RCSCLEAN(1) | General Commands Manual | RCSCLEAN(1) |
rcsclean - clean up working files
rcsclean [options] [ file ... ]
rcsclean removes files that are not being worked on. rcsclean -u also unlocks and removes files that are being worked on but have not changed.
For each file given, rcsclean compares the working file and a revision in the corresponding RCS file. If it finds a difference, it does nothing. Otherwise, it first unlocks the revision if the -u option is given, and then removes the working file unless the working file is writable and the revision is locked. It logs its actions by outputting the corresponding rcs -u and rm -f commands on the standard output.
Files are paired as explained in ci(1). If no file is given, all working files in the current directory are cleaned. Filenames matching an RCS suffix denote RCS files; all others denote working files.
The number of the revision to which the working file is compared may be attached to any of the options -n, -q, -r, or -u. If no revision number is specified, then if the -u option is given and the caller has one revision locked, rcsclean uses that revision; otherwise rcsclean uses the latest revision on the default branch, normally the root.
rcsclean is useful for clean targets in makefiles. See also rcsdiff(1), which prints out the differences, and ci(1), which normally reverts to the previous revision if a file was not changed.
removes all working files ending in .c or .h that were not changed since their checkout.
removes all working files in the current directory that were not changed since their checkout.
rcsclean accesses files much as ci(1) does.
The exit status is zero if and only if all operations were successful. Missing working files and RCS files are silently ignored.
Author: Walter F. Tichy.
Manual Page Revision: 5.9.4; Release Date: 2019-02-10.
Copyright © 2010-2015 Thien-Thi Nguyen.
Copyright © 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993 Paul Eggert.
Copyright © 1982, 1988, 1989 Walter F. Tichy.
ci(1), co(1), ident(1), rcs(1), rcsdiff(1), rcsmerge(1), rlog(1), rcsfile(5).
Walter F. Tichy, RCS--A System for Version Control, Software--Practice & Experience 15, 7 (July 1985), 637-654.
The full documentation for RCS is maintained as a Texinfo manual. If the info(1) and RCS programs are properly installed at your site, the command
should give you access to the complete manual. Additionally, the RCS homepage:
has news and links to the latest release, development site, etc.
At least one file must be given in older Unix versions that do not provide the needed directory scanning operations.
2019-02-10 | GNU RCS 5.9.4 |