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CO(1)							    CO(1)

NAME
       co - check out RCS revisions

SYNOPSIS
       co [options] file ...

DESCRIPTION
       co  retrieves  a revision from each RCS file and stores it
       into the corresponding working file.

       Pathnames matching an RCS suffix	 denote	 RCS  files;  all
       others	denote	 working  files.   Names  are  paired  as
       explained in ci(1).

       Revisions of an RCS file can  be	 checked  out  locked  or
       unlocked.    Locking   a	  revision  prevents  overlapping
       updates.	 A revision checked out for reading or processing
       (e.g.,  compiling) need not be locked.  A revision checked
       out for editing and later checkin must normally be locked.
       Checkout	 with locking fails if the revision to be checked
       out is currently locked by another user.	 (A lock  can  be
       broken  with rcs(1).)  Checkout with locking also requires
       the caller to be on the	access	list  of  the  RCS  file,
       unless  he  is  the owner of the file or the superuser, or
       the access list is empty.  Checkout without locking is not
       subject to accesslist restrictions, and is not affected by
       the presence of locks.

       A revision is selected by options for revision  or  branch
       number,	checkin	 date/time,  author,  or state.	 When the
       selection options are applied in combination, co retrieves
       the  latest  revision that satisfies all of them.  If none
       of the selection options is specified,  co  retrieves  the
       latest revision on the default branch (normally the trunk,
       see the -b option of rcs(1)).  A revision or branch number
       can  be attached to any of the options -f, -I, -l, -M, -p,
       -q, -r, or -u.  The options -d (date), -s (state), and  -w
       (author)	 retrieve  from	 a  single  branch,  the selected
       branch, which is either specified by one of -f,	...,  -u,
       or the default branch.

       A co command applied to an RCS file with no revisions cre-
       ates a zero-length working file.	 co always performs  key-
       word substitution (see below).

OPTIONS
       -r[rev]
	      retrieves	 the latest revision whose number is less
	      than or equal to rev.  If rev  indicates	a  branch
	      rather than a revision, the latest revision on that
	      branch is retrieved.  If rev is omitted, the latest
	      revision	on  the default branch (see the -b option
	      of rcs(1)) is retrieved.	If rev is  $,  co  deter-
	      mines  the  revision  number from keyword values in

GNU			     18:09:42				1

CO(1)							    CO(1)

	      the working file.	 Otherwise, a  revision	 is  com-
	      posed  of	 one  or  more numeric or symbolic fields
	      separated by periods.  If rev begins with a period,
	      then  the	 default  branch  (normally the trunk) is
	      prepended to it.	If rev is a  branch  number  fol-
	      lowed by a period, then the latest revision on that
	      branch is used.  The numeric equivalent of  a  sym-
	      bolic  field is specified with the -n option of the
	      commands ci(1) and rcs(1).

       -l[rev]
	      same as -r, except that it also locks the retrieved
	      revision for the caller.

       -u[rev]
	      same  as	-r,  except that it unlocks the retrieved
	      revision if it was locked by the caller.	If rev is
	      omitted,	-u  retrieves  the revision locked by the
	      caller, if there is one;	otherwise,  it	retrieves
	      the latest revision on the default branch.

       -f[rev]
	      forces  the overwriting of the working file; useful
	      in connection with -q.  See also FILE MODES  below.

       -kkv   Generate	keyword	 strings  using the default form,
	      e.g. $Revision: 1995/12/06 $ for the Revision  key-
	      word.   A locker's name is inserted in the value of
	      the Header, Id, and Locker keyword strings only  as
	      a	 file  is  being locked, i.e. by ci -l and co -l.
	      This is the default.

       -kkvl  Like -kkv, except that a locker's	 name  is  always
	      inserted if the given revision is currently locked.

       -kk    Generate only keyword  names  in	keyword	 strings;
	      omit their values.  See KEYWORD SUBSTITUTION below.
	      For example, for the Revision keyword, generate the
	      string  $Revision$ instead of $Revision: 1995/12/06
	      $.  This option is useful to ignore differences due
	      to  keyword  substitution	 when comparing different
	      revisions of a file.   Log  messages  are	 inserted
	      after  $Log$  keywords  even  if	-kk is specified,
	      since this tends to be  more  useful  when  merging
	      changes.

       -ko    Generate	the  old  keyword  string, present in the
	      working file just before it was  checked	in.   For
	      example,	for  the  Revision  keyword, generate the
	      string  $Revision:  1.1  $  instead  of  $Revision:
	      1995/12/06  $  if	 that  is how the string appeared
	      when the file was checked in.  This can  be  useful
	      for  file	 formats that cannot tolerate any changes
	      to substrings that  happen  to  take  the	 form  of

GNU			     18:09:42				2

CO(1)							    CO(1)

	      keyword strings.

