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1 @c This is part of the Emacs manual.
2 @c Copyright (C) 1985, 1986, 1987, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1997, 1999, 2000,
3 @c 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010
4 @c Free Software Foundation, Inc.
5 @c See file emacs.texi for copying conditions.
6 @node Maintaining, Abbrevs, Building, Top
7 @chapter Maintaining Large Programs
8
9 This chapter describes Emacs features for maintaining large
10 programs.
11
12 @menu
13 * Version Control:: Using version control systems.
14 * Change Log:: Maintaining a change history for your program.
15 * Tags:: Go directly to any function in your program in one
16 command. Tags remembers which file it is in.
17 * EDE:: An integrated development environment for Emacs.
18 @ifnottex
19 * Emerge:: A convenient way of merging two versions of a program.
20 @end ifnottex
21 @end menu
22
23 @node Version Control
24 @section Version Control
25 @cindex version control
26
27 A @dfn{version control system} is a program that can record multiple
28 versions of a source file, storing information such as the creation
29 time of each version, who made it, and a description of what was
30 changed.
31
32 The Emacs version control interface is called @dfn{VC}. VC commands
33 work with several different version control systems; currently, it
34 supports GNU Arch, Bazaar, CVS, Git, Mercurial, Monotone, RCS,
35 SCCS/CSSC, and Subversion. Of these, the GNU project distributes CVS,
36 Arch, RCS, and Bazaar.
37
38 VC is enabled automatically whenever you visit a file governed by a
39 version control system. To disable VC entirely, set the customizable
40 variable @code{vc-handled-backends} to @code{nil}
41 @iftex
42 (@pxref{Customizing VC,,,emacs-xtra, Specialized Emacs Features}).
43 @end iftex
44 @ifnottex
45 (@pxref{Customizing VC}).
46 @end ifnottex
47
48 @menu
49 * Introduction to VC:: How version control works in general.
50 * VC Mode Line:: How the mode line shows version control status.
51 * Basic VC Editing:: How to edit a file under version control.
52 * Log Buffer:: Features available in log entry buffers.
53 * Old Revisions:: Examining and comparing old versions.
54 * Secondary VC Commands:: The commands used a little less frequently.
55 * VC Directory Mode:: Listing files managed by version control.
56 * Branches:: Multiple lines of development.
57 @ifnottex
58 * Remote Repositories:: Efficient access to remote CVS servers.
59 * Revision Tags:: Symbolic names for revisions.
60 * Miscellaneous VC:: Various other commands and features of VC.
61 * Customizing VC:: Variables that change VC's behavior.
62 @end ifnottex
63 @end menu
64
65 @node Introduction to VC
66 @subsection Introduction to Version Control
67
68 VC allows you to use a version control system from within Emacs,
69 integrating the version control operations smoothly with editing. It
70 provides a uniform interface for common operations in many version
71 control operations.
72
73 Some uncommon or intricate version control operations, such as
74 altering repository settings, are not supported in VC. You should
75 perform such tasks outside Emacs, e.g. via the command line.
76
77 This section provides a general overview of version control, and
78 describes the version control systems that VC supports. You can skip
79 this section if you are already familiar with the version control system
80 you want to use.
81
82 @menu
83 * Why Version Control?:: Understanding the problems it addresses.
84 * Version Control Systems:: Supported version control back-end systems.
85 * VCS Concepts:: Words and concepts related to version control.
86 * VCS Merging:: How file conflicts are handled.
87 * VCS Changesets:: How changes are grouped.
88 * VCS Repositories:: Where version control repositories are stored.
89 * Types of Log File:: The VCS log in contrast to the ChangeLog.
90 @end menu
91
92 @node Why Version Control?
93 @subsubsection Understanding the problems it addresses
94
95 Version control systems provide you with three important
96 capabilities:
97
98 @itemize @bullet
99 @item
100 @dfn{Reversibility}: the ability to back up to a previous state if you
101 discover that some modification you did was a mistake or a bad idea.
102
103 @item
104 @dfn{Concurrency}: the ability to have many people modifying the same
105 collection of files knowing that conflicting modifications can be
106 detected and resolved.
107
108 @item
109 @dfn{History}: the ability to attach historical data to your data,
110 such as explanatory comments about the intention behind each change to
111 it. Even for a programmer working solo, change histories are an
112 important aid to memory; for a multi-person project, they are a
113 vitally important form of communication among developers.
114 @end itemize
115
116 @node Version Control Systems
117 @subsubsection Supported Version Control Systems
118
119 @cindex back end (version control)
120 VC currently works with many different version control systems,
121 which it refers to as @dfn{back ends}:
122
123 @itemize @bullet
124
125 @cindex SCCS
126 @item
127 SCCS was the first version control system ever built, and was long ago
128 superseded by more advanced ones. VC compensates for certain features
129 missing in SCCS (e.g., tag names for releases) by implementing them
130 itself. Other VC features, such as multiple branches, are simply
131 unavailable. Since SCCS is non-free, we recommend avoiding it.
132
133 @cindex CSSC
134 @item
135 CSSC is a free replacement for SCCS. You should use CSSC only if, for
136 some reason, you cannot use a more recent and better-designed version
137 control system.
138
139 @cindex RCS
140 @item
141 RCS is the free version control system around which VC was initially
142 built. It is relatively primitive: it cannot be used over the
143 network, and works at the level of individual files. Almost
144 everything you can do with RCS can be done through VC.
145
146 @cindex CVS
147 @item
148 CVS is the free version control system that was, until recently (circa
149 2008), used by the majority of free software projects. Nowadays, it
150 is slowly being superseded by newer systems. CVS allows concurrent
151 multi-user development either locally or over the network. Unlike
152 newer systems, it lacks support for atomic commits and file
153 moving/renaming. VC supports all basic editing operations under CVS.
154
155 @cindex SVN
156 @cindex Subversion
157 @item
158 Subversion (SVN) is a free version control system designed to be
159 similar to CVS but without its problems (e.g., it supports atomic
160 commits of filesets, and versioning of directories, symbolic links,
161 meta-data, renames, copies, and deletes).
162
163 @cindex GNU Arch
164 @cindex Arch
165 @item
166 GNU Arch is one of the earliest @dfn{distributed} version control
167 systems (the other being Monotone). @xref{VCS Concepts}, for a
168 description of distributed version control systems. It is no longer
169 under active development, and has been deprecated in favor of Bazaar.
170
171 @cindex git
172 @item
173 Git is a distributed version control system originally invented by
174 Linus Torvalds to support development of Linux (his kernel). VC
175 supports many common git operations, but others, such as repository
176 syncing, must be done from the command line.
177
178 @cindex hg
179 @cindex Mercurial
180 @item
181 Mercurial (hg) is a distributed version control system broadly
182 resembling git. VC supports most Mercurial commands, with the
183 exception of repository sync operations.
184
185 @cindex bzr
186 @cindex Bazaar
187 @item
188 Bazaar (bzr) is a distributed version control system that supports
189 both repository-based and distributed versioning. VC supports most
190 basic editing operations under Bazaar.
191 @end itemize
192
193 Previous versions of VC supported a version control system known as
194 Meta-CVS. This support was dropped due to limited interest from users
195 and developers.
196
197 @node VCS Concepts
198 @subsubsection Concepts of Version Control
199
200 @cindex repository
201 @cindex registered file
202 When a file is under version control, we say that it is
203 @dfn{registered} in the version control system. The system has a
204 @dfn{repository} which stores both the file's present state and its
205 change history---enough to reconstruct the current version or any
206 earlier version. The repository also contains other information, such
207 as @dfn{log entries} that describe the changes made to each file.
208
209 @cindex work file
210 @cindex checking out files
211 The copy of a version-controlled file that you actually edit is
212 called the @dfn{work file}. You can change each work file as you
213 would an ordinary file. After you are done with a set of changes, you
214 @dfn{commit} (or @dfn{check in}) the changes; this records the changes
215 in the repository, along with a descriptive log entry.
216
217 @cindex revision
218 @cindex revision ID
219 A copy of a file stored in a repository is called a @dfn{revision}.
220 The history of a file is a sequence of revisions. Each revision is
221 named by a @dfn{revision ID}. The format of the revision ID depends
222 on the version control system; in the simplest case, it is just an
223 integer.
224
225 To go beyond these basic concepts, you will need to understand three
226 aspects in which version control systems differ. As explained in the
227 next three sections, they can be lock-based or merge-based; file-based
228 or changeset-based; and centralized or decentralized. VC handles all
229 these modes of operation, but it cannot hide the differences.
230
231 @node VCS Merging
232 @subsubsection Merge-based vs lock-based Version Control
233 @cindex locking versus merging
234
235 A version control system typically has some mechanism to coordinate
236 between users who want to change the same file. There are two ways to
237 do this: merging and locking.
238
239 In a version control system that uses merging, each user may check
240 out and modify a work file at any time. The system lets you
241 @dfn{merge} your work file, which may contain changes that have not
242 been committed, with the latest changes that others have committed.
243
244 Older version control systems use a @dfn{locking} scheme instead.
245 Here, work files are normally read-only. To edit a file, you ask the
246 version control system to make it writable for you by @dfn{locking}
247 it; only one user can lock a given file at any given time. This
248 procedure is analogous to, but different from, the locking that Emacs
249 uses to detect simultaneous editing of ordinary files
250 (@pxref{Interlocking}). When you commit your changes, that unlocks
251 the file, and the work file becomes read-only again. Other users may
252 then lock the file to make their own changes.
253
254 Both locking and merging systems can have problems when multiple
255 users try to modify the same file at the same time. Locking systems
256 have @dfn{lock conflicts}; a user may try to check a file out and be
257 unable to because it is locked. In merging systems, @dfn{merge
258 conflicts} happen when you commit a change to a file that conflicts
259 with a change committed by someone else after your checkout. Both
260 kinds of conflict have to be resolved by human judgment and
261 communication. Experience has shown that merging is superior to
262 locking, both in convenience to developers and in minimizing the
263 number and severity of conflicts that actually occur.
264
265 SCCS always uses locking. RCS is lock-based by default but can be
266 told to operate in a merging style. CVS and Subversion are
267 merge-based by default but can be told to operate in a locking mode.
268 Distributed version control systems, such as GNU Arch, git, and
269 Mercurial, are exclusively merging-based.
270
271 VC mode supports both locking and merging version control. The
272 terms ``commit'' and ``update'' are used in newer version control
273 systems; older lock-based systems use the terms ``check in'' and
274 ``check out''. VC hides the differences between them as much as
275 possible.
276
277 @node VCS Changesets
278 @subsubsection Changeset-based vs File-based Version Control
279
280 @cindex changesets
281 On SCCS, RCS, CVS, and other early version control systems, version
282 control operations are @dfn{file-based}: each file has its own comment
283 and revision history separate from that of all other files. Newer
284 systems, beginning with Subversion, are @dfn{changeset-based}: a
285 checkin may include changes to several files, and the entire set of
286 changes is handled as a unit. Any comment associated with the change
287 does not belong to a single file, but to the changeset itself.
288
289 Changeset-based version control is more flexible and powerful than
290 file-based version control; usually, when a change to multiple files
291 has to be reversed, it's good to be able to easily identify and remove
292 all of it.
293
294 @node VCS Repositories
295 @subsubsection Decentralized vs Centralized Repositories
296
297 @cindex centralized version control
298 @cindex decentralized version control
299 Early version control systems were designed around a
300 @dfn{centralized} model in which each project has only one repository
301 used by all developers. SCCS, RCS, CVS, and Subversion share this
302 kind of model. One of its drawbacks is that the repository is a choke
303 point for reliability and efficiency.
304
305 GNU Arch pioneered the concept of @dfn{decentralized} version
306 control, later implemented in git, Mercurial, and Bazaar. A project
307 may have several different repositories, and these systems support a
308 sort of super-merge between repositories that tries to reconcile their
309 change histories. In effect, there is one repository for each
310 developer, and repository merges take the place of commit operations.
311
312 VC helps you manage the traffic between your personal workfiles and
313 a repository. Whether the repository is a single master, or one of a
314 network of peer repositories, is not something VC has to care about.
315
316 @node Types of Log File
317 @subsubsection Types of Log File
318 @cindex types of log file
319 @cindex log File, types of
320 @cindex version control log
321
322 Projects that use a version control system can have two types of log
323 for changes. One is the log maintained by the version control system:
324 each time you commit a change, you fill out a @dfn{log entry} for the
325 change (@pxref{Log Buffer}). This is called the @dfn{version control
326 log}.
