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6. Recursive behavior
Almost all of the subcommands of CVS work recursively when you specify a directory as an argument. For instance, consider this directory structure:
|
If `tc' is the current working directory, the following is true:
-
`cvs update testing' is equivalent to
cvs update testing/testpgm.t testing/test2.t
- `cvs update testing man' updates all files in the subdirectories
- `cvs update .' or just `cvs
update' updates all files in the
tcdirectory
If no arguments are given to update it will
update all files in the current working directory and all its
subdirectories. In other words, `.' is a default
argument to update. This is also true for most of
the CVS subcommands, not only the update
command.
The recursive behavior of the CVS subcommands can be turned off with the `-l' option. Conversely, the `-R' option can be used to force recursion if `-l' is specified in `~/.cvsrc' (see section A.3 Default options and the ~/.cvsrc file).
$ cvs update -l # Don't update files in subdirectories |
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