       -kb    Generate	a binary image of the old keyword string.
	      This acts like -ko, except it performs all  working
	      file  input  and output in binary mode.  This makes
	      little difference on Posix and Unix hosts,  but  on
	      DOS-like	hosts  one  should use rcs -i -kb to ini-
	      tialize an RCS file intended to be used for  binary
	      files.   Also,  on  all hosts, rcsmerge(1) normally
	      refuses to merge files when -kb is in effect.

       -kv    Generate only keyword values for	keyword	 strings.
	      For example, for the Revision keyword, generate the
	      string 1995/12/06 instead of $Revision:  1995/12/06
	      $.   This	 can  help  generate files in programming
	      languages where it is hard to strip keyword  delim-
	      iters  like  $Revision: $	 from a string.	 However,
	      further keyword substitution  cannot  be	performed
	      once  the keyword names are removed, so this option
	      should be used with care.	 Because of  this  danger
	      of  losing keywords, this option cannot be combined
	      with -l, and the	owner  write  permission  of  the
	      working file is turned off; to edit the file later,
	      check it out again without -kv.

       -p[rev]
	      prints the retrieved revision on the standard  out-
	      put  rather  than	 storing  it in the working file.
	      This option is useful when co is part of a pipe.

       -q[rev]
	      quiet mode; diagnostics are not printed.

       -I[rev]
	      interactive mode; the user is  prompted  and  ques-
	      tioned  even  if the standard input is not a termi-
	      nal.

       -ddate retrieves	 the  latest  revision	on  the	 selected
	      branch  whose  checkin  date/time	 is  less than or
	      equal to date.  The date and time can be	given  in
	      free  format.   The  time	 zone LT stands for local
	      time; other common time zone names are  understood.
	      For  example, the following dates are equivalent if
	      local time is January 11, 1990, 8pm  Pacific  Stan-
	      dard  Time, eight hours west of Coordinated Univer-
	      sal Time (UTC):

GNU			     18:09:42				3

CO(1)							    CO(1)

		     8:00 pm lt
		     4:00 AM, Jan. 12, 1990	      default is UTC
		     1990-01-12 04:00:00+00	      ISO 8601 (UTC)
		     1990-01-11 20:00:00-08	      ISO 8601 (local time)
		     1990/01/12 04:00:00	      traditional RCS format
		     Thu Jan 11 20:00:00 1990 LT      output of ctime(3) + LT
		     Thu Jan 11 20:00:00 PST 1990     output of date(1)
		     Fri Jan 12 04:00:00 GMT 1990
		     Thu, 11 Jan 1990 20:00:00 -0800  Internet RFC 822
		     12-January-1990, 04:00 WET

	      Most fields in the date and time can be  defaulted.
	      The default time zone is normally UTC, but this can
	      be overridden by the -z option.  The other defaults
	      are determined in the order year, month, day, hour,
	      minute, and second (most to least significant).  At
	      least  one  of  these fields must be provided.  For
	      omitted fields that are of higher significance than
	      the highest provided field, the time zone's current
	      values are assumed.  For all other omitted  fields,
	      the  lowest possible values are assumed.	For exam-
	      ple, without -z, the date	 20,  10:30  defaults  to
	      10:30:00	UTC  of	 the  20th of the UTC time zone's
	      current month and	 year.	 The  date/time	 must  be
	      quoted if it contains spaces.

       -M[rev]
	      Set  the	modification time on the new working file
	      to be the date of the retrieved revision.	 Use this
	      option with care; it can confuse make(1).

       -sstate
	      retrieves	 the  latest  revision	on  the	 selected
	      branch whose state is set to state.

       -T     Preserve the modification time on the RCS file even
	      if  the RCS file changes because a lock is added or
	      removed.	This option can suppress extensive recom-
	      pilation	caused	by  a  make(1) dependency of some
	      other copy of the working file  on  the  RCS  file.
	      Use this option with care; it can suppress recompi-
	      lation even when it is needed, i.e. when the change
	      of  lock	would mean a change to keyword strings in
	      the other working file.

       -w[login]
	      retrieves	 the  latest  revision	on  the	 selected
	      branch  which was checked in by the user with login
	      name login.  If the argument login is omitted,  the
	      caller's login is assumed.