327
328 The other kind of log is the file @file{ChangeLog} (@pxref{Change
329 Log}). It provides a chronological record of all changes to a large
330 portion of a program---typically one directory and its subdirectories.
331 A small program would use one @file{ChangeLog} file; a large program
332 may have a @file{ChangeLog} file in each major directory.
333 @xref{Change Log}. Programmers have used change logs since long
334 before version control systems.
335
336 Changeset-based version systems typically maintain a changeset-based
337 modification log for the entire system, which makes change log files
338 somewhat redundant. One advantage that they retain is that it is
339 sometimes useful to be able to view the transaction history of a
340 single directory separately from those of other directories.
341
342 A project maintained with version control can use just the version
343 control log, or it can use both kinds of logs. It can handle some
344 files one way and some files the other way. Each project has its
345 policy, which you should follow.
346
347 When the policy is to use both, you typically want to write an entry
348 for each change just once, then put it into both logs. You can write
349 the entry in @file{ChangeLog}, then copy it to the log buffer with
350 @kbd{C-c C-a} when checking in the change (@pxref{Log Buffer}). Or
351 you can write the entry in the log buffer while checking in the
352 change, and later use the @kbd{C-x v a} command to copy it to
353 @file{ChangeLog}
354 @iftex
355 (@pxref{Change Logs and VC,,,emacs-xtra, Specialized Emacs Features}).
356 @end iftex
357 @ifnottex
358 (@pxref{Change Logs and VC}).
359 @end ifnottex
360
361 @node VC Mode Line
362 @subsection Version Control and the Mode Line
363
364 When you visit a file that is under version control, Emacs indicates
365 this on the mode line. For example, @samp{Bzr-1223} says that Bazaar
366 is used for that file, and the current revision ID is 1223.
367
368 The character between the back-end name and the revision ID
369 indicates the status of the work file. In a merge-based version
370 control system, a @samp{-} character indicates that the work file is
371 unmodified, and @samp{:} indicates that it has been modified. In a
372 lock-based system, @samp{-} indicates an unlocked file, and @samp{:} a
373 locked file; if the file is locked by another user (for instance,
374 @samp{jim}), that is displayed as @samp{RCS:jim:1.3}.
375
376 On a graphical display, you can move the mouse over this mode line
377 indicator to pop up a ``tool-tip'', which displays a more verbose
378 description of the version control status. Pressing @kbd{Mouse-1}
379 over the indicator pops up a menu of VC commands, identical to
380 @samp{Tools / Version Control} on the menu bar.
381
382 @vindex auto-revert-check-vc-info
383 When Auto Revert mode (@pxref{Reverting}) reverts a buffer that is
384 under version control, it updates the version control information in
385 the mode line. However, Auto Revert mode may not properly update this
386 information if the version control status changes without changes to
387 the work file, from outside the current Emacs session. If you set
388 @code{auto-revert-check-vc-info} to @code{t}, Auto Revert mode updates
389 the version control status information every
390 @code{auto-revert-interval} seconds, even if the work file itself is
391 unchanged. The resulting CPU usage depends on the version control
392 system, but is usually not excessive.
393
394 @node Basic VC Editing
395 @subsection Basic Editing under Version Control
396
397 @cindex filesets, VC
398 Most VC commands operate on @dfn{VC filesets}. A VC fileset is a
399 collection of one or more files that a VC operation acts on. When you
400 type VC commands in a buffer visiting a version-controlled file, the
401 VC fileset is simply that one file. When you type them in a VC
402 Directory buffer, and some files in it are marked, the VC fileset
403 consists of the marked files (@pxref{VC Directory Mode}).
404
405 The principal VC command is an all-purpose command, @kbd{C-x v v}
406 (@code{vc-next-action}), that performs either registration, locking,
407 merging or a check-in (depending on the situation) on the current VC
408 fileset. You can use @kbd{C-x v v} in a file-visiting buffer or in a
409 VC Directory buffer.
410
411 @table @kbd
412 @itemx C-x v v
413 Perform the appropriate next version control operation on the VC fileset.
414 @end table
415
416 @findex vc-next-action
417 @kindex C-x v v
418 The precise action of @kbd{C-x v v} depends on the state of the VC
419 fileset, and whether the version control system uses locking or
420 merging. This is described in detail in the subsequent sections.
421
422 VC filesets are the way that VC mode bridges the gap between
423 file-based and changeset-based version control systems. They are,
424 essentially, a way to pass multiple file arguments as a group to
425 version control commands. For example, on Subversion, a checkin with
426 a multi-file VC fileset becomes a joint commit, as though you had
427 typed @command{svn commit} with those file arguments at the shell
428 command line. All files in a VC fileset must be under the same
429 version control system; if they are not, Emacs signals an error when
430 you attempt to execute a command on the fileset.
431
432 VC filesets are distinct from the ``named filesets'' used for
433 viewing and visiting files in functional groups (@pxref{Filesets}).
434 Unlike named filesets, VC filesets are not named and don't persist
435 across sessions.
436
437 @menu
438 * VC With A Merging VCS:: Without locking: default mode for CVS.
439 * VC With A Locking VCS:: RCS in its default mode, SCCS, and optionally CVS.
440 * Advanced C-x v v:: Advanced features available with a prefix argument.
441 @end menu
442
443 @node VC With A Merging VCS
444 @subsubsection Basic Version Control with Merging
445
446 When your version control system is merging-based (the default for
447 CVS and all newer version control systems), work files are always
448 writable; you need not do anything special to begin editing a file.
449 The status indicator on the mode line is @samp{-} if the file is
450 unmodified; it flips to @samp{:} as soon as you save any changes
451 (@pxref{VC Mode Line}).
452
453 Here is what @kbd{C-x v v} does when using a merging-based system:
454
455 @itemize @bullet
456 @item
457 If the work file is in a directory that is not controlled by any
458 version control system, prompt for a repository type. Then, create a
459 version control repository of that type and register the file with it.
460
461 @item
462 If the work file is in a directory that is controlled by a version
463 control system but not registered with it, register the file.
464
465 @item
466 If the work file is the same as in the repository, do nothing.
467
468 @item
469 If you have not changed the work file, but some other user has checked
470 in changes to the repository, merge those changes into the work file.
471
472 @item
473 If you have made modifications to the work file, attempt to commit
474 the changes. To do this, Emacs first reads the log entry for the new
475 revision (@pxref{Log Buffer}). If some other user has committed
476 changes to the repository since you last checked it out, the checkin
477 fails. In that case, type @kbd{C-x v v} again to merge those changes
478 into your own work file; this puts the work file into a ``conflicted''
479 state. Type @kbd{C-x v v} to clear the ``conflicted'' state; VC then
480 regards the file as up-to-date and modified, and you can try to check
481 it in again.
482
483 To pick up any recent changes from the repository @emph{without}
484 trying to commit your own changes, type @kbd{C-x v m @key{RET}}.
485 @xref{Merging}.
486 @end itemize
487
488 These rules also apply when you use RCS in its ``non-locking'' mode,
489 except that changes are not automatically merged from the repository.
490 Nothing informs you if another user has committed changes in the same
491 file since you began editing it; when you commit your revision, his
492 changes are removed (however, they remain in the repository and are
493 thus not irrevocably lost). Therefore, you must verify that the
494 current revision is unchanged before checking in your changes. In
495 addition, locking is possible with RCS even in this mode: @kbd{C-x v
496 v} with an unmodified file locks the file, just as it does with RCS in
497 its normal locking mode (@pxref{VC With A Locking VCS}).
498
499 @node VC With A Locking VCS
500 @subsubsection Basic Version Control with Locking
501
502 Under a locking-based version control system (such as SCCS, and RCS
503 in its default mode), @kbd{C-x v v} does the following:
504
505 @itemize @bullet
506 @item
507 If the file is not locked, lock it and make it writable, so that you
508 can change it.
509
510 @item
511 If the file is locked by you, and contains changes, commit the
512 changes. In order to do this, Emacs first reads the log entry for the
513 new revision. @xref{Log Buffer}.
514
515 @item
516 If the file is locked by you, but you have not changed it since you
517 locked it, release the lock and makes the file read-only again.
518
519 @item
520 If the file is locked by some other user, ask whether you want to
521 ``steal the lock'' from that user. If you say yes, the file becomes
522 locked by you, but a message is sent to the person who had formerly
523 locked the file, to inform him of what has happened.
524 @end itemize
525
526 These rules also apply when you use CVS in locking mode, except
527 that CVS does not support stealing a lock.
528
529 @node Advanced C-x v v
530 @subsubsection Advanced Control in @kbd{C-x v v}
531
532 @cindex revision ID in version control
533 When you give a prefix argument to @code{vc-next-action} (@kbd{C-u
534 C-x v v}), it still performs the next logical version control
535 operation, but accepts additional arguments to specify precisely how
536 to do the operation.
537
538 @itemize @bullet
539 @item
540 If the file is modified (or locked), you can specify the revision ID
541 to use for the new version that you commit. This is one way to create
542 a new branch (@pxref{Branches}).
543
544 @item
545 If the file is not modified (and unlocked), you can specify the
546 revision to select; this lets you start working from an older
547 revision, or on another branch. If you do not enter any revision,
548 that takes you to the highest (``head'') revision on the current
549 branch; therefore @kbd{C-u C-x v v @key{RET}} is a convenient way to
550 get the latest version of a file from the repository.
551
552 @item
553 @cindex specific version control system
554 Instead of the revision ID, you can also specify the name of a
555 version control system. This is useful when one file is being managed
556 with two version control systems at the same time
557 @iftex
558 (@pxref{Local Version Control,,,emacs-xtra, Specialized Emacs
559 Features}).
560 @end iftex
561 @ifnottex
562 (@pxref{Local Version Control}).
563 @end ifnottex
564
565 @end itemize
566
567 @node Log Buffer
568 @subsection Features of the Log Entry Buffer
569
570 When you tell VC to commit a change, it pops up a buffer called
571 @samp{*VC-Log*}. In this buffer, you should write a @dfn{log entry}
572 describing the changes you have made (@pxref{Why Version Control?}).
573 After you are done, type @kbd{C-c C-c}; this exits the buffer and
574 commits the change, together with your log entry.
575
576 While in the @samp{*VC-Log*} buffer, you can write one or more
577 @dfn{header lines}, specifying additional information to be supplied
578 to the version control system. Each header line must occupy a single
579 line at the top of the buffer; the first line that is not a header
580 line is treated as the start of the log entry. For example, the
581 following header line states that the present change was not written
582 by you, but by another developer:
583
584 @smallexample
585 Author: J. R. Hacker <jrh@@example.com>
586 @end smallexample
587
588 @noindent
589 Apart from the @samp{Author} header, Emacs recognizes the headers
590 @samp{Date} (a manually-specified commit time) and @samp{Fixes} (a
591 reference to a bug fixed by the change). Not all version control
592 systems recognize all headers: Bazaar recognizes all three headers,
593 while git, Mercurial, and Monotone recognizes only @samp{Author} and
594 @samp{Summary}. If you specify a header for a version control that
595 does not support it, the header is treated as part of the log entry.
596
597 @findex log-edit-show-files
598 @findex log-edit-show-diff
599 Type @kbd{C-c C-f} (@code{log-edit-show-files}) to display a list of
600 files in the current VC fileset. If you called @kbd{C-x v v} directly
601 from a work file, the fileset consists of that single file; if you
602 called @kbd{C-x v v} from a VC directory buffer (@pxref{VC Directory
603 Mode}), the fileset may consist of multiple files.
604
605 @findex log-edit-insert-changelog
606 Type @kbd{C-c C-d} (@code{log-edit-show-diff}) to show a @dfn{diff}
607 of the changes you have made (i.e., the differences between the work
608 file and the repository revision from which you started editing).
609 @xref{Old Revisions}.
610
611 If the current VC fileset includes one or more @file{ChangeLog}
612 files (@pxref{Change Log}), type @kbd{C-c C-a}
613 (@code{log-edit-insert-changelog}) to pull the relevant entries into
614 the @samp{*VC-Log*} buffer. If the topmost item in each
615 @file{ChangeLog} was made under your user name on the current date,
616 this command searches that item for entries that match the file(s) to
617 be committed; if found, these entries are inserted.
