fsvs-options(5)
.PP
Description
FSVS - Options and configfile
NAME
Further options for FSVS. -
List of settings that modify FSVS’ behaviour. List of settings that modify FSVS’ behaviour.
FSVS understands some options that modify its behaviour in various small ways.
Overview
This document
This document lists all available options in FSVS, in an full listing and in groups.
Furthermore you can see their relative priorities and some examples.
Semantic groups
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Output settings and entry filtering |
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Diffing and merging on update |
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Options for commit |
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Performance and tuning related options |
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Base configuration |
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Debugging and diagnosing |
Sorted list of options
FSVS currently knows:
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all_removed - Trimming the list of deleted entries |
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author - Author |
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change_check - Change detection |
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colordiff - Using colordiff |
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commit_to - Destination URL for commit |
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conflict - How to resolve conflicts on update |
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conf - Path definitions for the config and WAA area. |
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config_dir - Configuration directory for the subversion libraries. |
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copyfrom_exp - Avoiding expensive compares on copyfrom-detect |
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debug_output - Destination for debug output |
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debug_buffer - Using a debug buffer |
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delay - Waiting for a time change after working copy operations |
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diff_prg, diff_opt, diff_extra - Options relating to the ’diff’ action |
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dir_exclude_mtime - Ignore mtime-metadata changes for directories |
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dir_sort - Directory sorting |
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empty_commit - Doing empty commits |
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empty_message - Avoid commits without a commit message |
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filter - Filtering entries, but see -f. |
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group_stats - Getting grouping/ignore statistics. |
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limit - ’fsvs log’ revision limit |
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log_output - ’fsvs log’ output format |
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merge_prg, merge_opt - Options regarding the ’merge’ program |
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mkdir_base - Creating directories in the repository above the URL |
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path - Displaying paths |
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softroot - Using an alternate root directory |
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stat_color - Status output coloring |
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stop_change - Checking for changes in a script |
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verbose - Verbosity flags |
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warning - Setting warning behaviour, but see -W. |
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waa - waa. |
Priorities for option setting
The priorities are
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Command line (highest) |
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Environment variables. These are named as FSVS_{upper-case option name}. |
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$HOME/.fsvs/wc-dir/config |
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$FSVS_CONF/wc-dir/config |
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$HOME/.fsvs/config |
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$FSVS_CONF/config |
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Default value, compiled in (lowest) |
Note:
The $HOME-dependent configuration files are not implemented currently. Volunteers?
Furthermore there are ’intelligent’ run-time dependent settings, like turning off colour output when the output is redirected. Their priority is just below the command line - so they can always be overridden if necessary.
Examples
Using the commandline:
fsvs -o path=environment
fsvs -opath=environment
Using
environment variables:
FSVS_PATH=absolute fsvs st
A configuration
file, from $FSVS_CONF/config or in a WC-specific path below
$FSVS_CONF:
# FSVS configuration file
path=wcroot
Output settings and entry filtering
Trimming the list of deleted entries
If you remove a
directory, all entries below are implicitly known to be
deleted, too. To make the status output shorter
there’s the all_removed option which, if set to no,
will cause children of removed entries to be omitted.
Example for the config file:
all_removed=no
Ignore mtime-metadata changes for directories
When this option
is enabled, directories where only the mtime changed are not
reported on status anymore.
This is useful in situations where temporary files are
created in directories, eg. by text editors. (Example: VIM
swapfiles when no directory option is configured).
Example for the config file:
dir_exclude_mtime=yes
Directory sorting
If you’d
like to have the output of status sorted, you can use
the option dir_sort=yes. FSVS will do a run through the
tree, to read the status of the entries, and then go through
it again, but sorted by name.
Note:
If FSVS aborts with an error during status output, you might want to turn this option off again, to see where FSVS stops; the easiest way is on the command line with -odir_sort=no.
Filtering entries
Please see the command line
parameter for -f, which is identical.
fsvs -o filter=mtime
’fsvs log’ revision limit
There are some defaults for the number of revisions that are shown on a ’fsvs log’ command:
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2 revisions given (-rX:Y): abs(X-Y)+1, ie. all revisions in that range. |
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1 revision given: exactly that one. |
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no revisions given: from HEAD to 1, with a maximum of 100. |
As this option can only be used to set an upper limit of revisions, it makes most sense for the no-revision-arguments case.