       -jjoinlist
	      generates	 a  new revision which is the join of the
	      revisions on  joinlist.	This  option  is  largely

GNU			     18:09:42				4

CO(1)							    CO(1)

	      obsoleted	 by rcsmerge(1) but is retained for back-
	      wards compatibility.

	      The joinlist is a comma-separated list of pairs  of
	      the  form	 rev2:rev3, where rev2 and rev3 are (sym-
	      bolic or numeric) revision numbers.  For	the  ini-
	      tial  such pair, rev1 denotes the revision selected
	      by the above options -f, ..., -w.	  For  all  other
	      pairs,  rev1  denotes the revision generated by the
	      previous pair.   (Thus,  the  output  of	one  join
	      becomes the input to the next.)

	      For  each	 pair,	co  joins revisions rev1 and rev3
	      with respect to rev2.  This means that all  changes
	      that transform rev2 into rev1 are applied to a copy
	      of rev3.	This is particularly useful if	rev1  and
	      rev3 are the ends of two branches that have rev2 as
	      a common ancestor.  If rev1<rev2<rev3 on	the  same
	      branch,  joining	generates a new revision which is
	      like rev3, but with all changes that lead from rev1
	      to rev2 undone.  If changes from rev2 to rev1 over-
	      lap with changes from  rev2  to  rev3,  co  reports
	      overlaps as described in merge(1).

	      For  the	initial	 pair,	rev2 can be omitted.  The
	      default is the common  ancestor.	 If  any  of  the
	      arguments	 indicate  branches, the latest revisions
	      on those branches are assumed.  The options -l  and
	      -u lock or unlock rev1.

       -V     Print RCS's version number.

       -Vn    Emulate  RCS  version n, where n can be 3, 4, or 5.
	      This can be useful  when	interchanging  RCS  files
	      with  others who are running older versions of RCS.
	      To see which version of RCS your correspondents are
	      running,	have  them invoke rcs -V; this works with
	      newer versions of RCS.  If it  doesn't  work,  have
	      them  invoke  rlog  on  an RCS file; if none of the
	      first  few  lines	 of  output  contain  the  string
	      branch:  it  is version 3; if the dates' years have
	      just two digits, it is version 4; otherwise, it  is
	      version  5.   An RCS file generated while emulating
	      version 3 loses its default branch.  An  RCS  revi-
	      sion generated while emulating version 4 or earlier
	      has a time stamp that is off by up to 13 hours.	A
	      revision	extracted  while  emulating  version 4 or
	      earlier contains	abbreviated  dates  of	the  form
	      yy/mm/dd and can also contain different white space
	      and line prefixes in the substitution for $Log$.

       -xsuffixes
	      Use suffixes to characterize RCS files.  See  ci(1)
	      for details.

GNU			     18:09:42				5

CO(1)							    CO(1)

       -zzone specifies the date output format in keyword substi-
	      tution, and specifies the	 default  time	zone  for
	      date  in	the  -ddate  option.   The zone should be
	      empty, a numeric UTC offset, or the special  string
	      LT  for  local time.  The default is an empty zone,
	      which uses the traditional RCS format of UTC  with-
	      out any time zone indication and with slashes sepa-
	      rating the parts of the date; otherwise, times  are
	      output  in  ISO  8601 format with time zone indica-
	      tion.  For example, if local time	 is  January  11,
	      1990,  8pm  Pacific Standard Time, eight hours west
	      of UTC, then the time is output as follows:

		     option    time output
		     -z	       1990/01/12 04:00:00	  (default)
		     -zLT      1990-01-11 20:00:00-08
		     -z+05:30  1990-01-12 09:30:00+05:30

	      The -z option does not affect dates stored  in  RCS
	      files, which are always UTC.

KEYWORD SUBSTITUTION
       Strings	of  the form $keyword$ and $keyword:...$ embedded
       in the text are replaced with strings of	 the  form  $key-
       word:value$  where  keyword  and	 value	are  pairs listed
       below.  Keywords can be embedded	 in  literal  strings  or
       comments to identify a revision.

       Initially,  the user enters strings of the form $keyword$.
       On checkout, co replaces these strings with strings of the
       form $keyword:value$.  If a revision containing strings of
       the latter form is checked back in, the value fields  will
       be  replaced  during the next checkout.	Thus, the keyword
       values are automatically updated on checkout.  This  auto-
       matic substitution can be modified by the -k options.

       Keywords and their corresponding values:

       $Author$
	      The login name of the user who checked in the revi-
	      sion.