618 @iftex
619 @xref{Change Logs and VC,,,emacs-xtra, Specialized Emacs Features},
620 @end iftex
621 @ifnottex
622 @xref{Change Logs and VC},
623 @end ifnottex
624 for the opposite way of working---generating ChangeLog entries from
625 the revision control log.
626
627 To abort a check-in, just @strong{don't} type @kbd{C-c C-c} in that
628 buffer. You can switch buffers and do other editing. As long as you
629 don't try to commit another file, the entry you were editing remains
630 in the @samp{*VC-Log*} buffer, and you can go back to that buffer at
631 any time to complete the check-in.
632
633 If you change several source files for the same reason, it is often
634 convenient to specify the same log entry for many of the files. (This
635 is the normal way to do things on a changeset-oriented system, where
636 comments are attached to changesets rather than the history of
637 individual files.) The most convenient way to do this is to mark all
638 the files in VC Directory Mode and commit from there; the log buffer
639 will carry the fileset information with it and do a group commit when
640 you type @kbd{C-c C-c}.
641
642 You can also browse the history of previous log entries to duplicate
643 a checkin comment. This can be useful when you want several files to
644 have checkin comments that vary only slightly from each other. The
645 commands @kbd{M-n}, @kbd{M-p}, @kbd{M-s} and @kbd{M-r} for doing this
646 work just like the minibuffer history commands (except that these
647 versions are used outside the minibuffer).
648
649 @vindex vc-log-mode-hook
650 Each time you commit a change, the log entry buffer is put into VC
651 Log Edit mode, which involves running two hooks: @code{text-mode-hook}
652 and @code{vc-log-mode-hook}. @xref{Hooks}.
653
654 @node Old Revisions
655 @subsection Examining And Comparing Old Revisions
656
657 One of the convenient features of version control is the ability
658 to examine any revision of a file, or compare two revisions.
659
660 @table @kbd
661 @item C-x v ~
662 Prompt for a revision of the current file, and visit it in a buffer of
663 its own (@code{vc-revision-other-window}).
664
665 @item C-x v =
666 Compare the files in the current fileset with the working revision(s)
667 you started from (@code{vc-diff}). With a prefix argument, prompt for
668 two revisions of the current fileset and compare them. You can call
669 this command from a Dired buffer (@pxref{Dired}).
670
671 @item C-x v D
672 Compare the entire tree corresponding to the current fileset with the
673 tree you started from (@code{vc-root-diff}). With a prefix argument,
674 prompt for two revisions and compare their trees.
675
676 @item C-x v g
677 Display an annotated version of the file: for each line, show the
678 latest revision in which it was modified (@code{vc-annotate}).
679 @end table
680
681 @findex vc-revision-other-window
682 @kindex C-x v ~
683 To examine an old revision, visit the work file and type @kbd{C-x v
684 ~ @var{revision} @key{RET}} (@code{vc-revision-other-window}). Here,
685 @var{revision} is either the desired revision ID (@pxref{VCS
686 Concepts}), or the name of a tag or branch
687 @iftex
688 (@pxref{Tags,,,emacs-xtra, Specialized Emacs Features}).
689 @end iftex
690 @ifnottex
691 (@pxref{Tags}).
692 @end ifnottex
693 This command puts the text of the old revision in a file named
694 @file{@var{filename}.~@var{revision}~}, and visits it in its own
695 buffer in a separate window.
696
697 @findex vc-diff
698 @kindex C-x v =
699 @kbd{C-x v =} (@code{vc-diff}) compares each file in the current VC
700 fileset (saving them if necessary) with the repository revision(s)
701 from which you started editing. Note that the latter may or may not
702 be the latest revision of the file(s).
703
704 The diff is displayed in another window, in a Diff mode buffer
705 (@pxref{Diff Mode}) named @file{*vc-diff*}. In this buffer, the
706 @kbd{g} (@code{revert-buffer}) command performs the file comparison
707 again, generating a new diff.
708
709 @findex vc-diff
710 @kindex C-u C-x v =
711 To compare two arbitrary revisions of the current VC fileset, call
712 @code{vc-diff} with a prefix argument: @kbd{C-u C-x v =}. This
713 prompts for two revision IDs, using the minibuffer, and displays the
714 diff in a special buffer in another window. Instead of providing a
715 revision ID, you can give an empty input, which specifies the current
716 contents of the work file; or a tag or branch name
717 @iftex
718 (@pxref{Tags,,,emacs-xtra, Specialized Emacs Features}).
719 @end iftex
720 @ifnottex
721 (@pxref{Tags}).
722 @end ifnottex
723 If your version control system is file-based (e.g. CVS) rather than
724 changeset-based (Subversion, GNU Arch, git, Mercurial), supplying a
725 revision ID for a multi-file fileset (as opposed to a symbolic tag
726 name) is unlikely to return diffs that are connected in any meaningful
727 way.
728
729 The command @kbd{C-x v D} (@code{vc-root-diff}) is similar to
730 @kbd{C-x v =}, but it compares the entire tree associated with the
731 current VC fileset with the tree you started with. This means all the
732 files controlled by the current version control repository, even those
733 that are not part of the current VC fileset.
734
735 If you invoke @kbd{C-x v =} or @kbd{C-u C-x v =} from a buffer that
736 is neither visiting a version-controlled file nor a VC directory
737 buffer, these commands generate a diff of all registered files in the
738 current directory and its subdirectories.
739
740 @vindex vc-diff-switches
741 @vindex vc-rcs-diff-switches
742 @kbd{C-x v =} works by running a variant of the @code{diff} utility
743 designed to work with the version control system in use. The options
744 to pass to the @code{diff} command are taken from the first non-@code{nil}
745 value of @code{vc-@var{backend}-diff-switches}, @code{vc-diff-switches},
746 and @code{diff-switches} (@pxref{Comparing Files}), in that order.
747 Since @code{nil} means to check the next variable in the sequence,
748 either of the first two may use the value @code{t} to mean no switches at all.
749 Most of the @samp{vc@dots{}diff-switches} variables default to
750 @code{nil}, but some default to @code{t}. These are for those version
751 control systems (e.g. SVN) whose @code{diff} implementations do not
752 accept common options (e.g. @samp{-c}) likely to be in
753 @code{diff-switches}.
754
755 The buffer produced by @kbd{C-x v =} supports the commands of
756 Compilation mode (@pxref{Compilation Mode}), such as @kbd{C-x `} and
757 @kbd{C-c C-c}, in both the ``old'' and ``new'' text, and they always
758 find the corresponding locations in the current work file. (Older
759 revisions are not, in general, present as files on your disk.)
760
761 @findex vc-annotate
762 @kindex C-x v g
763 For some back ends, you can display the file @dfn{annotated} with
764 per-line revision information, by typing @kbd{C-x v g}
765 (@code{vc-annotate}). This creates a new buffer (the ``annotate
766 buffer'') displaying the file's text, with each part colored to show
767 how old it is. Text colored red is new, blue means old, and
768 intermediate colors indicate intermediate ages. By default, the color
769 is scaled over the full range of ages, such that the oldest changes
770 are blue, and the newest changes are red.
771
772 When you give a prefix argument to this command, Emacs reads two
773 arguments using the minibuffer: the ID of which revision to display and
774 annotate (instead of the current file contents), and the time span in
775 days the color range should cover.
776
777 From the annotate buffer, these and other color scaling options are
778 available from the @samp{VC-Annotate} menu. In this buffer, you can
779 also use the following keys to browse the annotations of past revisions,
780 view diffs, or view log entries:
781
782 @table @kbd
783 @item p
784 Annotate the previous revision, that is to say, the revision before
785 the one currently annotated. A numeric prefix argument is a repeat
786 count, so @kbd{C-u 10 p} would take you back 10 revisions.
787
788 @item n
789 Annotate the next revision---the one after the revision currently
790 annotated. A numeric prefix argument is a repeat count.
791
792 @item j
793 Annotate the revision indicated by the current line.
794
795 @item a
796 Annotate the revision before the one indicated by the current line.
797 This is useful to see the state the file was in before the change on
798 the current line was made.
799
800 @item f
801 Show in a buffer the file revision indicated by the current line.
802
803 @item d
804 Display the diff between the current line's revision and the previous
805 revision. This is useful to see what the current line's revision
806 actually changed in the file.
807
808 @item D
809 Display the diff between the current line's revision and the previous
810 revision for all files in the changeset (for VC systems that support
811 changesets). This is useful to see what the current line's revision
812 actually changed in the tree.
813
814 @item l
815 Show the log of the current line's revision. This is useful to see
816 the author's description of the changes in the revision on the current
817 line.
818
819 @item w
820 Annotate the working revision--the one you are editing. If you used
821 @kbd{p} and @kbd{n} to browse to other revisions, use this key to
822 return to your working revision.
823
824 @item v
825 Toggle the annotation visibility. This is useful for looking just at
826 the file contents without distraction from the annotations.
827 @end table
828
829 @node Secondary VC Commands
830 @subsection The Secondary Commands of VC
831
832 This section explains the secondary commands of VC.
833
834 @menu
835 * Registering:: Putting a file under version control.
836 * VC Change Log:: Viewing the VC Change Log.
837 * VC Undo:: Canceling changes before or after check-in.
838 @end menu
839
840 @node Registering
841 @subsubsection Registering a File for Version Control
842
843 @kindex C-x v i
844 @findex vc-register
845 You can put any file under version control by simply visiting it, and
846 then typing @w{@kbd{C-x v i}} (@code{vc-register}).
847
848 @table @kbd
849 @item C-x v i
850 Register the visited file for version control.
851 @end table
852
853 To register the file, Emacs must choose which version control system
854 to use for it. If the file's directory already contains files
855 registered in a version control system, Emacs uses that system. If
856 there is more than one system in use for a directory, Emacs uses the
857 one that appears first in @code{vc-handled-backends}
858 @iftex
859 (@pxref{Customizing VC,,,emacs-xtra, Specialized Emacs Features}).
860 @end iftex
861 @ifnottex
862 (@pxref{Customizing VC}).
863 @end ifnottex
864 On the other hand, if there are no files already registered, Emacs uses
865 the first system from @code{vc-handled-backends} that could register
866 the file (for example, you cannot register a file under CVS if its
867 directory is not already part of a CVS tree); with the default value
868 of @code{vc-handled-backends}, this means that Emacs uses RCS in this
869 situation.
870
871 If locking is in use, @kbd{C-x v i} leaves the file unlocked and
872 read-only. Type @kbd{C-x v v} if you wish to start editing it. After
873 registering a file with CVS, you must subsequently commit the initial
874 revision by typing @kbd{C-x v v}. Until you do that, the revision ID
875 appears as @samp{@@@@} in the mode line.
876
877 @vindex vc-default-init-revision
878 @cindex initial revision ID to register
879 The default initial revision ID for a newly registered file
880 varies by what VCS you are using; normally it will be 1.1 on VCSes
881 that use dot-pair revision IDs and 1 on VCSes that use monotonic IDs.
882 You can specify a different default by setting the variable
883 @code{vc-default-init-revision}, or you can give @kbd{C-x v i} a
884 numeric argument; then it reads the initial revision ID for this
885 particular file using the minibuffer.
886
887 @vindex vc-initial-comment
888 If @code{vc-initial-comment} is non-@code{nil}, @kbd{C-x v i} reads an
889 initial comment to describe the purpose of this source file. Reading
890 the initial comment works like reading a log entry (@pxref{Log Buffer}).
891
892 @node VC Change Log
893 @subsubsection VC Change Log
894
895 @table @kbd
896 @item C-x v l
897 Display revision control state and change history
898 (@code{vc-print-log}).
899
900 @item C-x v L
901 Display the change history for the current repository
902 (@code{vc-print-root-log}).
903 @end table
904
905 @kindex C-x v l
906 @findex vc-print-log
907 The command @kbd{C-x v l} (@code{vc-print-log}) displays a buffer
908 named @samp{*vc-change-log*} in a new window. This buffer lists the
909 changes to the current file, including the associated log entries.
910 (These are the log entries associated with the version control system,
911 i.e. the ones you enter via the @samp{*VC-Log*} buffer. @xref{Log
912 Buffer}.) Point is centered at the revision of the file currently
913 being visited. With a prefix argument, the command prompts for the
914 revision to center on, and the maximum number of revisions to display.
915 You can call this command from a Dired buffer (@pxref{Dired}).
916
917 @findex vc-print-root-log
918 Type @kbd{C-x v L} (@code{vc-print-root-log}) to display a
919 @samp{*vc-change-log*} buffer showing the history of the
920 version-controlled directory tree as a whole. With a prefix argument,
921 the command prompts for the maximum number of revisions to display.
