Classification: UNCLASSIFIED Caveats: NONE Sorry...fat fingers...in the first line you enter, change ">>" to ">".
Steve -----Original Message----- From: Glasgow, Steven Mr CIV USA TRADOC Sent: Friday, August 05, 2011 9:20 AM To: [email protected] Subject: RE: cvs command line usage (UNCLASSIFIED) Classification: UNCLASSIFIED Caveats: NONE Enter this command.... cvs -q -n update -d >> /tmp/modified.txt Then... 1) awk '/? /{ print $2 }' /tmp/modified.txt 2) awk '/M /{ print $2 }' /tmp/modified.txt 3 & 4) awk '/U /{ print $2 }' /tmp/modified.txt Also... 1) awk '/A /{ print $2 }' /tmp/modified.txt Will show you the files you have added but not yet committed 2) awk '/R /{ print $2 }' /tmp/modified.txt Will show you the files you have removed but not yet committed 3) awk '/C /{ print $2 }' /tmp/modified.txt Will show you files that will have conflicts when you update Steve -----Original Message----- From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of J.V. Sent: Sunday, August 07, 2011 4:04 PM To: [email protected] Subject: cvs command line usage How do I show a list of files on my local machine that: 1) files that do not exist in the repo 2) files that are modified locally but have not been committed 3) files that are in the repo but not on my local system 4) files that have been modified in the repo but not (updated) on my local system With all of the above, I simply want a single line per file and not alot of other messages or junk. Just one line per file. If this is not possible, would I have to resort to writing perl or something? J.V. Classification: UNCLASSIFIED Caveats: NONE Classification: UNCLASSIFIED Caveats: NONE
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