’fsvs log’ output format
You can modify aspects of the fsvs log output format by setting the log_output option to a combination of these flags:
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color: This uses color in the output, similar to cg-log (cogito-log); the header and separator lines are highlighted. |
Note:
This uses ANSI escape sequences, and tries to restore the default color; if you know how to do that better (and more compatible), please tell the developer mailing list.
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indent: Additionally you can shift the log message itself a space to the right, to make the borders clearer. |
Furthermore the value normal is
available; this turns off all special handling.
Note:
If you start such an option, the value is reset; so if you specify log_output=color,indent in the global config file, and use log_output=color on the commandline, only colors are used. This is different to the Filtering entries option, which is cumulating.
Displaying paths
You can specify how paths
printed by FSVS should look like; this is used for the entry
status output of the various actions, and for the diff
header lines.
There are several possible settings, of which one can be
chosen via the path option.
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wcroot
This is the old, traditional FSVS setting, where all paths
are printed relative to the working copy root.
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parameter
With this setting FSVS works like most other programs - it
uses the first best-matching parameter given by the user,
and appends the rest of the path.
This is the new default.
Note:
Internally FSVS still first parses all arguments, and then does a single run through the entries. So if some entry matches more than one parameter, it is printed using the first match.
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absolute
All paths are printed in absolute form. This is useful if
you want to paste them into other consoles without worrying
whether the current directory matches, or for using them in
pipelines.
The next two are nearly identical to absolute, but the beginning of paths are substituted by environment variables. This makes sense if you want the advantage of full paths, but have some of them abbreviated.
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environment
Match variables to directories after reading the known
entries, and use this cached information. This is faster,
but might miss the best case if new entries are found (which
would not be checked against possible longer hits).
Furthermore, as this works via associating environment
variables to entries, the environment variables must at
least match the working copy base - shorter paths
won’t be substituted.
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full-environment |
Check for matches just before
printing the path.
This is slower, but finds the best fit.
Note:
The string of the environment
variables must match a directory name; the filename is
always printed literally, and partial string matches are not
allowed. Feedback wanted.
Only environment variables whose names start with WC are
used for substitution, to avoid using variables like $PWD,
$OLDPWD, $HOME and similar which might differ between
sessions. Maybe the allowed prefixes for the environment
variables should be settable in the configuration. Opinions
to the users mailing list, please.
Example, with / as working copy
base:
$ cd /etc
$ fsvs -o path=wcroot st
$ fsvs -o path=absolute st
$ fsvs -o
path=parameters st
$ fsvs -o path=parameters st .
$ fsvs -o path=parameters st /
$ fsvs -o path=parameters st X11
$ fsvs -o path=parameters st ../dev/..
$ fsvs -o path=parameters st X11 ../etc
$ fsvs -o path=parameters st ../etc X11
$ fsvs -o
path=environ st
$ WCBAR=/etc fsvs -o path=wcroot st
$ WCBAR=/etc fsvs -o path=wcroot st /
$ WCBAR=/e fsvs -o path=wcroot st
$ WCBAR=/etc WCFOO=/etc/X11 fsvs -o path=wcroot st
$ touch
/etc/X11/xinit/xinitrc
$ fsvs -o path=parameters st
$ fsvs -o path=parameters st X11 /etc/X11/xinit
Note:
At least for the command line options the strings can be abbreviated, as long as they’re still identifiable. Please use the full strings in the configuration file, to avoid having problems in future versions when more options are available.
Status output coloring
FSVS can colorize the output of
the status lines; removed entries will be printed in red,
new ones in green, and otherwise changed in blue. Unchanged
(for -v) will be given in the default color.
For this you can set stat_color=yes; this is turned off per
default.
As with the other colorizing options this gets turned off
automatically if the output is not on a tty; on the command
line you can override this, though.
Checking for changes in a script
If you want to use FSVS in
scripts, you might simply want to know whether anything was
changed.
In this case use the stop_on_change option, possibly
combined with Filtering entries; this gives you no
output on STDOUT, but an error code on the first change
seen:
fsvs -o stop_change=yes st /etc
if fsvs status -o stop_change=yes -o filter=text /etc/init.d
then
echo No change found ...
else
echo Changes seen.
fi
Verbosity flags
If you want a bit more control about the data you’re getting you can use some specific flags for the verbose options.