922 RCS, SCCS, and CVS do not support this feature.
923
924 In the @samp{*vc-change-log*} buffer, you can use the following keys
925 to move between the logs of revisions and of files, to view past
926 revisions, to modify change comments, to view annotations and to view
927 diffs:
928
929 @table @kbd
930 @item p
931 Move to the previous revision-item in the buffer. (Revision entries in the log
932 buffer are usually in reverse-chronological order, so the previous
933 revision-item usually corresponds to a newer revision.) A numeric
934 prefix argument is a repeat count.
935
936 @item n
937 Move to the next revision-item (which most often corresponds to the
938 previous revision of the file). A numeric prefix argument is a repeat
939 count.
940
941 @item P
942 Move to the log of the previous file, when the logs of multiple files
943 are in the log buffer (@pxref{VC Directory Mode}). Otherwise, just
944 move to the beginning of the log. A numeric prefix argument is a
945 repeat count, so @kbd{C-u 10 P} would move backward 10 files.
946
947 @item N
948 Move to the log of the next file, when the logs of multiple files are
949 in the log buffer (@pxref{VC Directory Mode}). It also takes a
950 numeric prefix argument as a repeat count.
951
952 @item a
953 Annotate the revision indicated by the current line.
954
955 @item e
956 Modify the change comment displayed at point. Note that not all VC
957 systems support modifying change comments.
958
959 @item f
960 Visit the revision indicated at the current line, like typing @kbd{C-x
961 v ~} and specifying this revision's ID (@pxref{Old Revisions}).
962
963 @item d
964 Display the diff (@pxref{Comparing Files}) between the revision
965 indicated at the current line and the next earlier revision. This is
966 useful to see what actually changed in the file when the revision
967 indicated on the current line was committed.
968
969 @item D
970 Display the changeset diff (@pxref{Comparing Files}) between the
971 revision indicated at the current line and the next earlier revision.
972 This is useful to see all the changes to all files that the revision
973 indicated on the current line did when it was committed.
974 @end table
975
976 @vindex vc-log-show-limit
977 Because fetching many log entries can be slow, the
978 @samp{*vc-change-log*} buffer displays no more than 2000 revisions by
979 default. The variable @code{vc-log-show-limit} specifies this limit;
980 if you set the value to zero, that removes the limit. You can also
981 increase the number of revisions shown in an existing
982 @samp{*vc-change-log*} buffer by clicking on the @samp{Show 2X
983 entries} or @samp{Show unlimited entries} buttons at the end of the
984 buffer. However, RCS, SCCS, and CVS do not support this feature.
985
986 @node VC Undo
987 @subsubsection Undoing Version Control Actions
988
989 @table @kbd
990 @item C-x v u
991 Revert the buffer and the file to the working revision from which you started
992 editing the file.
993
994 @item C-x v c
995 Remove the last-entered change from the master for the visited file.
996 This undoes your last check-in.
997 @end table
998
999 @kindex C-x v u
1000 @findex vc-revert-buffer
1001 If you want to discard your current set of changes and revert to the
1002 working revision from which you started editing the file, use @kbd{C-x
1003 v u} (@code{vc-revert-buffer}). If the version control system is
1004 locking-based, this leaves the file unlocked, and you must lock it
1005 again before making new changes. @kbd{C-x v u} requires confirmation,
1006 unless it sees that you haven't made any changes with respect to the
1007 master copy of the working revision.
1008
1009 @kbd{C-x v u} is also the command to unlock a file if you lock it and
1010 then decide not to change it.
1011
1012 @kindex C-x v c
1013 @findex vc-rollback
1014 To cancel a change that you already committed, use @kbd{C-x v c}
1015 (@code{vc-rollback}). This command discards all record of the most
1016 recent checked-in revision, but only if your work file corresponds to
1017 that revision---you cannot use @kbd{C-x v c} to cancel a revision that
1018 is not the latest on its branch. Note that many version control
1019 systems do not support rollback at all; this command is something of a
1020 historical relic.
1021
1022 @node VC Directory Mode
1023 @subsection VC Directory Mode
1024
1025 @kindex C-x v d
1026 @findex vc-dir
1027 When you are working on a large program, it is often useful to find
1028 out which files have changed within an entire directory tree, or to
1029 view the status of all files under version control at once, and to
1030 perform version control operations on collections of files. You can
1031 use the command @kbd{C-x v d} (@code{vc-dir}) to make a directory
1032 listing that includes only files relevant for version control. This
1033 creates a @dfn{VC Directory buffer} and displays it in a separate
1034 window.
1035
1036 @cindex PCL-CVS
1037 @pindex cvs
1038 @cindex CVS directory mode
1039 The VC Directory buffer works with all the version control systems
1040 that VC supports. For CVS, Emacs also offers a more powerful facility
1041 called PCL-CVS. @xref{Top, , About PCL-CVS, pcl-cvs, PCL-CVS --- The
1042 Emacs Front-End to CVS}.
1043
1044 @menu
1045 * Buffer: VC Directory Buffer. What the buffer looks like and means.
1046 * Commands: VC Directory Commands. Commands to use in a VC directory buffer.
1047 @end menu
1048
1049 @node VC Directory Buffer
1050 @subsubsection The VC Directory Buffer
1051
1052 The VC Directory buffer contains a list of version-controlled files
1053 in the current directory and its subdirectories. Files which are
1054 up-to-date (have no local differences from the repository copy) are
1055 usually hidden; if all files in a subdirectory are up-to-date, the
1056 subdirectory is hidden as well. There is an exception to this rule:
1057 if VC mode detects that a file has changed to an up-to-date state
1058 since you last looked at it, that file and its state are shown.
1059
1060 If a directory uses more that one version control system, you can
1061 select which system to use for the @code{vc-dir} command by invoking
1062 @code{vc-dir} with a prefix argument: @kbd{C-u C-x v d}.
1063
1064 The line for an individual file shows the version control state of
1065 the file. Under RCS and SCCS, the name of the user locking the file
1066 is shown; under CVS, an abbreviated version of the @samp{cvs status}
1067 output is used. Here is an example using CVS:
1068
1069 @smallexample
1070 @group
1071 ./
1072 modified file1.c
1073 needs-update file2.c
1074 needs-merge file3.c
1075 @end group
1076 @end smallexample
1077
1078 @noindent
1079 In this example, @samp{file1.c} is modified with respect to the
1080 repository, and @samp{file2.c} is not. @samp{file3.c} is modified,
1081 but other changes have also been committed---you need to merge them
1082 with the work file before you can check it in.
1083
1084 @vindex vc-stay-local
1085 @vindex vc-cvs-stay-local
1086 In the above, if the repository were on a remote machine, VC only
1087 contacts it when the variable @code{vc-stay-local} (or
1088 @code{vc-cvs-stay-local}) is @code{nil}
1089 @iftex
1090 (@pxref{CVS Options,,,emacs-xtra, Specialized Emacs Features}).
1091 @end iftex
1092 @ifnottex
1093 (@pxref{CVS Options}).
1094 @end ifnottex
1095 This is because access to the repository may be slow, or you may be
1096 working offline and not have access to the repository at all. As a
1097 consequence, VC would not be able to tell you that @samp{file3.c} is
1098 in the ``merge'' state; you would learn that only when you try to
1099 check-in your modified copy of the file, or use a command such as
1100 @kbd{C-x v m}.
1101
1102 In practice, this is not a problem because CVS handles this case
1103 consistently whenever it arises. In VC, you'll simply get prompted to
1104 merge the remote changes into your work file first. The benefits of
1105 less network communication usually outweigh the disadvantage of not
1106 seeing remote changes immediately.
1107
1108 @vindex vc-directory-exclusion-list
1109 When a VC directory displays subdirectories it omits some that
1110 should never contain any files under version control. By default,
1111 this includes Version Control subdirectories such as @samp{RCS} and
1112 @samp{CVS}; you can customize this by setting the variable
1113 @code{vc-directory-exclusion-list}.
1114
1115 @node VC Directory Commands
1116 @subsubsection VC Directory Commands
1117
1118 VC Directory mode has a full set of navigation and marking commands
1119 for picking out filesets. Some of these are also available in a
1120 context menu invoked by @kbd{mouse-2}.
1121
1122 Up- and down-arrow keys move in the buffer; @kbd{n} and @kbd{p} also
1123 move vertically as in other list-browsing modes. @key{SPC} and
1124 @key{TAB} behave like down-arrow, and @key{BackTab} behaves like
1125 up-arrow.
1126
1127 Both @kbd{C-m} and @kbd{f} visit the file on the current
1128 line. @kbd{o} visits that file in another window. @kbd{q} dismisses
1129 the directory buffer.
1130
1131 @kbd{x} hides up-to-date files.
1132
1133 @kbd{m} marks the file or directory on the current line. If the
1134 region is active, @kbd{m} marks all the files in the region. There
1135 are some restrictions when marking: a file cannot be marked if any of
1136 its parent directories are marked, and a directory cannot be marked if
1137 any files in it or in its child directories are marked.
1138
1139 @kbd{M} marks all the files with the same VC state as the current
1140 file if the cursor is on a file. If the cursor is on a directory, it
1141 marks all child files. With a prefix argument: marks all files and
1142 directories.
1143
1144 @kbd{u} unmarks the file or directory on the current line. If the
1145 region is active, it unmarks all the files in the region.
1146
1147 @kbd{U} marks all the files with the same VC state as the current file
1148 if the cursor is on a file. If the cursor is on a directory, it
1149 unmarks all child files. With a prefix argument: unmarks all marked
1150 files and directories.
1151
1152 It is possible to do search, search and replace, incremental search,
1153 and incremental regexp search on multiple files. These commands will
1154 work on all the marked files or the current file if nothing is marked.
1155 If a directory is marked, the files in that directory shown in the VC
1156 directory buffer will be used.
1157
1158 @kbd{S} searches the marked files.
1159
1160 @kbd{Q} does a query replace on the marked files.
1161
1162 @kbd{M-s a C-s} does an incremental search on the marked files.
1163
1164 @kbd{M-s a C-M-s} does an incremental regular expression search
1165 on the marked files.
1166
1167 @cindex stashes in version control
1168 @cindex shelves in version control
1169 Commands are also accessible from the VC-dir menu. Note that some
1170 VC backends use the VC-dir menu to make available extra,
1171 backend-specific, commands. For example, Git and Bazaar allow you to
1172 manipulate @dfn{stashes} and @dfn{shelves}. (These provide a
1173 mechanism to temporarily store uncommitted changes somewhere out of
1174 the way, and bring them back at a later time.)
1175
1176 Normal VC commands with the @kbd{C-x v} prefix work in VC directory
1177 buffers. Some single-key shortcuts are available as well; @kbd{=},
1178 @kbd{+}, @kbd{l}, @kbd{i}, and @kbd{v} behave as through prefixed with
1179 @kbd{C-x v}.
1180
1181 The command @kbd{C-x v v} (@code{vc-next-action}) operates on all
1182 the marked files, so that you can commit several files at once. If
1183 the underlying VC supports atomic commits of multiple-file changesets,
1184 @kbd{C-x v v} with a selected set of modified but not committed files
1185 will commit all of them at once as a single changeset.
1186
1187 When @kbd{C-x v v} (@code{vc-next-action}) operates on multiple
1188 files, all of those files must be either in the same state or in
1189 compatible states (added, modified and removed states are considered
1190 compatible). Otherwise it signals an error. This differs from the
1191 behavior of older versions of VC, which did not have fileset
1192 operations and simply did @code{vc-next-action} on each file
1193 individually.
1194
1195 If any files are in a state that calls for commit, @kbd{C-x v v} reads a
1196 single log entry and uses it for the changeset as a whole. If the
1197 underling VCS is file- rather than changeset-oriented, the log entry
1198 will be replicated into the history of each file.
1199
1200 @node Branches
1201 @subsection Multiple Branches of a File
1202 @cindex branch (version control)
1203 @cindex trunk (version control)
1204
1205 One use of version control is to maintain multiple ``current''
1206 revisions of a file. For example, you might have different revisions of a
1207 program in which you are gradually adding various unfinished new
1208 features. Each such independent line of development is called a
1209 @dfn{branch}. VC allows you to create branches, switch between
1210 different branches, and merge changes from one branch to another.