       $Date$ The date and time	 the  revision	was  checked  in.
	      With -zzone a numeric time zone offset is appended;
	      otherwise, the date is UTC.

       $Header$
	      A standard header containing the full  pathname  of
	      the  RCS	file,  the  revision number, the date and
	      time, the author, the state,  and	 the  locker  (if
	      locked).	With -zzone a numeric time zone offset is
	      appended to the date; otherwise, the date is UTC.

       $Id$   Same as $Header$, except that the RCS  filename  is

GNU			     18:09:42				6

CO(1)							    CO(1)

	      without a path.

       $Locker$
	      The  login name of the user who locked the revision
	      (empty if not locked).

       $Log$  The log message supplied during  checkin,	 preceded
	      by  a header containing the RCS filename, the revi-
	      sion number, the author, and  the	 date  and  time.
	      With -zzone a numeric time zone offset is appended;
	      otherwise, the date is UTC.  Existing log	 messages
	      are  not replaced.  Instead, the new log message is
	      inserted after $Log:...$.	 This is useful for accu-
	      mulating a complete change log in a source file.

	      Each  inserted  line is prefixed by the string that
	      prefixes the $Log$ line.	For example, if the $Log$
	      line is "// $Log: tan.cc $", RCS prefixes each line
	      of the log with "// ".  This  is	useful	for  lan-
	      guages  with  comments  that  go	to the end of the
	      line.  The convention for other languages is to use
	      a	 "  *  "  prefix inside a multiline comment.  For
	      example, the initial log comment	of  a  C  program
	      conventionally is of the following form:

		     /*
		      * $Log$
		      */

	      For  backwards compatibility with older versions of
	      RCS, if the log prefix is /* or  (*  surrounded  by
	      optional	white space, inserted log lines contain a
	      space instead of / or (;	however,  this	usage  is
	      obsolescent and should not be relied on.

       $Name$ The  symbolic  name used to check out the revision,
	      if   any.	   For	 example,   co -rJoe	generates
	      $Name: Joe $.  Plain co generates just $Name:  $.

       $RCSfile$
	      The name of the RCS file without a path.

       $Revision$
	      The revision number assigned to the revision.

       $Source$
	      The full pathname of the RCS file.

       $State$
	      The  state  assigned  to	the  revision with the -s
	      option of rcs(1) or ci(1).

       The following characters in keyword values are represented
       by escape sequences to keep keyword strings well-formed.

GNU			     18:09:42				7

CO(1)							    CO(1)

	      char     escape sequence
	      tab      \t
	      newline  \n
	      space    \040
	      $	       \044
	      \	       \\

FILE MODES
       The working file inherits the read and execute permissions
       from the RCS file.  In addition, the owner  write  permis-
       sion  is	 turned	 on,  unless  -kv  is  set or the file is
       checked out unlocked and locking is  set	 to  strict  (see
       rcs(1)).

       If a file with the name of the working file exists already
       and has write permission, co aborts the	checkout,  asking
       beforehand  if  possible.  If the existing working file is
       not writable or -f is given, the working file  is  deleted
       without asking.

FILES
       co  accesses files much as ci(1) does, except that it does
       not need to read the working file unless a revision number
       of $ is specified.

ENVIRONMENT
       RCSINIT
	      options  prepended  to the argument list, separated
	      by spaces.  See ci(1) for details.

DIAGNOSTICS
       The RCS pathname, the working pathname, and  the	 revision
       number  retrieved  are  written	to the diagnostic output.
       The exit status is zero if and only if all operations were
       successful.

IDENTIFICATION
       Author: Walter F. Tichy.
       Manual  Page Revision: 1995/12/06; Release Date: 18:09:42.
       Copyright (C) 1982, 1988, 1989 Walter F. Tichy.
       Copyright (C) 1990, 1991,  1992,	 1993,	1994,  1995  Paul
       Eggert.

SEE ALSO
       rcsintro(1),  ci(1), ctime(3), date(1), ident(1), make(1),
       rcs(1),	rcsclean(1),  rcsdiff(1),  rcsmerge(1),	 rlog(1),
       rcsfile(5)
       Walter  F.  Tichy,  RCS--A  System  for	Version	 Control,
       Software--Practice  &  Experience  15,  7   (July   1985),
       637-654.

LIMITS
       Links to the RCS and working files are not preserved.

GNU			     18:09:42				8

CO(1)							    CO(1)

       There  is  no way to selectively suppress the expansion of
       keywords, except by writing them	 differently.	In  nroff
       and troff, this is done by embedding the null-character \&
       into the keyword.

GNU			     18:09:42				9

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