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none,veryquiet - reset the bitmask, don’t display anything. | ||
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quiet - only a few output lines. | ||
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changes - the characters showing what has changed for an entry. | ||
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size - the size for files, or the textual description (like ’dir’). | ||
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path - the path of the file, formatted according to the path option. | ||
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default - The default value, ie. changes, size and name. | ||
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meta - One more than the default so it can be used via a single ’-v’, it marks that the mtime and owner/group changes get reported as two characters.If ’-v’ is used to achieve that, even entries without changes are reported, unless overridden by Filtering entries. | ||
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url - Displays the entries’ top priority URL | ||
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copyfrom - Displays the URL this entry has been copied from (see copy). | ||
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group - The group this entry belongs to, see group | ||
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urls - Displays all known URLs of this entry | ||
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stacktrace - Print the full stacktrace when reporting errors; useful for debugging. | ||
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all - Sets all flags. Mostly useful for debugging. |
Please note that if you want to
display fewer items than per default, you’ll
have to clear the bitmask first, like this:
fsvs status -o verbose=none,changes,path
Diffing and merging on update
Options relating to the ’diff’ action
The diff is not
done internally in FSVS, but some other program is called,
to get the highest flexibility.
There are several option values:
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diff_prg: The executable name, default ’diff’. |
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diff_opt: The default options, default ’-pu’. |
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diff_extra: Extra options, no default. |
The call is done as
$diff_prg $diff_opt $file1 --label ’$label1’
$file2 --label ’$label2’ $diff_extra
Note:
In diff_opt you should use only use command line flags without parameters; in diff_extra you can encode a single flag with parameter (like ’-U5’). If you need more flexibility, write a shell script and pass its name as diff_prg.
Advanced users might be interested in exported environment variables, too; with their help you can eg. start different diff programs depending on the filename.
Using colordiff
If you have colordiff installed
on your system, you might be interested in the colordiff
option.
It can take one of these values:
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no, off or false: Don’t use colordiff. | ||
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empty (default value): Try to use colordiff as executable, but don’t throw an error if it can’t be started; just pipe the data as-is to STDOUT. (Auto mode.) | ||
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anything else: Pipe the output of the diff program (see Options relating to the ’diff’ action) to the given executable. |
Please note that if STDOUT is not a tty (eg. is redirected into a file), this option must be given on the command line to take effect.
How to resolve conflicts on update
If you start an update, but one
of the entries that was changed in the repository is changed
locally too, you get a conflict.
There are some ways to resolve a conflict:
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local - Just take the local entry, ignore the repository. | ||
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remote - Overwrite any local change with the remote version. | ||
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both - Keep the local modifications in the file renamed to filename.mine, and save the repository version as filename.rXXX, ie. put the revision number after the filename. |
The conflict must be solved
manually, and the solution made known to FSVS via the
resolve command.
Note:
As there’s no known
good version after this renaming, a zero byte file
gets created.
Any resolve or revert command would make that
current, and the changes that are kept in
filename.mine would be lost!
You should only revert to the last repository
version, ie. the data of filename.rXXX.
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merge - Call the program merge with the common ancestor, the local and the remote version. |
If it is a clean merge, no
further work is necessary; else you’ll get the
(partly) merged file, and the two other versions just like
with the both variant, and (again) have to tell FSVS that
the conflict is solved, by using the resolve command.
Note:
As in the subversion command line client svn the auxiliary files are seen as new, although that might change in the future (so that they automatically get ignored).
Options regarding the ’merge’ program
Like with diff, the merge
operation is not done internally in FSVS.
To have better control
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merge_prg: The executable name, default ’merge’. |
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merge_opt: The default options, default ’-A’. |
The option ’-p’ is
always used:
$merge_prg $merge_opt -p $file1 $common $file2
Options for commit
Author
You can specify
an author to be used on commit. This option has a special
behaviour; if the first character of the value is an
’$’, the value is replaced by the environment
variable named.