1211 Please note, however, that branches are not supported for SCCS.
1212
1213 A file's main line of development is usually called the @dfn{trunk}.
1214 You can create multiple branches from the trunk. How the difference
1215 between trunk and branch is made visible is dependent on whether the
1216 VCS uses dot-pair or monotonic version IDs.
1217
1218 In VCSes with dot-pair revision IDs, the revisions on the trunk are
1219 normally IDed 1.1, 1.2, 1.3, etc. At any such revision, you can
1220 start an independent branch. A branch starting at revision 1.2 would
1221 have revision ID 1.2.1.1, and consecutive revisions on this branch
1222 would have IDs 1.2.1.2, 1.2.1.3, 1.2.1.4, and so on. If there is
1223 a second branch also starting at revision 1.2, it would consist of
1224 revisions 1.2.2.1, 1.2.2.2, 1.2.2.3, etc.
1225
1226 In VCSes with monotonic revision IDs, trunk revisions are IDed as
1227 1, 2, 3, etc. A branch from (say) revision 2 might start with 2.1 and
1228 continue through 2.2, 2.3, etc. But naming conventions for branches
1229 and subbranches vary widely on these systems, and some (like
1230 Mercurial) never depart from the monotonic integer sequence at all.
1231 Consult the documentation of the VCS you are using.
1232
1233 @cindex head revision
1234 If you omit the final component of a dot-pair revision ID, that is called a
1235 @dfn{branch ID}. It refers to the highest existing revision on that
1236 branch---the @dfn{head revision} of that branch. The branches in the
1237 dot-pair example above have branch IDs 1.2.1 and 1.2.2.
1238
1239 @menu
1240 * Switching Branches:: How to get to another existing branch.
1241 * Creating Branches:: How to start a new branch.
1242 * Merging:: Transferring changes between branches.
1243 * Multi-User Branching:: Multiple users working at multiple branches
1244 in parallel.
1245 @end menu
1246
1247 @node Switching Branches
1248 @subsubsection Switching between Branches
1249
1250 To switch between branches, type @kbd{C-u C-x v v} and specify the
1251 revision ID you want to select. On a locking-based system, this
1252 version is then visited @emph{unlocked} (write-protected), so you can
1253 examine it before locking it. Switching branches in this way is allowed
1254 only when the file is not locked.
1255
1256 On a VCS with dot-pair IDs, you can omit the minor part, thus giving
1257 only the branch ID; this takes you to the head version on the
1258 chosen branch. If you only type @key{RET}, Emacs goes to the highest
1259 version on the trunk.
1260
1261 After you have switched to any branch (including the main branch), you
1262 stay on it for subsequent VC commands, until you explicitly select some
1263 other branch.
1264
1265 @node Creating Branches
1266 @subsubsection Creating New Branches
1267
1268 To create a new branch from a head revision (one that is the latest
1269 in the branch that contains it), first select that revision if
1270 necessary, lock it with @kbd{C-x v v}, and make whatever changes you
1271 want. Then, when you commit the changes, use @kbd{C-u C-x v v}. This
1272 lets you specify the revision ID for the new revision. You should
1273 specify a suitable branch ID for a branch starting at the current
1274 revision. For example, if the current revision is 2.5, the branch ID
1275 should be 2.5.1, 2.5.2, and so on, depending on the number of existing
1276 branches at that point.
1277
1278 To create a new branch at an older revision (one that is no longer the
1279 head of a branch), first select that revision (@pxref{Switching
1280 Branches}). Your procedure will then differ depending on whether you
1281 are using a locking or merging-based VCS.
1282
1283 On a locking VCS, you will need to lock the old revision branch with
1284 @kbd{C-x v v}. You'll be asked to confirm, when you lock the old
1285 revision, that you really mean to create a new branch---if you say no,
1286 you'll be offered a chance to lock the latest revision instead. On
1287 a merging-based VCS you will skip this step.
1288
1289 Then make your changes and type @kbd{C-x v v} again to commit a new
1290 revision. This automatically creates a new branch starting from the
1291 selected revision. You need not specially request a new branch,
1292 because that's the only way to add a new revision at a point that is
1293 not the head of a branch.
1294
1295 After the branch is created, you ``stay'' on it. That means that
1296 subsequent check-ins create new revisions on that branch. To leave the
1297 branch, you must explicitly select a different revision with @kbd{C-u C-x
1298 v v}. To transfer changes from one branch to another, use the merge
1299 command, described in the next section.
1300
1301 @node Merging
1302 @subsubsection Merging Branches
1303
1304 @cindex merging changes
1305 When you have finished the changes on a certain branch, you will
1306 often want to incorporate them into the file's main line of development
1307 (the trunk). This is not a trivial operation, because development might
1308 also have proceeded on the trunk, so that you must @dfn{merge} the
1309 changes into a file that has already been changed otherwise. VC allows
1310 you to do this (and other things) with the @code{vc-merge} command.
1311
1312 @table @kbd
1313 @item C-x v m (vc-merge)
1314 Merge changes into the work file.
1315 @end table
1316
1317 @kindex C-x v m
1318 @findex vc-merge
1319 @kbd{C-x v m} (@code{vc-merge}) takes a set of changes and merges it
1320 into the current version of the work file. It firsts asks you in the
1321 minibuffer where the changes should come from. If you just type
1322 @key{RET}, Emacs merges any changes that were made on the same branch
1323 since you checked the file out (we call this @dfn{merging the news}).
1324 This is the common way to pick up recent changes from the repository,
1325 regardless of whether you have already changed the file yourself.
1326
1327 You can also enter a branch ID or a pair of revision IDs in
1328 the minibuffer. Then @kbd{C-x v m} finds the changes from that
1329 branch, or the differences between the two revisions you specified, and
1330 merges them into the current revision of the current file.
1331
1332 As an example, suppose that you have finished a certain feature on
1333 branch 1.3.1. In the meantime, development on the trunk has proceeded
1334 to revision 1.5. To merge the changes from the branch to the trunk,
1335 first go to the head revision of the trunk, by typing @kbd{C-u C-x v v
1336 @key{RET}}. Revision 1.5 is now current. If locking is used for the file,
1337 type @kbd{C-x v v} to lock revision 1.5 so that you can change it. Next,
1338 type @kbd{C-x v m 1.3.1 @key{RET}}. This takes the entire set of changes on
1339 branch 1.3.1 (relative to revision 1.3, where the branch started, up to
1340 the last revision on the branch) and merges it into the current revision
1341 of the work file. You can now commit the changed file, thus creating
1342 revision 1.6 containing the changes from the branch.
1343
1344 It is possible to do further editing after merging the branch, before
1345 the next check-in. But it is usually wiser to commit the merged
1346 revision, then lock it and make the further changes. This will keep
1347 a better record of the history of changes.
1348
1349 @cindex conflicts
1350 @cindex resolving conflicts
1351 When you merge changes into a file that has itself been modified, the
1352 changes might overlap. We call this situation a @dfn{conflict}, and
1353 reconciling the conflicting changes is called @dfn{resolving a
1354 conflict}.
1355
1356 Whenever conflicts occur during merging, VC detects them, tells you
1357 about them in the echo area, and asks whether you want help in merging.
1358 If you say yes, it starts an Ediff session (@pxref{Top,
1359 Ediff, Ediff, ediff, The Ediff Manual}).
1360
1361 If you say no, the conflicting changes are both inserted into the
1362 file, surrounded by @dfn{conflict markers}. The example below shows how
1363 a conflict region looks; the file is called @samp{name} and the current
1364 master file revision with user B's changes in it is 1.11.
1365
1366 @c @w here is so CVS won't think this is a conflict.
1367 @smallexample
1368 @group
1369 @w{<}<<<<<< name
1370 @var{User A's version}
1371 =======
1372 @var{User B's version}
1373 @w{>}>>>>>> 1.11
1374 @end group
1375 @end smallexample
1376
1377 @cindex vc-resolve-conflicts
1378 Then you can resolve the conflicts by editing the file manually. Or
1379 you can type @code{M-x vc-resolve-conflicts} after visiting the file.
1380 This starts an Ediff session, as described above. Don't forget to
1381 commit the merged version afterwards.
1382
1383 @node Multi-User Branching
1384 @subsubsection Multi-User Branching
1385
1386 It is often useful for multiple developers to work simultaneously on
1387 different branches of a file. CVS and later systems allow this by
1388 default; for RCS, it is possible if you create multiple source
1389 directories. Each source directory should have a link named
1390 @file{RCS} which points to a common directory of RCS master files.
1391 Then each source directory can have its own choice of selected
1392 revisions, but all share the same common RCS records.
1393
1394 This technique works reliably and automatically, provided that the
1395 source files contain RCS version headers
1396 @iftex
1397 (@pxref{Version Headers,,,emacs-xtra, Specialized Emacs Features}).
1398 @end iftex
1399 @ifnottex
1400 (@pxref{Version Headers}).
1401 @end ifnottex
1402 The headers enable Emacs to be sure, at all times, which revision
1403 ID is present in the work file.
1404
1405 If the files do not have version headers, you must instead tell Emacs
1406 explicitly in each session which branch you are working on. To do this,
1407 first find the file, then type @kbd{C-u C-x v v} and specify the correct
1408 branch ID. This ensures that Emacs knows which branch it is using
1409 during this particular editing session.
1410
1411 @ifnottex
1412 @include vc1-xtra.texi
1413 @end ifnottex
1414
1415 @node Change Log
1416 @section Change Logs
1417
1418 @cindex change log
1419 A change log file contains a chronological record of when and why you
1420 have changed a program, consisting of a sequence of entries describing
1421 individual changes. Normally it is kept in a file called
1422 @file{ChangeLog} in the same directory as the file you are editing, or
1423 one of its parent directories. A single @file{ChangeLog} file can
1424 record changes for all the files in its directory and all its
1425 subdirectories.
1426
1427 @menu
1428 * Change Log Commands:: Commands for editing change log files.
1429 * Format of ChangeLog:: What the change log file looks like.
1430 @end menu
1431
1432 @node Change Log Commands
1433 @subsection Change Log Commands
1434
1435 @kindex C-x 4 a
1436 @findex add-change-log-entry-other-window
1437 The Emacs command @kbd{C-x 4 a} adds a new entry to the change log
1438 file for the file you are editing
1439 (@code{add-change-log-entry-other-window}). If that file is actually
1440 a backup file, it makes an entry appropriate for the file's
1441 parent---that is useful for making log entries for functions that
1442 have been deleted in the current version.
1443
1444 @kbd{C-x 4 a} visits the change log file and creates a new entry
1445 unless the most recent entry is for today's date and your name. It
1446 also creates a new item for the current file. For many languages, it
1447 can even guess the name of the function or other object that was
1448 changed.
1449
1450 @vindex add-log-keep-changes-together
1451 When the variable @code{add-log-keep-changes-together} is
1452 non-@code{nil}, @kbd{C-x 4 a} adds to any existing item for the file
1453 rather than starting a new item.
1454
1455 @vindex add-log-always-start-new-record
1456 If @code{add-log-always-start-new-record} is non-@code{nil},
1457 @kbd{C-x 4 a} always makes a new entry, even if the last entry
1458 was made by you and on the same date.
1459
1460 @vindex change-log-version-info-enabled
1461 @vindex change-log-version-number-regexp-list
1462 @cindex file version in change log entries
1463 If the value of the variable @code{change-log-version-info-enabled}
1464 is non-@code{nil}, @kbd{C-x 4 a} adds the file's version number to the
1465 change log entry. It finds the version number by searching the first
1466 ten percent of the file, using regular expressions from the variable
1467 @code{change-log-version-number-regexp-list}.
1468
1469 @cindex Change Log mode
1470 @findex change-log-mode
1471 The change log file is visited in Change Log mode. In this major
1472 mode, each bunch of grouped items counts as one paragraph, and each
1473 entry is considered a page. This facilitates editing the entries.
1474 @kbd{C-j} and auto-fill indent each new line like the previous line;
1475 this is convenient for entering the contents of an entry.
1476
1477 You can use the @code{next-error} command (by default bound to
1478 @kbd{C-x `}) to move between entries in the Change Log, when Change
1479 Log mode is on. You will jump to the actual site in the file that was
1480 changed, not just to the next Change Log entry. You can also use
1481 @code{previous-error} to move back in the same list.
1482
1483 @findex change-log-merge
1484 You can use the command @kbd{M-x change-log-merge} to merge other
1485 log files into a buffer in Change Log Mode, preserving the date
1486 ordering of entries.
