This creates a file called file,v in directory
RCS. file,v is
called an RCS file, and it
will store all future revisions of file. When
you run ci on a file for the first
time, you are prompted to describe the contents. ci then deposits file into
the RCS file as revision 1.1.
To edit a new revision, check out a copy:
co -l file
This causes RCS to extract a copy of file
from the RCS file. You must lock the file with -l to make it writable by you. This copy
is called a working file. When you're done editing, you can record
the changes by checking the working file back in again:
ci file
This time, you are prompted to enter a log of the changes made,
and the file is deposited as revision 1.2. Note that a checkin
normally removes the working file. To retrieve a read-only copy, do a
checkout without a lock:
co file
This is useful when you need to keep a copy on hand for
compiling or searching. As a shortcut to the previous ci/co, you
could type:
ci -u file
This checks in the file but immediately checks out a read-only copy.
To compare changes between a working file and its latest revision,
you can type:
rcsdiff file