Community technical support mailing list was retired 2010 and replaced with a professional technical support team. For assistance please contact: Pre-sales Technical support via email to sales@march-hare.com.
Victor A. Wagner Jr. wrote: > > then why does init tell you about it when it creates the cvswrappers file?? > It's a bit ambiguous but that text has always been there (it's the same in 1.10.x AFAIK). The documentation is more explicit that this refers only to text files. > I had > *.pdf -k 'b' > import a pdf file > check it out and it's 1/10 the size... I have no idea what messed up, > that's why I started looking at -m That should have worked (at least given a recent-ish cvsnt client/server combination). Unless it's overridden in your global .cvswrappers file of course. Frontends tend to pass an explicit -W option on the command line to avoid ambiguity... AFAIK cvswrappers didn't work too well on old CVS versions (never did for me anyway) so people just worked around it. > > I ask again why does init put a cvswrapper file in that mentions -m ?? > History, basically. Nobody's really mentioned it before. > sorry, the option was -s .... worked on co, ci, log ... set the "state" > that used to show up in the log (the default setting was exp There's no record of such an option at cvshome.org, and I certainly haven't removed it. You might be thinking of the old RCS tools... state in CVS refers only to dead or alive, not anything special - it's always 'Exp' on a live revision (for historical reasons). Tony -- Te audire no possum. Musa sapientum fixa est in aure. Tony Hoyle <tmh at nodomain.org> Key ID: 104D/4F4B6917 2003-09-13 Fingerprint: 063C AFB4 3026 F724 0AA2 02B8 E547 470E 4F4B 6917