1487
1488 Version control systems are another way to keep track of changes in
1489 your program and keep a change log. In the VC log buffer, typing
1490 @kbd{C-c C-a} (@code{log-edit-insert-changelog}) inserts the relevant
1491 Change Log entry, if one exists (@pxref{Log Buffer}). You can also
1492 insert a VC log entry into a Change Log buffer by typing @kbd{C-x v a}
1493 (@code{vc-update-change-log}) in the Change Log buffer
1494 @iftex
1495 (@pxref{Change Logs and VC,,,emacs-xtra, Specialized Emacs Features}).
1496 @end iftex
1497 @ifnottex
1498 (@pxref{Change Logs and VC}).
1499 @end ifnottex
1500
1501 @node Format of ChangeLog
1502 @subsection Format of ChangeLog
1503
1504 A change log entry starts with a header line that contains the current
1505 date, your name, and your email address (taken from the variable
1506 @code{add-log-mailing-address}). Aside from these header lines, every
1507 line in the change log starts with a space or a tab. The bulk of the
1508 entry consists of @dfn{items}, each of which starts with a line starting
1509 with whitespace and a star. Here are two entries, both dated in May
1510 1993, with two items and one item respectively.
1511
1512 @iftex
1513 @medbreak
1514 @end iftex
1515 @smallexample
1516 1993-05-25 Richard Stallman <rms@@gnu.org>
1517
1518 * man.el: Rename symbols `man-*' to `Man-*'.
1519 (manual-entry): Make prompt string clearer.
1520
1521 * simple.el (blink-matching-paren-distance):
1522 Change default to 12,000.
1523
1524 1993-05-24 Richard Stallman <rms@@gnu.org>
1525
1526 * vc.el (minor-mode-map-alist): Don't use it if it's void.
1527 (vc-cancel-version): Doc fix.
1528 @end smallexample
1529
1530 One entry can describe several changes; each change should have its
1531 own item, or its own line in an item. Normally there should be a
1532 blank line between items. When items are related (parts of the same
1533 change, in different places), group them by leaving no blank line
1534 between them.
1535
1536 You should put a copyright notice and permission notice at the
1537 end of the change log file. Here is an example:
1538
1539 @smallexample
1540 Copyright 1997, 1998 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
1541 Copying and distribution of this file, with or without modification, are
1542 permitted provided the copyright notice and this notice are preserved.
1543 @end smallexample
1544
1545 @noindent
1546 Of course, you should substitute the proper years and copyright holder.
1547
1548 @node Tags
1549 @section Tags Tables
1550 @cindex tags and tag tables
1551
1552 A @dfn{tag} is a reference to a subunit in a program or in a
1553 document. In program source code, tags reference syntactic elements
1554 of the program: functions, subroutines, data types, macros, etc. In a
1555 document, tags reference chapters, sections, appendices, etc. Each
1556 tag specifies the name of the file where the corresponding subunit is
1557 defined, and the position of the subunit's definition in that file.
1558
1559 A @dfn{tags table} records the tags extracted by scanning the source
1560 code of a certain program or a certain document. Tags extracted from
1561 generated files reference the original files, rather than the
1562 generated files that were scanned during tag extraction. Examples of
1563 generated files include C files generated from Cweb source files, from
1564 a Yacc parser, or from Lex scanner definitions; @file{.i} preprocessed
1565 C files; and Fortran files produced by preprocessing @file{.fpp}
1566 source files.
1567
1568 To produce a tags table, you use the @samp{etags} command,
1569 submitting it a document or the source code of a program.
1570 @samp{etags} writes the tags to a @dfn{tags table file}, or @dfn{tags
1571 file} in short. The conventional name for a tags file is @file{TAGS}.
1572
1573 Emacs uses the information recorded in tags tables in commands that
1574 search or replace through multiple source files: these commands use
1575 the names of the source files recorded in the tags table to know which
1576 files to search. Other commands, such as @kbd{M-.}, which finds the
1577 definition of a function, use the recorded information about the
1578 function names and positions to find the source file and the position
1579 within that file where the function is defined.
1580
1581 @cindex C++ class browser, tags
1582 @cindex tags, C++
1583 @cindex class browser, C++
1584 @cindex Ebrowse
1585 See also the Ebrowse facility, which is tailored for C++.
1586 @xref{Top,, Ebrowse, ebrowse, Ebrowse User's Manual}.
1587
1588 @menu
1589 * Tag Syntax:: Tag syntax for various types of code and text files.
1590 * Create Tags Table:: Creating a tags table with @code{etags}.
1591 * Etags Regexps:: Create arbitrary tags using regular expressions.
1592 * Select Tags Table:: How to visit a tags table.
1593 * Find Tag:: Commands to find the definition of a specific tag.
1594 * Tags Search:: Using a tags table for searching and replacing.
1595 * List Tags:: Listing and finding tags defined in a file.
1596 @end menu
1597
1598 @node Tag Syntax
1599 @subsection Source File Tag Syntax
1600
1601 Here is how tag syntax is defined for the most popular languages:
1602
1603 @itemize @bullet
1604 @item
1605 In C code, any C function or typedef is a tag, and so are definitions of
1606 @code{struct}, @code{union} and @code{enum}.
1607 @code{#define} macro definitions, @code{#undef} and @code{enum}
1608 constants are also
1609 tags, unless you specify @samp{--no-defines} when making the tags table.
1610 Similarly, global variables are tags, unless you specify
1611 @samp{--no-globals}, and so are struct members, unless you specify
1612 @samp{--no-members}. Use of @samp{--no-globals}, @samp{--no-defines}
1613 and @samp{--no-members} can make the tags table file much smaller.
1614
1615 You can tag function declarations and external variables in addition
1616 to function definitions by giving the @samp{--declarations} option to
1617 @code{etags}.
1618
1619 @item
1620 In C++ code, in addition to all the tag constructs of C code, member
1621 functions are also recognized; member variables are also recognized,
1622 unless you use the @samp{--no-members} option. Tags for variables and
1623 functions in classes are named @samp{@var{class}::@var{variable}} and
1624 @samp{@var{class}::@var{function}}. @code{operator} definitions have
1625 tag names like @samp{operator+}.
1626
1627 @item
1628 In Java code, tags include all the constructs recognized in C++, plus
1629 the @code{interface}, @code{extends} and @code{implements} constructs.
1630 Tags for variables and functions in classes are named
1631 @samp{@var{class}.@var{variable}} and @samp{@var{class}.@var{function}}.
1632
1633 @item
1634 In La@TeX{} text, the argument of any of the commands @code{\chapter},
1635 @code{\section}, @code{\subsection}, @code{\subsubsection},
1636 @code{\eqno}, @code{\label}, @code{\ref}, @code{\cite},
1637 @code{\bibitem}, @code{\part}, @code{\appendix}, @code{\entry},
1638 @code{\index}, @code{\def}, @code{\newcommand}, @code{\renewcommand},
1639 @code{\newenvironment} or @code{\renewenvironment} is a tag.@refill
1640
1641 Other commands can make tags as well, if you specify them in the
1642 environment variable @env{TEXTAGS} before invoking @code{etags}. The
1643 value of this environment variable should be a colon-separated list of
1644 command names. For example,
1645
1646 @example
1647 TEXTAGS="mycommand:myothercommand"
1648 export TEXTAGS
1649 @end example
1650
1651 @noindent
1652 specifies (using Bourne shell syntax) that the commands
1653 @samp{\mycommand} and @samp{\myothercommand} also define tags.
1654
1655 @item
1656 In Lisp code, any function defined with @code{defun}, any variable
1657 defined with @code{defvar} or @code{defconst}, and in general the first
1658 argument of any expression that starts with @samp{(def} in column zero is
1659 a tag.
1660
1661 @item
1662 In Scheme code, tags include anything defined with @code{def} or with a
1663 construct whose name starts with @samp{def}. They also include variables
1664 set with @code{set!} at top level in the file.
1665 @end itemize
1666
1667 Several other languages are also supported:
1668
1669 @itemize @bullet
1670
1671 @item
1672 In Ada code, functions, procedures, packages, tasks and types are
1673 tags. Use the @samp{--packages-only} option to create tags for
1674 packages only.
1675
1676 In Ada, the same name can be used for different kinds of entity
1677 (e.g.@:, for a procedure and for a function). Also, for things like
1678 packages, procedures and functions, there is the spec (i.e.@: the
1679 interface) and the body (i.e.@: the implementation). To make it
1680 easier to pick the definition you want, Ada tag name have suffixes
1681 indicating the type of entity:
1682
1683 @table @samp
1684 @item /b
1685 package body.
1686 @item /f
1687 function.
1688 @item /k
1689 task.
1690 @item /p
1691 procedure.
1692 @item /s
1693 package spec.
1694 @item /t
1695 type.
1696 @end table
1697
1698 Thus, @kbd{M-x find-tag @key{RET} bidule/b @key{RET}} will go
1699 directly to the body of the package @code{bidule}, while @kbd{M-x
1700 find-tag @key{RET} bidule @key{RET}} will just search for any tag
1701 @code{bidule}.
1702
1703 @item
1704 In assembler code, labels appearing at the beginning of a line,
1705 followed by a colon, are tags.
1706
1707 @item
1708 In Bison or Yacc input files, each rule defines as a tag the nonterminal
1709 it constructs. The portions of the file that contain C code are parsed
1710 as C code.
1711
1712 @item
1713 In Cobol code, tags are paragraph names; that is, any word starting in
1714 column 8 and followed by a period.
1715
1716 @item
1717 In Erlang code, the tags are the functions, records and macros defined
1718 in the file.
1719
1720 @item
1721 In Fortran code, functions, subroutines and block data are tags.
1722
1723 @item
1724 In HTML input files, the tags are the @code{title} and the @code{h1},
1725 @code{h2}, @code{h3} headers. Also, tags are @code{name=} in anchors
1726 and all occurrences of @code{id=}.
1727
1728 @item
1729 In Lua input files, all functions are tags.
1730
1731 @item
1732 In makefiles, targets are tags; additionally, variables are tags
1733 unless you specify @samp{--no-globals}.
1734
1735 @item
1736 In Objective C code, tags include Objective C definitions for classes,
1737 class categories, methods and protocols. Tags for variables and
1738 functions in classes are named @samp{@var{class}::@var{variable}} and
1739 @samp{@var{class}::@var{function}}.
1740
1741 @item
1742 In Pascal code, the tags are the functions and procedures defined in
1743 the file.
1744
1745 @item
1746 In Perl code, the tags are the packages, subroutines and variables
1747 defined by the @code{package}, @code{sub}, @code{my} and @code{local}
1748 keywords. Use @samp{--globals} if you want to tag global variables.
1749 Tags for subroutines are named @samp{@var{package}::@var{sub}}. The
1750 name for subroutines defined in the default package is
1751 @samp{main::@var{sub}}.
1752
1753 @item
1754 In PHP code, tags are functions, classes and defines. Vars are tags
1755 too, unless you use the @samp{--no-members} option.
1756
1757 @item
1758 In PostScript code, the tags are the functions.
1759
1760 @item
1761 In Prolog code, tags are predicates and rules at the beginning of
1762 line.
1763
1764 @item
1765 In Python code, @code{def} or @code{class} at the beginning of a line
1766 generate a tag.
1767 @end itemize
1768
1769 You can also generate tags based on regexp matching (@pxref{Etags
1770 Regexps}) to handle other formats and languages.
1771
1772 @node Create Tags Table
1773 @subsection Creating Tags Tables
1774 @cindex @code{etags} program
1775
1776 The @code{etags} program is used to create a tags table file. It knows
1777 the syntax of several languages, as described in
1778 @iftex
1779 the previous section.
1780 @end iftex
1781 @ifnottex
1782 @ref{Tag Syntax}.
1783 @end ifnottex
1784 Here is how to run @code{etags}:
1785
1786 @example
1787 etags @var{inputfiles}@dots{}
1788 @end example
1789
1790 @noindent
1791 The @code{etags} program reads the specified files, and writes a tags
1792 table named @file{TAGS} in the current working directory. You can
1793 optionally specify a different file name for the tags table by using the
1794 @samp{--output=@var{file}} option; specifying @file{-} as a file name
1795 prints the tags table to standard output.
1796
1797 If the specified files don't exist, @code{etags} looks for
1798 compressed versions of them and uncompresses them to read them. Under
1799 MS-DOS, @code{etags} also looks for file names like @file{mycode.cgz}
1800 if it is given @samp{mycode.c} on the command line and @file{mycode.c}
1801 does not exist.
