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history options

Several options (shown above as `-report') control what kind of report is generated:

-c
Report on each time commit was used (i.e., each time the repository was modified).
-e
Everything (all record types). Equivalent to specifying `-x' with all record types. Of course, `-e' will also include record types which are added in a future version of CVS; if you are writing a script which can only handle certain record types, you'll want to specify `-x'.
-m module
Report on a particular module. (You can meaningfully use `-m' more than once on the command line.)
-o
Report on checked-out modules.
-T
Report on all tags.
-x type
Extract a particular set of record types type from the CVS history. The types are indicated by single letters, which you may specify in combination. Certain commands have a single record type:
F
release
O
checkout
E
export
T
rtag
One of four record types may result from an update:
C
A merge was necessary but collisions were detected (requiring manual merging).
G
A merge was necessary and it succeeded.
U
A working file was copied from the repository.
W
The working copy of a file was deleted during update (because it was gone from the repository).
One of three record types results from commit:
A
A file was added for the first time.
M
A file was modified.
R
A file was removed.

The options shown as `-flags' constrain or expand the report without requiring option arguments:

-a
Show data for all users (the default is to show data only for the user executing history).
-l
Show last modification only.
-w
Show only the records for modifications done from the same working directory where history is executing.

The options shown as `-options args' constrain the report based on an argument:

-b str
Show data back to a record containing the string str in either the module name, the file name, or the repository path.
-D date
Show data since date. This is slightly different from the normal use of `-D date', which selects the newest revision older than date.
-p repository
Show data for a particular source repository (you can specify several `-p' options on the same command line).
-r rev
Show records referring to revisions since the revision or tag named rev appears in individual RCS files. Each RCS file is searched for the revision or tag.
-t tag
Show records since tag tag was last added to the history file. This differs from the `-r' flag above in that it reads only the history file, not the RCS files, and is much faster.
-u name
Show records for user name.


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