Empty strings are ignored; that allows an /etc/fsvs/config
like this:
author=unknown
author=$LOGNAME
author=$SUDO_USER
where the last
non-empty value is taken; and if your .authorized_keys has
lines like
environment=’FSVS_AUTHOR=some_user’ ssh-rsa
...
that would
override the config values.
Note:
Your sshd_config needs the PermitUserEnvironment setting; you can also take a look at the AcceptEnv and SendEnv documentation.
Destination URL for commit
If you defined multiple URLs for
your working copy, FSVS needs to know which URL to commit
to.
For this you would set commit_to to the name of the
URL; see this example:
fsvs urls N:master,P:10,http://... N:local,P:20,file:///...
fsvs ci /etc/passwd -m ’New user defined’
-ocommit_to=local
Doing empty commits
In the default
settings FSVS will happily create empty commits, ie.
revisions without any changed entry. These just have a
revision number, an author and a timestamp; this is nice if
FSVS is run via CRON, and you want to see when FSVS gets
run.
If you would like to avoid such revisions, set this option
to no; then such commits will be avoided.
Example:
fsvs commit -o empty_commit=no -m ’cron’
/etc
Avoid commits without a commit message
If you
don’t like the behaviour that FSVS does commits with
an empty message received from $EDITOR (eg if you found out
that you don’t want to commit after all), you can
change this option to no; then FSVS won’t allow empty
commit messages.
Example for the config file:
empty_message=no
Creating directories in the repository above the URL
If you want to
keep some data versioned, the first commit is normally the
creation of the base directories above the given URL
(to keep that data separate from the other repository data).
Previously this had to be done manually, ie. with a svn
mkdir $URL --parents or similar command.
With the mkdir_base option you can tell FSVS to create
directories as needed; this is mostly useful on the first
commit.
fsvs urls ...
fsvs group ’group:ignore,./**’
fsvs ci -m ’First post!’ -o mkdir_base=yes
Waiting for a time change after working copy operations
If you’re using FSVS in
automated systems, you might see that changes that happen in
the same second as a commit are not seen with status
later; this is because the timestamp granularity of FSVS is
1 second.
For backward compatibility the default value is no
(don’t delay). You can set it to any combination
of
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commit, |
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update, |
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revert and/or |
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checkout; |
for yes all of these actions are
delayed until the clock seconds change.
Example how to set that option via an environment variable:
export FSVS_DELAY=commit,revert
Performance and tuning related options
Change detection
This options
allows one to specify the trade-off between speed and
accuracy.
A file with a changed size can immediately be known as
changed; but if only the modification time is changed, this
is not so easy. Per default FSVS does a MD5 check on the
file in this case; if you don’t want that, or if you
want to do the checksum calculation for every file
(in case a file has changed, but its mtime not), you can use
this option to change FSVS’ behaviour.
On the command line there’s a shortcut for that: for
every ’-C’ another check in this option is
chosen.
The recognized specifications are noneResets the check
bitmask to ’no checks’. file_mtimeCheck files
for modifications (via MD5) and directories for new entries,
if the mtime is different - default dirCheck all directories
for new entries, regardless of the timestamp. allfilesCheck
all files with MD5 for changes (tripwire -like
operation). fullAll available checks.
You can give multiple options; they’re accumulated
unless overridden by none.
fsvs -o change_check=allfiles status
Note:
commit and update set additionally the dir option, to avoid missing new files. ef cpfd ’copyfrom-detect’
Avoiding expensive compares onIf you’ve got big files that are seen as new, doing the MD5 comparison canbe time consuming. So there’s the option copyfrom_exp (for ’expensive’,which takes the usual yes (default) and no arguments.fsvs copyfrom-detect -o copyfrom_exp=no some_directoryGetting grouping/ignore statistics
If you need to ignore many entries of your working copy, you might find that the ignore pattern matching takes some valuable time.
In order to optimize the order
of your patterns you can specify this option to print the
number of tests and matches for each pattern.
$ fsvs status -o group_stats=yes -q
Grouping statistics (tested, matched, groupname, pattern):
4705 80 ignore
group:ignore,.
For optimizing you’ll want to put often matching
patterns at the front (to make them match sooner, and avoid
unnecessary tests); but if you are using other groups than
ignore (like take), you will have to take care to keep the
patterns within a group together.
