conforms to Posix 1003.1b-1993.


- 5.6 | 1993-03-25

  Features new to RCS version 5.6 include:

  - Security holes have been plugged; setgid use is no longer supported.

  - co can retrieve old revisions much more efficiently.  To generate
    the Nth youngest revision on the trunk, the old method used up to N
    passes through copies of the working file; the new method uses a
    piece table to generate the working file in one pass.

  - When ci finds no changes in the working file, it automatically
    reverts to the previous revision unless -f is given.

  - RCS follows symbolic links to RCS files instead of breaking them,
    and warns when it breaks hard links to RCS files.

  - ‘$’ stands for the revision number taken from working file keyword
    strings.  E.g. if F contains an Id keyword string, ‘rcsdiff -r$ F’
    compares F to its checked-in revision, and ‘rcs -nL:$ F’ gives the
    symbolic name L to F's revision.

  - co and ci's new -M option sets the modification time of the working
    file to be that of the revision.  Without -M, ci now tries to avoid
    changing the working file's modification time if its contents are
    unchanged.

  - rcs's new -m option changes the log message of an old revision.

  - RCS is portable to hosts that do not permit ‘,’ in filenames.
    (‘,’ is not part of the Posix portable filename character set.)
    A new -x option specifies extensions other than ‘,v’ for RCS files.
    The Unix default is ‘-x,v/’, so that the working file ‘w’ corresponds
    to the first file in the list ‘RCS/w,v’, ‘w,v’, ‘RCS/w’ that works.
    The non-Unix default is ‘-x’, so that only ‘RCS/w’ is tried.
    Eventually, the Unix default should change to ‘-x/,v’ to encourage
    interoperability among all Posix hosts.

  - A new RCSINIT environment variable specifies defaults for options
    like -x.

  - The separator for revision ranges has been changed from ‘-’ to ‘:’,
    because the range ‘A-B’ is ambiguous if ‘A’, ‘B’ and ‘A-B’ are all
    symbolic names.  E.g. the old ‘rlog -r1.5-1.7’ is now ‘rlog
    -r1.5:1.7’; ditto for ‘rcs -o’.  For a while RCS will still support
    (but warn about) the old ‘-’ separator.

  - RCS manipulates its lock files using a method that is more reliable
    under NFS.


- 5.5 | 1991-01-04

  Features new to RCS version 5 include:

  - RCS can check in arbitrary files, not just text files, if diff -a
    works.  RCS can merge lines containing just a single ‘.’ if diff3 -m
    works.  GNU diff supports the -a and -m options.

  - RCS can now be used as a setuid program.  See ci(1) for how users
    can employ setuid copies of ci, co, and rcsclean.  Setuid privileges
    yield extra security if the effective user owns RCS files and
    directories, and if only the effective user can write RCS
    directories.  RCS uses the real user for all accesses other than
    writing RCS directories.  As described in ci(1), there are three
    levels of setuid support.

    1. Setuid works fully if the seteuid() system call lets any process
       switch back and forth between real and effective users, as
       specified in Posix 1003.1a Draft 5.

    2. On hosts with saved setuids (a Posix 1003.1-1990 option) and
       without a modern seteuid(), setuid works unless the real or
       effective user is root.

    3. On hosts that lack both modern seteuid() and saved setuids,
       setuid does not work, and RCS uses the effective user for all
       accesses; formerly it was inconsistent.

  - New options to co, rcsdiff, and rcsmerge give more flexibility to
    keyword substitution.

    - -kkv substitutes the default ‘$Keyword: value $’ for keyword
      strings.  However, a locker's name is inserted only as a file is
      being locked, i.e. by ‘ci -l’ and ‘co -l’.  This is normally the
      default.

    - -kkvl acts like -kkv, except that a locker's name is always
      inserted if the given revision is currently locked.  This was the
      default in version 4.  It is now the default only with when using
      rcsdiff to compare a revision to a working file whose mode is that
      of a file checked out for changes.

    - -kk substitutes just ‘$Keyword$’, which helps to ignore keyword
      values when comparing revisions.

    - -ko retrieves the old revision's keyword string, thus bypassing
      keyword substitution.

    - -kv retrieves just ‘value’.  This can ease the use of keyword
      values, but it is dangerous because it causes RCS to lose track of
      where the keywords are, so for safety the owner write permission
      of the working file is turned off when -kv is used; to edit the
      file later, check it out again without -kv.

  - rcs -ko sets the default keyword substitution to be in the style of
    co -ko, and similarly for the other -k options.  This can be useful
    with file formats that cannot tolerate changing the lengths of
    keyword strings.  However it also renders a RCS file readable only
    by RCS version 5 or later.  Use rcs -kkv to restore the usual
    default substitution.