1802
1803 @code{etags} recognizes the language used in an input file based on
1804 its file name and contents. You can specify the language with the
1805 @samp{--language=@var{name}} option, described below.
1806
1807 If the tags table data become outdated due to changes in the files
1808 described in the table, the way to update the tags table is the same
1809 way it was made in the first place. If the tags table fails to record
1810 a tag, or records it for the wrong file, then Emacs cannot possibly
1811 find its definition until you update the tags table. However, if the
1812 position recorded in the tags table becomes a little bit wrong (due to
1813 other editing), the worst consequence is a slight delay in finding the
1814 tag. Even if the stored position is very far wrong, Emacs will still
1815 find the tag, after searching most of the file for it. That delay is
1816 hardly noticeable with today's computers.
1817
1818 Thus, there is no need to update the tags table after each edit.
1819 You should update a tags table when you define new tags that you want
1820 to have listed, or when you move tag definitions from one file to
1821 another, or when changes become substantial.
1822
1823 One tags table can virtually include another. Specify the included
1824 tags file name with the @samp{--include=@var{file}} option when
1825 creating the file that is to include it. The latter file then acts as
1826 if it covered all the source files specified in the included file, as
1827 well as the files it directly contains.
1828
1829 If you specify the source files with relative file names when you run
1830 @code{etags}, the tags file will contain file names relative to the
1831 directory where the tags file was initially written. This way, you can
1832 move an entire directory tree containing both the tags file and the
1833 source files, and the tags file will still refer correctly to the source
1834 files. If the tags file is @file{-} or is in the @file{/dev} directory,
1835 however, the file names are
1836 made relative to the current working directory. This is useful, for
1837 example, when writing the tags to @file{/dev/stdout}.
1838
1839 When using a relative file name, it should not be a symbolic link
1840 pointing to a tags file in a different directory, because this would
1841 generally render the file names invalid.
1842
1843 If you specify absolute file names as arguments to @code{etags}, then
1844 the tags file will contain absolute file names. This way, the tags file
1845 will still refer to the same files even if you move it, as long as the
1846 source files remain in the same place. Absolute file names start with
1847 @samp{/}, or with @samp{@var{device}:/} on MS-DOS and MS-Windows.
1848
1849 When you want to make a tags table from a great number of files, you
1850 may have problems listing them on the command line, because some systems
1851 have a limit on its length. The simplest way to circumvent this limit
1852 is to tell @code{etags} to read the file names from its standard input,
1853 by typing a dash in place of the file names, like this:
1854
1855 @smallexample
1856 find . -name "*.[chCH]" -print | etags -
1857 @end smallexample
1858
1859 Use the option @samp{--language=@var{name}} to specify the language
1860 explicitly. You can intermix these options with file names; each one
1861 applies to the file names that follow it. Specify
1862 @samp{--language=auto} to tell @code{etags} to resume guessing the
1863 language from the file names and file contents. Specify
1864 @samp{--language=none} to turn off language-specific processing
1865 entirely; then @code{etags} recognizes tags by regexp matching alone
1866 (@pxref{Etags Regexps}).
1867
1868 The option @samp{--parse-stdin=@var{file}} is mostly useful when
1869 calling @code{etags} from programs. It can be used (only once) in
1870 place of a file name on the command line. @code{Etags} will read from
1871 standard input and mark the produced tags as belonging to the file
1872 @var{file}.
1873
1874 @samp{etags --help} outputs the list of the languages @code{etags}
1875 knows, and the file name rules for guessing the language. It also prints
1876 a list of all the available @code{etags} options, together with a short
1877 explanation. If followed by one or more @samp{--language=@var{lang}}
1878 options, it outputs detailed information about how tags are generated for
1879 @var{lang}.
1880
1881 @node Etags Regexps
1882 @subsection Etags Regexps
1883
1884 The @samp{--regex} option provides a general way of recognizing tags
1885 based on regexp matching. You can freely intermix this option with
1886 file names, and each one applies to the source files that follow it.
1887 If you specify multiple @samp{--regex} options, all of them are used
1888 in parallel. The syntax is:
1889
1890 @smallexample
1891 --regex=[@var{@{language@}}]/@var{tagregexp}/[@var{nameregexp}/]@var{modifiers}
1892 @end smallexample
1893
1894 The essential part of the option value is @var{tagregexp}, the
1895 regexp for matching tags. It is always used anchored, that is, it
1896 only matches at the beginning of a line. If you want to allow
1897 indented tags, use a regexp that matches initial whitespace; start it
1898 with @samp{[ \t]*}.
1899
1900 In these regular expressions, @samp{\} quotes the next character, and
1901 all the GCC character escape sequences are supported (@samp{\a} for
1902 bell, @samp{\b} for back space, @samp{\d} for delete, @samp{\e} for
1903 escape, @samp{\f} for formfeed, @samp{\n} for newline, @samp{\r} for
1904 carriage return, @samp{\t} for tab, and @samp{\v} for vertical tab).
1905
1906 Ideally, @var{tagregexp} should not match more characters than are
1907 needed to recognize what you want to tag. If the syntax requires you
1908 to write @var{tagregexp} so it matches more characters beyond the tag
1909 itself, you should add a @var{nameregexp}, to pick out just the tag.
1910 This will enable Emacs to find tags more accurately and to do
1911 completion on tag names more reliably. You can find some examples
1912 below.
1913
1914 The @var{modifiers} are a sequence of zero or more characters that
1915 modify the way @code{etags} does the matching. A regexp with no
1916 modifiers is applied sequentially to each line of the input file, in a
1917 case-sensitive way. The modifiers and their meanings are:
1918
1919 @table @samp
1920 @item i
1921 Ignore case when matching this regexp.
1922 @item m
1923 Match this regular expression against the whole file, so that
1924 multi-line matches are possible.
1925 @item s
1926 Match this regular expression against the whole file, and allow
1927 @samp{.} in @var{tagregexp} to match newlines.
1928 @end table
1929
1930 The @samp{-R} option cancels all the regexps defined by preceding
1931 @samp{--regex} options. It too applies to the file names following
1932 it. Here's an example:
1933
1934 @smallexample
1935 etags --regex=/@var{reg1}/i voo.doo --regex=/@var{reg2}/m \
1936 bar.ber -R --lang=lisp los.er
1937 @end smallexample
1938
1939 @noindent
1940 Here @code{etags} chooses the parsing language for @file{voo.doo} and
1941 @file{bar.ber} according to their contents. @code{etags} also uses
1942 @var{reg1} to recognize additional tags in @file{voo.doo}, and both
1943 @var{reg1} and @var{reg2} to recognize additional tags in
1944 @file{bar.ber}. @var{reg1} is checked against each line of
1945 @file{voo.doo} and @file{bar.ber}, in a case-insensitive way, while
1946 @var{reg2} is checked against the whole @file{bar.ber} file,
1947 permitting multi-line matches, in a case-sensitive way. @code{etags}
1948 uses only the Lisp tags rules, with no user-specified regexp matching,
1949 to recognize tags in @file{los.er}.
1950
1951 You can restrict a @samp{--regex} option to match only files of a
1952 given language by using the optional prefix @var{@{language@}}.
1953 (@samp{etags --help} prints the list of languages recognized by
1954 @code{etags}.) This is particularly useful when storing many
1955 predefined regular expressions for @code{etags} in a file. The
1956 following example tags the @code{DEFVAR} macros in the Emacs source
1957 files, for the C language only:
1958
1959 @smallexample
1960 --regex='@{c@}/[ \t]*DEFVAR_[A-Z_ \t(]+"\([^"]+\)"/'
1961 @end smallexample
1962
1963 @noindent
1964 When you have complex regular expressions, you can store the list of
1965 them in a file. The following option syntax instructs @code{etags} to
1966 read two files of regular expressions. The regular expressions
1967 contained in the second file are matched without regard to case.
1968
1969 @smallexample
1970 --regex=@@@var{case-sensitive-file} --ignore-case-regex=@@@var{ignore-case-file}
1971 @end smallexample
1972
1973 @noindent
1974 A regex file for @code{etags} contains one regular expression per
1975 line. Empty lines, and lines beginning with space or tab are ignored.
1976 When the first character in a line is @samp{@@}, @code{etags} assumes
1977 that the rest of the line is the name of another file of regular
1978 expressions; thus, one such file can include another file. All the
1979 other lines are taken to be regular expressions. If the first
1980 non-whitespace text on the line is @samp{--}, that line is a comment.
1981
1982 For example, we can create a file called @samp{emacs.tags} with the
1983 following contents:
1984
1985 @smallexample
1986 -- This is for GNU Emacs C source files
1987 @{c@}/[ \t]*DEFVAR_[A-Z_ \t(]+"\([^"]+\)"/\1/
1988 @end smallexample
1989
1990 @noindent
1991 and then use it like this:
1992
1993 @smallexample
1994 etags --regex=@@emacs.tags *.[ch] */*.[ch]
1995 @end smallexample
1996
1997 Here are some more examples. The regexps are quoted to protect them
1998 from shell interpretation.
1999
2000 @itemize @bullet
2001
2002 @item
2003 Tag Octave files:
2004
2005 @smallexample
2006 etags --language=none \
2007 --regex='/[ \t]*function.*=[ \t]*\([^ \t]*\)[ \t]*(/\1/' \
2008 --regex='/###key \(.*\)/\1/' \
2009 --regex='/[ \t]*global[ \t].*/' \
2010 *.m
2011 @end smallexample
2012
2013 @noindent
2014 Note that tags are not generated for scripts, so that you have to add
2015 a line by yourself of the form @samp{###key @var{scriptname}} if you
2016 want to jump to it.
2017
2018 @item
2019 Tag Tcl files:
2020
2021 @smallexample
2022 etags --language=none --regex='/proc[ \t]+\([^ \t]+\)/\1/' *.tcl
2023 @end smallexample
2024
2025 @item
2026 Tag VHDL files:
2027
2028 @smallexample
2029 etags --language=none \
2030 --regex='/[ \t]*\(ARCHITECTURE\|CONFIGURATION\) +[^ ]* +OF/' \
2031 --regex='/[ \t]*\(ATTRIBUTE\|ENTITY\|FUNCTION\|PACKAGE\
2032 \( BODY\)?\|PROCEDURE\|PROCESS\|TYPE\)[ \t]+\([^ \t(]+\)/\3/'
2033 @end smallexample
2034 @end itemize
2035
2036 @node Select Tags Table
2037 @subsection Selecting a Tags Table
2038
2039 @vindex tags-file-name
2040 @findex visit-tags-table
2041 Emacs has at any time one @dfn{selected} tags table, and all the
2042 commands for working with tags tables use the selected one. To select
2043 a tags table, type @kbd{M-x visit-tags-table}, which reads the tags
2044 table file name as an argument, with @file{TAGS} in the default
2045 directory as the default.
2046
2047 Emacs does not actually read in the tags table contents until you
2048 try to use them; all @code{visit-tags-table} does is store the file
2049 name in the variable @code{tags-file-name}, and setting the variable
2050 yourself is just as good. The variable's initial value is @code{nil};
2051 that value tells all the commands for working with tags tables that
2052 they must ask for a tags table file name to use.
2053
2054 Using @code{visit-tags-table} when a tags table is already loaded
2055 gives you a choice: you can add the new tags table to the current list
2056 of tags tables, or start a new list. The tags commands use all the tags
2057 tables in the current list. If you start a new list, the new tags table
2058 is used @emph{instead} of others. If you add the new table to the
2059 current list, it is used @emph{as well as} the others.
2060
2061 @vindex tags-table-list
2062 You can specify a precise list of tags tables by setting the variable
2063 @code{tags-table-list} to a list of strings, like this:
2064
2065 @c keep this on two lines for formatting in smallbook
2066 @example
2067 @group
2068 (setq tags-table-list
2069 '("~/emacs" "/usr/local/lib/emacs/src"))
2070 @end group
2071 @end example
2072
2073 @noindent
2074 This tells the tags commands to look at the @file{TAGS} files in your
2075 @file{~/emacs} directory and in the @file{/usr/local/lib/emacs/src}
2076 directory. The order depends on which file you are in and which tags
2077 table mentions that file, as explained above.
2078
2079 Do not set both @code{tags-file-name} and @code{tags-table-list}.
2080
2081 @node Find Tag
2082 @subsection Finding a Tag
2083
2084 The most important thing that a tags table enables you to do is to find
2085 the definition of a specific tag.
