I think the answer to this is "SOL", but in desperation I figured I'd describe it anyway.
I spent the day working on a changeset. Decided I wanted to commit this to a branch, and did tla undo, generating an ,,undo-2 directory. I moved this up a level with mv ,,undo-2 ../,,undo-1 tagged a new branch, moved the orig working dir aside, and got the new one fresh. I moved ,,undo-1 into the new dir and did 'tla redo.' Except, it was the wrong changeset. The only thing I can figure is that there already was an ,,undo-1 in the directory above, and the ,,undo-2 was actually placed inside it, rather than moved and renamed as I intended. This makes sense because the bogus changeset was relevant to the parent directory. After issuing 'tla redo', it appears my original changeset was deleted in the process. Am I dead in the water? (Yes, I know there are several points where I could have done something differently/more carefully here.) Bob _______________________________________________ Gnu-arch-users mailing list [email protected] http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/gnu-arch-users GNU arch home page: http://savannah.gnu.org/projects/gnu-arch/