  - RCS can now be used by development groups that span time zone
    boundaries.  All times are now displayed in UTC, and UTC is the
    default time zone.  To use local time with co -d, append ‘ LT’ to
    the time.  When interchanging RCS files with sites running older
    versions of RCS, time stamp discrepancies may prevent checkins; to
    work around this, use ‘ci -d’ with a time slightly in the future.

  - Dates are now displayed using four-digit years, not two-digit years.
    Years given in -d options must now have four digits.  This change is
    required for RCS to continue to work after 1999/12/31.  The form of
    dates in version 5 RCS files will not change until 2000/01/01, so in
    the meantime RCS files can still be interchanged with sites running
    older versions of RCS.  To make room for the longer dates, rlog now
    outputs ‘lines: +A -D’ instead of ‘lines added/del: A/D’.

  - To help prevent diff programs that are broken or have run out of
    memory from trashing an RCS file, ci now checks diff output more
    carefully.

  - ci -k now handles the Log keyword, so that checking in a file with
    -k does not normally alter the file's contents.

  - RCS no longer outputs white space at the ends of lines unless the
    original working file had it.  For consistency with other keywords,
    a space, not a tab, is now output after ‘$Log:’.  Rlog now puts
    lockers and symbolic names on separate lines in the output to avoid
    generating lines that are too long.  A similar fix has been made to
    lists in the RCS files themselves.

  - RCS no longer outputs the string ‘Locker: ’ when expanding Header or
    Id keywords.  This saves space and reverts back to version 3
    behavior.

  - The default branch is not put into the RCS file unless it is
    nonempty.  Therefore, files generated by RCS version 5 can be read
    by RCS version 3 unless they use the default branch feature
    introduced in version 4.  This fixes a compatibility problem
    introduced by version 4.

  - RCS can now emulate older versions of RCS; see ‘co -V’.  This may be
    useful to overcome compatibility problems due to the above changes.

  - Programs like Emacs can now interact with RCS commands via a pipe:
    the new -I option causes ci, co, and rcs to run interactively, even
    if standard input is not a terminal.  These commands now accept
    multiple inputs from stdin separated by ‘.’ lines.

  - ci now silently ignores the -t option if the RCS file already
    exists.  This simplifies some shell scripts and improves security in
    setuid sites.

  - Descriptive text may be given directly in an argument of the form
    -t-string.

  - The character set for symbolic names has been upgraded from ASCII to
    ISO 8859.

  - rcsdiff now passes through all options used by GNU diff; this is a
    longer list than 4.3BSD diff.

  - merge's new -L option gives tags for merge's overlap report lines.
    This ability used to be present in a different, undocumented form;
    the new form is chosen for compatibility with GNU diff3's -L option.

  - rcsmerge and merge now have a -q option, just like their siblings.

  - rcsclean's new -n option outputs what rcsclean would do, without
    actually doing it.

  - RCS now attempts to ignore parts of an RCS file that look like they
    come from a future version of RCS.

  - When properly configured, RCS now strictly conforms with Posix
    1003.1-1990.  RCS can still be compiled in non-Posix traditional
    Unix environments, and can use common BSD and USG extensions to
    Posix.  RCS is a conforming Standard C program, and also compiles
    under traditional C.

  - Arbitrary limits on internal table sizes have been removed.  The
    only limit now is the amount of memory available via malloc().

  - File temporaries, lock files, signals, and system call return codes
    are now handled more cleanly, portably, and quickly.  Some race
    conditions have been removed.

  - A new compile-time option RCSPREFIX lets administrators avoid
    absolute path names for subsidiary programs, trading speed for
    flexibility.

  - The configuration procedure is now more automatic.

  - Snooping has been removed.


- 4.3 | 1989-11-18

  Version 4 was the first version distributed by FSF.
  Beside bug fixes, features new to RCS version 4 include:

    The notion of default branch has been added; see rcs -b.


- 3.x | ????-??-??

  Version 3 was included in the 4.3BSD distribution.



Copyright information:

   Copyright (C) 2010-2022 Thien-Thi Nguyen
   Copyright (C) 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995 Paul Eggert

   Permission is granted to anyone to make or distribute verbatim copies
   of this document as received, in any medium, provided that the
   copyright notice and this permission notice are preserved,
   thus giving the recipient permission to redistribute in turn.

   Permission is granted to distribute modified versions
   of this document, or of portions of it,
   under the above conditions, provided also that they
   carry prominent notices stating who last changed them.

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