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D. All environment variables which affect CVS
This is a complete list of all environment variables that affect CVS.
-
$CVSIGNORE
A whitespace-separated list of file name patterns that CVS should ignore. See section Ignoring files via cvsignore.
-
$CVSWRAPPERS
A whitespace-separated list of file name patterns that CVS should treat as wrappers. See section The cvswrappers file.
-
$CVSREAD
If this is set,
checkout
andupdate
will try hard to make the files in your working directory read-only. When this is not set, the default behavior is to permit modification of your working files.-
$CVSUMASK
Controls permissions of files in the repository. See File permissions.
-
$CVSROOT
Should contain the full pathname to the root of the CVS source repository (where the RCS files are kept). This information must be available to CVS for most commands to execute; if
$CVSROOT
is not set, or if you wish to override it for one invocation, you can supply it on the command line: ‘cvs -d cvsroot cvs_command…’ Once you have checked out a working directory, CVS stores the appropriate root (in the file ‘CVS/Root’), so normally you only need to worry about this when initially checking out a working directory.-
$CVSEDITOR
-
$EDITOR
-
$VISUAL
-
Specifies the program to use for recording log messages during commit.
$CVSEDITOR
overrides$EDITOR
, which overrides$VISUAL
. See Committing your changes for more or Global options for alternative ways of specifying a log editor. -
$PATH
If
$RCSBIN
is not set, and no path is compiled into CVS, it will use$PATH
to try to find all programs it uses.-
$HOME
-
$HOMEPATH
-
$HOMEDRIVE
Used to locate the directory where the ‘.cvsrc’ file, and other such files, are searched. On Unix, CVS just checks for
HOME
. On Windows NT, the system will setHOMEDRIVE
, for example to ‘d:’ andHOMEPATH
, for example to ‘\joe’. On Windows 95, you'll probably need to setHOMEDRIVE
andHOMEPATH
yourself.-
$CVS_RSH
Specifies the external program which CVS connects with, when
:ext:
access method is specified. see section Connecting with rsh.-
$CVS_SERVER
Used in client-server mode when accessing a remote repository using RSH. It specifies the name of the program to start on the server side (and any necessary arguments) when accessing a remote repository using the
:ext:
,:fork:
, or:server:
access methods. The default value for:ext:
and:server:
iscvs
; the default value for:fork:
is the name used to run the client. see section Connecting with rsh-
$CVS_PASSFILE
Used in client-server mode when accessing the
cvs login server
. Default value is ‘$HOME/.cvspass’. see section Using the client with password authentication-
$CVS_CLIENT_PORT
Used in client-server mode to set the port to use when accessing the server via Kerberos, GSSAPI, or CVS's password authentication protocol if the port is not specified in the CVSROOT. see section Remote repositories
-
$CVS_RCMD_PORT
Used in client-server mode. If set, specifies the port number to be used when accessing the RCMD demon on the server side. (Currently not used for Unix clients).
-
$CVS_CLIENT_LOG
Used for debugging only in client-server mode. If set, everything sent to the server is logged into ‘
$CVS_CLIENT_LOG
.in’ and everything sent from the server is logged into ‘$CVS_CLIENT_LOG
.out’.-
$CVS_SERVER_SLEEP
Used only for debugging the server side in client-server mode. If set, delays the start of the server child process the specified amount of seconds so that you can attach to it with a debugger.
-
$CVS_IGNORE_REMOTE_ROOT
For CVS 1.10 and older, setting this variable prevents CVS from overwriting the ‘CVS/Root’ file when the ‘-d’ global option is specified. Later versions of CVS do not rewrite ‘CVS/Root’, so
CVS_IGNORE_REMOTE_ROOT
has no effect.-
$COMSPEC
Used under OS/2 only. It specifies the name of the command interpreter and defaults to CMD.EXE.
-
$TMPDIR
-
$TMP
-
$TEMP
-
Directory in which temporary files are located. The CVS server uses
TMPDIR
. See section Global options, for a description of how to specify this. Some parts of CVS will always use ‘/tmp’ (via thetmpnam
function provided by the system).On Windows NT,
TMP
is used (via the_tempnam
function provided by the system).The
patch
program which is used by the CVS client usesTMPDIR
, and if it is not set, uses ‘/tmp’ (at least with GNU patch 2.1). Note that if your server and client are both running CVS 1.9.10 or later, CVS will not invoke an externalpatch
program.
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