2086
2087 @table @kbd
2088 @item M-.@: @var{tag} @key{RET}
2089 Find first definition of @var{tag} (@code{find-tag}).
2090 @item C-u M-.
2091 Find next alternate definition of last tag specified.
2092 @item C-u - M-.
2093 Go back to previous tag found.
2094 @item C-M-. @var{pattern} @key{RET}
2095 Find a tag whose name matches @var{pattern} (@code{find-tag-regexp}).
2096 @item C-u C-M-.
2097 Find the next tag whose name matches the last pattern used.
2098 @item C-x 4 .@: @var{tag} @key{RET}
2099 Find first definition of @var{tag}, but display it in another window
2100 (@code{find-tag-other-window}).
2101 @item C-x 5 .@: @var{tag} @key{RET}
2102 Find first definition of @var{tag}, and create a new frame to select the
2103 buffer (@code{find-tag-other-frame}).
2104 @item M-*
2105 Pop back to where you previously invoked @kbd{M-.} and friends.
2106 @end table
2107
2108 @kindex M-.
2109 @findex find-tag
2110 @kbd{M-.}@: (@code{find-tag}) is the command to find the definition of
2111 a specified tag. It searches through the tags table for that tag, as a
2112 string, and then uses the tags table info to determine the file that the
2113 definition is in and the approximate character position in the file of
2114 the definition. Then @code{find-tag} visits that file, moves point to
2115 the approximate character position, and searches ever-increasing
2116 distances away to find the tag definition.
2117
2118 If an empty argument is given (just type @key{RET}), the balanced
2119 expression in the buffer before or around point is used as the
2120 @var{tag} argument. @xref{Expressions}.
2121
2122 You don't need to give @kbd{M-.} the full name of the tag; a part
2123 will do. This is because @kbd{M-.} finds tags in the table which
2124 contain @var{tag} as a substring. However, it prefers an exact match
2125 to a substring match. To find other tags that match the same
2126 substring, give @code{find-tag} a numeric argument, as in @kbd{C-u
2127 M-.}; this does not read a tag name, but continues searching the tags
2128 table's text for another tag containing the same substring last used.
2129 If you have a real @key{META} key, @kbd{M-0 M-.}@: is an easier
2130 alternative to @kbd{C-u M-.}.
2131
2132 @kindex C-x 4 .
2133 @findex find-tag-other-window
2134 @kindex C-x 5 .
2135 @findex find-tag-other-frame
2136 Like most commands that can switch buffers, @code{find-tag} has a
2137 variant that displays the new buffer in another window, and one that
2138 makes a new frame for it. The former is @w{@kbd{C-x 4 .}}, which invokes
2139 the command @code{find-tag-other-window}. The latter is @w{@kbd{C-x 5 .}},
2140 which invokes @code{find-tag-other-frame}.
2141
2142 To move back to places you've found tags recently, use @kbd{C-u -
2143 M-.}; more generally, @kbd{M-.} with a negative numeric argument. This
2144 command can take you to another buffer. @w{@kbd{C-x 4 .}} with a negative
2145 argument finds the previous tag location in another window.
2146
2147 @kindex M-*
2148 @findex pop-tag-mark
2149 @vindex find-tag-marker-ring-length
2150 As well as going back to places you've found tags recently, you can go
2151 back to places @emph{from where} you found them. Use @kbd{M-*}, which
2152 invokes the command @code{pop-tag-mark}, for this. Typically you would
2153 find and study the definition of something with @kbd{M-.} and then
2154 return to where you were with @kbd{M-*}.
2155
2156 Both @kbd{C-u - M-.} and @kbd{M-*} allow you to retrace your steps to
2157 a depth determined by the variable @code{find-tag-marker-ring-length}.
2158
2159 @findex find-tag-regexp
2160 @kindex C-M-.
2161 The command @kbd{C-M-.} (@code{find-tag-regexp}) visits the tags that
2162 match a specified regular expression. It is just like @kbd{M-.} except
2163 that it does regexp matching instead of substring matching.
2164
2165 @node Tags Search
2166 @subsection Searching and Replacing with Tags Tables
2167 @cindex search and replace in multiple files
2168 @cindex multiple-file search and replace
2169
2170 The commands in this section visit and search all the files listed
2171 in the selected tags table, one by one. For these commands, the tags
2172 table serves only to specify a sequence of files to search. These
2173 commands scan the list of tags tables starting with the first tags
2174 table (if any) that describes the current file, proceed from there to
2175 the end of the list, and then scan from the beginning of the list
2176 until they have covered all the tables in the list.
2177
2178 @table @kbd
2179 @item M-x tags-search @key{RET} @var{regexp} @key{RET}
2180 Search for @var{regexp} through the files in the selected tags
2181 table.
2182 @item M-x tags-query-replace @key{RET} @var{regexp} @key{RET} @var{replacement} @key{RET}
2183 Perform a @code{query-replace-regexp} on each file in the selected tags table.
2184 @item M-,
2185 Restart one of the commands above, from the current location of point
2186 (@code{tags-loop-continue}).
2187 @end table
2188
2189 @findex tags-search
2190 @kbd{M-x tags-search} reads a regexp using the minibuffer, then
2191 searches for matches in all the files in the selected tags table, one
2192 file at a time. It displays the name of the file being searched so you
2193 can follow its progress. As soon as it finds an occurrence,
2194 @code{tags-search} returns.
2195
2196 @kindex M-,
2197 @findex tags-loop-continue
2198 Having found one match, you probably want to find all the rest. To find
2199 one more match, type @kbd{M-,} (@code{tags-loop-continue}) to resume the
2200 @code{tags-search}. This searches the rest of the current buffer, followed
2201 by the remaining files of the tags table.@refill
2202
2203 @findex tags-query-replace
2204 @kbd{M-x tags-query-replace} performs a single
2205 @code{query-replace-regexp} through all the files in the tags table. It
2206 reads a regexp to search for and a string to replace with, just like
2207 ordinary @kbd{M-x query-replace-regexp}. It searches much like @kbd{M-x
2208 tags-search}, but repeatedly, processing matches according to your
2209 input. @xref{Replace}, for more information on query replace.
2210
2211 @vindex tags-case-fold-search
2212 @cindex case-sensitivity and tags search
2213 You can control the case-sensitivity of tags search commands by
2214 customizing the value of the variable @code{tags-case-fold-search}. The
2215 default is to use the same setting as the value of
2216 @code{case-fold-search} (@pxref{Search Case}).
2217
2218 It is possible to get through all the files in the tags table with a
2219 single invocation of @kbd{M-x tags-query-replace}. But often it is
2220 useful to exit temporarily, which you can do with any input event that
2221 has no special query replace meaning. You can resume the query
2222 replace subsequently by typing @kbd{M-,}; this command resumes the
2223 last tags search or replace command that you did. For instance, to
2224 skip the rest of the current file, you can type @kbd{M-> M-,}.
2225
2226 The commands in this section carry out much broader searches than the
2227 @code{find-tag} family. The @code{find-tag} commands search only for
2228 definitions of tags that match your substring or regexp. The commands
2229 @code{tags-search} and @code{tags-query-replace} find every occurrence
2230 of the regexp, as ordinary search commands and replace commands do in
2231 the current buffer.
2232
2233 These commands create buffers only temporarily for the files that they
2234 have to search (those which are not already visited in Emacs buffers).
2235 Buffers in which no match is found are quickly killed; the others
2236 continue to exist.
2237
2238 It may have struck you that @code{tags-search} is a lot like
2239 @code{grep}. You can also run @code{grep} itself as an inferior of
2240 Emacs and have Emacs show you the matching lines one by one.
2241 @xref{Grep Searching}.
2242
2243 @node List Tags
2244 @subsection Tags Table Inquiries
2245
2246 @table @kbd
2247 @item M-x list-tags @key{RET} @var{file} @key{RET}
2248 Display a list of the tags defined in the program file @var{file}.
2249 @item M-x tags-apropos @key{RET} @var{regexp} @key{RET}
2250 Display a list of all tags matching @var{regexp}.
2251 @end table
2252
2253 @findex list-tags
2254 @kbd{M-x list-tags} reads the name of one of the files described by
2255 the selected tags table, and displays a list of all the tags defined in
2256 that file. The ``file name'' argument is really just a string to
2257 compare against the file names recorded in the tags table; it is read as
2258 a string rather than as a file name. Therefore, completion and
2259 defaulting are not available, and you must enter the file name the same
2260 way it appears in the tags table. Do not include a directory as part of
2261 the file name unless the file name recorded in the tags table includes a
2262 directory.
2263
2264 @findex tags-apropos
2265 @vindex tags-apropos-verbose
2266 @kbd{M-x tags-apropos} is like @code{apropos} for tags
2267 (@pxref{Apropos}). It finds all the tags in the selected tags table
2268 whose entries match @var{regexp}, and displays them. If the variable
2269 @code{tags-apropos-verbose} is non-@code{nil}, it displays the names
2270 of the tags files together with the tag names.
2271
2272 @vindex tags-tag-face
2273 @vindex tags-apropos-additional-actions
2274 You can customize the appearance of the output by setting the
2275 variable @code{tags-tag-face} to a face. You can display additional
2276 output with @kbd{M-x tags-apropos} by customizing the variable
2277 @code{tags-apropos-additional-actions}---see its documentation for
2278 details.
2279
2280 You can also use the collection of tag names to complete a symbol
2281 name in the buffer. @xref{Symbol Completion}.
2282
2283 @node EDE
2284 @section Emacs Development Environment
2285 @cindex EDE (Emacs Development Environment)
2286 @cindex Emacs Development Environment
2287 @cindex Integrated development environment
2288
2289 EDE (@dfn{Emacs Development Environment}) is a package that simplifies
2290 the task of creating, building, and debugging large programs with
2291 Emacs. It provides some of the features of an IDE, or @dfn{Integrated
2292 Development Environment}, in Emacs.
2293
2294 This section provides a brief description of EDE usage.
2295 @ifnottex
2296 For full details, see @ref{Top, EDE,, ede, Emacs Development Environment}.
2297 @end ifnottex
2298 @iftex
2299 For full details on Ede, type @kbd{C-h i} and then select the EDE
2300 manual.
2301 @end iftex
2302
2303 EDE is implemented as a global minor mode (@pxref{Minor Modes}). To
2304 enable it, type @kbd{M-x global-ede-mode} or click on the
2305 @samp{Project Support (EDE)} item in the @samp{Tools} menu. You can
2306 also enable EDE each time you start Emacs, by adding the following
2307 line to your initialization file:
2308
2309 @smallexample
2310 (global-ede-mode t)
2311 @end smallexample
2312
2313 @noindent
2314 Activating EDE adds a menu named @samp{Development} to the menu bar.
2315 Many EDE commands, including the ones described below, can be invoked
2316 from this menu.
2317
2318 EDE organizes files into @dfn{projects}, which correspond to
2319 directory trees. The @dfn{project root} is the topmost directory of a
2320 project. To define a new project, visit a file in the desired project
2321 root and type @kbd{M-x ede-new}. This command prompts for a
2322 @dfn{project type}, which refers to the underlying method that EDE
2323 will use to manage the project (@pxref{Creating a Project, EDE,, ede,
2324 Emacs Development Environment}). The most common project types are
2325 @samp{Make}, which uses Makefiles, and @samp{Automake}, which uses GNU
2326 Automake (@pxref{Top, Automake,, automake, Automake}). In both cases,
2327 EDE also creates a file named @file{Project.ede}, which stores
2328 information about the project.
2329
2330 A project may contain one or more @dfn{targets}. A target can be an
2331 object file, executable program, or some other type of file, which is
2332 ``built'' from one or more of the files in the project.
2333
2334 To add a new @dfn{target} to a project, type @kbd{C-c . t}
2335 (@code{M-x ede-new-target}). This command also asks if you wish to
2336 ``add'' the current file to that target, which means that the target
2337 is to be built from that file. After you have defined a target, you
2338 can add more files to it by typing @kbd{C-c . a}
2339 (@code{ede-add-file}).
2340
2341 To build a target, type @kbd{C-c . c} (@code{ede-compile-target}).
2342 To build all the targets in the project, type @kbd{C-c . C}
2343 (@code{ede-compile-project}). EDE uses the file types to guess how
2344 the target should be built.
2345
2346 @ifnottex
2347 @include emerge-xtra.texi
2348 @end ifnottex
2349