Please note that the first line shows how many entries were
tested, and that the next lines differ by the number of
matches entries for the current line, as all entries being
tested against some pattern get tested for the next too,
unless they match the current pattern.
This option is available for status and the ignore
test commands.
Base configuration
Path definitions for the config and WAA area
The paths given here are used to
store the persistent configuration data needed by FSVS;
please see Files used by fsvs and Priorities for
option setting for more details, and the Using an
alternate root directory parameter as well as the
Recovery for a non-booting system for further
discussion.
FSVS_CONF=/home/user/.fsvs-conf fsvs -o
waa=/home/user/.fsvs-waa st
Note:
Please note that these paths can be given only as environment variables ($FSVS_CONF resp. $FSVS_WAA) or as command line parameter; settings in config files are ignored.
Configuration directory for the subversion libraries
This path specifies where the
subversion libraries should take their configuration data
from; the most important aspect of that is authentication
data, especially for certificate authentication.
The default value is $FSVS_CONF/svn/.
/etc/fsvs/config could have eg.
config_dir=/root/.subversion
Please note that this directory can hold an auth directory, and the servers and config files.
Using an alternate root directory
This is a path that is prepended
to $FSVS_WAA and $FSVS_CONF (or their default values, see
Files used by fsvs), if they do not already start
with it, and it is cut off for the directory-name MD5
calculation.
When is that needed? Imagine that you’ve booted from
some Live-CD like Knoppix; if you want to setup or restore a
non-working system, you’d have to transfer all files
needed by the FSVS binary to it, and then start in some kind
of chroot environment.
With this parameter you can tell FSVS that it should load
its libraries from the current filesystem, but use the given
path as root directory for its administrative data.
This is used for recovery; see the example in Recovery
for a non-booting system.
So how does this work?
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The internal data paths derived from $FSVS_WAA and $FSVS_CONF use the value given for softroot as a base directory, if they do not already start with it. |
(If that creates a conflict for you, eg. in that you want to use /var as the softroot, and your $FSVS_WAA should be /var/fsvs, you can make the string comparison fail by using /./var for either path.)
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When a directory name for $FSVS_CONF or $FSVS_WAA is derived from some file path, the part matching softroot is cut off, so that the generated names match the situation after rebooting. |
Previously you’d have to
export your data back to the filesystem and call
urls ’fsvs urls’ and FSVS
sync-repos again, to get the WAA data back.
Note:
A plain chroot() would not
work, as some needed programs (eg. the decoder for update,
see Special property names) would not be available.
The easy way to understand softroot is: If you want to do a
chroot() into the given directory (or boot with it as /),
you’ll want this set.
As this value is used for finding the correct working copy
root (by trying to find a conf-path, it cannot be set
from a per-wc config file. Only the environment, global
configuration or command line parameter make sense.
Debugging and diagnosing
The next two options could be
set in the global configuration file, to automatically get
the last debug messages when an error happens.
To provide an easy way to get on-line debugging again,
debug_output and debug_buffer are both reset to
non-redirected, on-line output, if more than a single -d is
specified on the command line, like this:
fsvs commit -m ’...’ -d -d filenames
In this case you’ll get a message telling you about that.
Destination for debug output
You can specify the debug output
destination with the option debug_output. This can be a
simple filename (which gets truncated on open), or, if it
starts with a |, a command that the output gets piped into.
If the destination cannot be opened (or none is given),
debug output goes to STDOUT (for easier tracing via less).
Example:
fsvs -o debug_output=/tmp/debug.out -d st /etc
Note:
That string is taken only once - at the first debug output line. So you have to use the correct order of parameters: -o debug_output=... -d.
An example: writing the last 200
lines of debug output into a file.
fsvs -o debug_output=’| tail -200 >
/tmp/debug.log’ -d ....
Using a debug buffer
With the
debug_buffer option you can specify the size of a buffer (in
kB) that is used to capture the output, and which gets
printed automatically if an error occurs.
This must be done before debugging starts, like with
the debug_output specification.
fsvs -o debug_buffer=128 ...
Note:
If this option is specified in the configuration file or via the environment, only the buffer is allocated; if it is used on the command line, debugging is automatically turned on, too.
Setting warning behaviour
Please see the command line
parameter -W, which is identical.
fsvs -o warning=diff-status=ignore
Author
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