Res Pons writes:
>  
> I tried both of the commands below, as you mentioned, in a project
> which hasn't had any activity for a long time, therefore, shouldn't have
> generated a report at all but to my amazement, it did!

Why do you think it shouldn't have generated a report at all?  The -d
option only affects which log messages get printed, you always get the
header for each file regardless of whether any log messages are selected
unless you also use the -S option.

> I also realized that there shouldn't be any space between -d and its
> ARG, and the ARG should be in double quotes or CVS will complain.

A space between -d and its argument is perfectly acceptable.  If < is
interpreted specially by your shell (as it is in most Unix-like and
Windows shells), then you need some kind of quoting.  That is an OS
issue, not specific to CVS.
-- 
Larry Jones

It's like SOMEthing... I just can't think of it. -- Calvin


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